Monsoon: The Indian Ocean and the Future of American Power
Written by Robert D. Kaplan
Narrated by John Pruden
4/5
()
About this audiobook
and center, while the Indian Ocean region all but disappears. This
convention reveals the geopolitical focus of the now-departed twentieth
century, but in the twenty-first century that focus will fundamentally
change.In this pivotal examination of the countries known as "Monsoon
Asia"-which include India, Pakistan, China, Indonesia, Burma, Oman, Sri
Lanka, Bangladesh, and Tanzania-bestselling author Robert D. Kaplan
shows how crucial this dynamic area has become to American power. It is
here that the fight for democracy, energy independence, and religious
freedom will be lost or won, and it is here that American foreign policy
must concentrate if the United States is to remain relevant in an
ever-changing world. From the Horn of Africa to the Indonesian
archipelago and beyond, Kaplan exposes the effects of population growth,
climate change, and extremist politics on this unstable region,
demonstrating why Americans can no longer afford to ignore this
important area of the world.
Robert D. Kaplan
Robert D. Kaplan is the bestselling author of nineteen books on foreign affairs and travel translated into many languages, including The Good American, The Revenege of Geography, Asia’s Cauldron, Monsoon, The Coming Anarchy, and Balkan Ghosts. He holds the Robert Strausz-Hupé Chair in Geopolitics at the Foreign Policy Research Institute. For three decades he reported on foreign affairs for The Atlantic. He was a member of the Pentagon’s Defense Policy Board and the U.S. Navy’s Executive Panel. Foreign Policy magazine twice named him one of the world’s “Top 100 Global Thinkers.”
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Reviews for Monsoon
115 ratings8 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Supreme and detailed overview of the Indian Ocean and its many protagonists.
Deserves a wide audience. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A brisk and rousting journey through the nations on the Indian Ocean, from east Africa to Indonesia. masterful and well crafted, based on history and personal familiarity. The grace of this work is that the chpters are focused and concise. A number of elegant maps. A great work!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This interesting book is several things: part travelogue, part history, part geo-politics and geo-economics. And, the author puts it all together in an informative and engaging way.India, China and the other countries who rely on the Indian Ocean and South China Sea for trade and transport are examined in this book. It is clear that Mr. Kaplan has done a lot of reserach, and spent time visiting all the places he talks about. He displays a deep understanding of the cultures and realities of the people he writes about. I learned a lot about this part of the world. Some of the themes explored were how Islam took different forms when it arrived via traders vs. crusaders; how social institutions are needed to support governance models, especially democracy; how China provides economic development assistance in search of access without preaching about human rights; how so much trade depends on two or three narrow straits. The one topic I thought wasn't fully explored was the subtitle: what all this means for American power. I was able to reflect on parallels to Canada's system of Indian reserves, our insistence that foreign aid be linked to human rights, how some issues become social causes while other similar situations go virtually unheard of. A great introduction to this part of the world. I hope I am now better able to put current events in a context.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Excellent and informative. History, culture, travel, geography, politics and more. All in one book. My only complaint would be that the final chapter about China seemed forced. However, RDK is at the top of his league.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5An excellent book, This book clearly explains the issues that surround the countries that are affected by the monsoons. When I picked up this book, I thought that it may be one of those geopolitical books that have been written by an American diplomat with scant knowledge of what is happening in this part of the world. This is one time that I was really proved wrong, ad Robert Kaplan has demonstrated excellent knowledge and insight into the issues affecting this part of the world. The book has been very clearly laid out, and the writing style is easy enough to read without having to strain unnesecarrily. The chapters are complete in themselves, so it is easy to come back to a specific section and read, without having to scan the whole book again. This part of the world changes fast, so I hope that he comes up with updated versions soon.