Notes 177
System, 1495–1975 (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1983); Mearsheimer,
The Tragedy of Great Power Politics.
- Zakaria, From Wealth to Power, p. 5.
- James Kurth, “America’s Grand Strategy: A Pattern of History,” The National
Interest, Vol. 43 (Spring 1996), pp. 3–19. - Ross H. Munro, “The Asian Interior: China’s Waxing Spheres of Influence,”
Orbis, Vol. 38, No. 4 (Fall 1994), pp. 585–605. - Leszek Buszynski, “Russia and the CIS in 2003: Regional Reconstruction,”
Asian Survey, Vol. 44, No. 1 (January–February 2004), pp. 158–167. - This discussion is drawn from Ofer Israeli, “The Necessary Russian Involve-
ment within the Disintegrated Middle East,” Maariv, August 2, 2015 [Hebrew]; and
Ofer Israeli, “An Israeli Perspective on the Russian Chess Game in Syria.” Unpub-
lished: Prepared for “The Russian Foreign Policy in the Middle East,” University
of Haifa, June 8, 2015 [Hebrew]. - Kurth, “America’s Grand Strategy.”
- Ismail Sharif, “Growing Discontent with Globalization,” World Affairs,
Vol. 7, No. 3 (July–September 2003), pp. 14–27. - Territorial Change, 1816–2008 (v4.01).
- David B. Rivkin Jr. and Darin R. Bartram, “Military Occupation: Legally
Ensuring a Lasting Peace,” The Washington Quarterly, Vol. 26, No. 3 (Summer 2003),
pp. 87–103; Eric Carlton, Occupation: The Policies and Practice of Military Conquerors
(New York: Routledge, 1992); Minxin Pei and Sara Kasper, Lessons from the Past:
The American Record of Nation Building (Washington, DC: Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, 2003). - In certain occupations, such as the occupation of Istanbul after the First
World War, just one area was occupied. David M. Edelstein, “Occupational Haz-
ards: Why Military Occupations Succeed or Fail,” International Security, Vol. 29,
No. 1 (Summer 2004), pp. 49–91, at p. 52 fn. 9. - Peter Liberman, Does Conquest Pay? The Exploitation of Occupied Industrial
Societies (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1996). - Mark Dow, “Occupying and Obscuring Haiti,” New Politics, Vol. 5, No. 2
(Winter 1995), pp. 12–26. - Edelstein, “Occupational Hazards.”
- The unification, Anschluss, of Germany and Austria in 1938, in which Aus-
tria became part of the German Reich, is an example of annexation. The unification
was in violation of the Versailles Treaty that ended the First World War and led to
Austria’s becoming a province of the German Third Reich, in 1938–1945. Evan Burr
Bukey, Hitler’s Hometown: Linz, Austria, 1908–1945 (Bloomington: Indiana Univer-
sity Press, 1986); F. Parkinson, ed., Conquering the Past: Austrian Nazism Yesterday
and Today (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1989); Bruce F. Pauley, Hitler and
the Forgotten Nazis: A History of Austrian National Socialism (Chapel Hill: University
of North Carolina Press, 1981); Kurt Schuschnigg, The Brutal Takeover: The Austrian
Ex-Chancellor’s Account of the Anschluss of Austria by Hitler (London: Weidenfeld
and Nicolson, 1971). - Two prominent cases of acquisition of territories that were not in wartime
in which the United States purchased territories for money may be mentioned. On
April 30, 1803, the United States purchased the territory of Louisiana from France,