[
The strategist
]
Much has been made in the past year
of profound changes in the way we make war. Thomas Barnett, forty, is the man
who dreamed them first.
Thomas Barnett is a philosopher of modern war.
A few years ago, Barnett, a Harvard-educated
professor of military strategy at the
“We really haven’t been a nation at war since World
War II,” Barnett says. “We always did it on the side, so to speak. We networked
ourselves with the outside world so much that our definition of national security started moving beyond the war
paradigm to something else—crises that threatened our connections with the
outside world.” So in the late nineties, he began thinking larger. He teamed up
with the bond firm Cantor Fitzgerald and asked a
question: How would the
No more. Within weeks of
Barnett breaks the big world down thusly: “core”
countries, those that promote or align themselves with the larger global
community through a relatively free flow of trade,
people, direct foreign investment, and security; and “gap” countries that either
refuse to or can’t work with the core because of political instability, cultural
rigidity, or extreme poverty. It’s not as if he’s making it up. He drew a map of
the world and highlighted our military responses of the past three decades—from
The future likely means that the
Barnett has the brass’s ear, and the brass is
listening. “When people start using your words—core and gap, system
perturbations, exporting security—you know you’re getting through,” Barnett
says. “In
Andrew
Chaikivsky
December 2002
Volume 138 No. 6
The Best &
Brightest A special issue devoted to introducing a few
dozen people who are changing our world. Saving our
cities. Unlocking secrets of science and
medicine. Creating new industries. Imagining new worlds. Their work will astonish and inspire a
new generation. Featuring an introductory essay on leadership
in
136 CULTURE
137 Ryan Gosling The star of last spring's The Believer is the most ferociously talented actor of his generation.
138
Charlie Kaufman The most innovative screenwriter in
140 Malerie Marder, Jenny Gage, Anna Gaskell
Three women who have
changed the direction of American art photography.
142 Jonathan Safran Foer, Nicole Krauss Fast talk between fast friends who are also two of the best young voices in American fiction.
143 Van Toffler The man who is reinventing television.
143 Jonathan Ive Apple computer owes much of its comeback to its young chief of design.
144 William Massie One young architect has a startling idea about how to bring high-end, custom house design within the reach of everyone.
146 Will Wright The man who created The Sims is about to obliterate the line between computer gaming and reality.
148 Paul Liebrandt The most daring chef in
148 The
149 Samantha Morton An Oscar nominee who has uttered fewer words onscreen than any star since the silent era.
150 SOCIETY
151 Bill
Frist The only heart-lung transplant surgeon in
the country who also happens to be a
152 Martin O'Malley The best young
mayor in
156 Michael Gerson Notes from the most important presidential speechwriter in a generation.
157 Ray Boshara Asset building has always worked for the rich. Why not let it work for the poor?
157 Mellody Hobson A Chicago fund manager has a dream: that poor black kids can learn to love the stock market.
158 Vernor Vinge The man who foresaw the Internet now sees something else-the post-human future
160 Sara Horowitz One woman thinks that even if you work for yourself, you should have group benefits.
160 Gregory Rodriguez On the post-minority nation.
161 Jedediah
Purdy One of the best young thinkers in
162 Cory Booker Rewriting the rules of
racial politics — and other lessons taken from the sixteenth floor of the
163 Thomas
Barnett A view of the world
from the military strategist who saw September 11 coming.
164 SCIENCE
165 David Lederman The man who built the first self-contained
artificial heart isn't finished with it yet.
166 Eugene Chan The most radical innovation in biotechnology since the discovery of DNA is the work of a medical-school dropout with an unshakable vision.
168 Josef Penninger A leading genetic scientist may have found a cure for nothing less than pain itself.
169 Jonathan Eisen By studying life that thrives in the most extreme conditions on earth, a biologist hopes to discover how life began at all.
170 Mehmet Oz Why would a brilliant heart surgeon bring hypnotherapy and energy healing into the operating room? "I don't care what works," he says.
171 Donald Ingber Our understanding of how cells are constructed has changed utterly, all because one biologist took an art class.
172 Dave Lavery The NASA scientist who is leading mankind on a mission to Mars.
175 Michael L. Dustin By capturing an image of how immune cells communicate, he may have begun to unlock the body's ability to cure itself.
175 Sarah Flannery Others had spent years trying, but in just three days, a sixteen-year-old Irish girl on a work-study job found a way to make data encryption twenty times faster.
176 BUSINESS
177 Richard Barton
What has the thirty-five-year-old CEO of Expedia learned? Trust your
external dependencies (but not your stock price).
178 Ed Breen The man hired to save Tyco is at least one thing many recent would-be titans weren't-a man of business.
182 David Neeleman Can the visionary behind JetBlue tell us how to save the rest of American industry?
184 Amory Lovins A leading environmental thinker believes that business can lead us out of the mess it has created.
186 Craig Newmark The elusive creator behind Craigslist, the best e-commerce site on the Web.
186 Joseph Jacobson By the end of this decade, he hopes, E Ink will fundamentally change the way you read-on screen and on paper.
187 Matthew Rabin Will five-dollar packs really get
smokers to quit? A
187 Dan DeLong The head engineer of XCor could make commercial space flight a reality within four years.
188 Chad Mirkin
It's one thing to speculate about the coming miracles of nanotechnology.
It's another to be the guy who's turning them into products.