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Robert Kaplan’s Monsoon borrows a format from his earlier popular and very influential book Balkan Ghosts: part history, part travelogue, part geography lesson, and part political analysis. Here he broadens his scope from a European peninsula to the Indian Ocean littoral. His overall theme is that the United States no longer has the power to be the world’s only hegemon, and so it must adapt to sharing power in this theater with China and India. Moreover, the Indian Ocean littoral is the locus of some of the most unstable regimes in the world, and thus is likely to be a place where radical changes in the political status quo will occur. While the geography of the Indian Ocean determines the scope of the book, that area’s characteristic wind patterns (the monsoons) unify its history from early medieval times to the advent of steam power. Because the winds blow like clockwork from southwest to northeast part of the year and then reverse themselves in April and October, Arab traders were able to sail to India and farther east to Indonesia with the wind at their backs, and then return home, also with favorable winds. From the east, Chinese traders were able to sail to India and East Africa, and then return home with favorable winds.The spread of Islam is another principal theme of the book. Where Islam spread by conquest (its usual modus operandi)—in Persia and Northwest India (modern Pakistan)—it retained its intolerant, close-minded character. Where it expanded through trade and voluntary conversion—Indonesia—it absorbed many of the local religious beliefs and practices, and became much more tolerant and open minded. In India, where Islam’s spread by conquest was stopped by Hindu civilization, the history of the country is still suffused with the confrontation of Muslim and Hindu belief systems. The coming of the Portuguese with Vasco da Gama in the late 16th century disrupted trading patterns that had prevailed for over 500 years in the area. The Dutch and British followed soon thereafter, and Europeans dominated the area until World War II. Kaplan’s narrative takes us on a chapter-by-chapter tour of Oman, Baluchistan and Sindh (Pakistan), Gujarat (western India), Delhi (central India), Kolkata (eastern India), Bangladesh, Burma, and Indonesia. Oman is prosperous, but not remotely democratic. India is a thriving democracy. Pakistan and Bangladesh are atrociously-ruled basket cases. Burma is a mixture of rival ethnicities ruled by an oppressive dictatorship. Indonesia practices a remarkably tolerant form of Islam, and is fairly democratic. Kaplan’s descriptions of these countries is much more detailed and nuanced than my thumb nail sketches, so you will have to read the book for a full appreciation of his careful and detailed analysis. Hovering over the entire area is the rapidly growing power of China, which seeks to expand its navy to protect its vital interests in oil from Arabia. At present, China, India, and the United States all have significant naval presences in the Indian Ocean. The three have been able to cooperate in such matters as suppressing piracy. However, as U.S. power wanes and Chinese and Indian power wax, the situation must be handled deftly and carefully by all involved to avoid confrontation and possible military conflict. Evaluation: Monsoon is a lucid analysis of the complexity of the issues presented in this potentially troublesome portion of the globe that accounts for a third of the world’s population. Kaplan contends that just as Europe defined the geopolitics of the 20th Century, the Indian Ocean will define the 21st. For those interested in global power relationships, this book is essential. A helpful glossary as well as a number of maps are included.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Classic Kaplan. Informative and historically deep while explaining the various possibilities that the future may hold for power in the western Pacific and Indian Oceans. More like his previous works than his last two love affairs w the American military.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In Monsoon, Robert Kaplan brings the reader on a crash course through the history and politics of the whole Indian Ocean region, from Zanzibar off Tanzania's coast to the deep water ports of Indonesia. Though relatively small in relation to its Atlantic and Pacific neighbors, the Indian Ocean has served as a unifying network for a vast array of cultures over the past thousand years. The reliable and regular monsoon winds made this ocean a major hub of trade in ages past, and as Kaplan explains, the growing power of its coastal nations promise to make it a center of political and economic power in the coming decades. Kaplan jumps from one region to the next, briefly covering its history and framing the potential for growth and change in the future. From tiny Oman, living under a benevolent sultanate in control of the Persian Gulf, to vast India and its constant maneuvers in Burma to counter Chinese influence, Monsoon covers a huge amount of territory in a very few pages, but still captures the visceral reality of the people working to bring this region to the forefront of world politics. Kaplan has a long list of books under his belt, dealing with a range of topics from the US military to the aftermath of the Cold War and the development of the third world. The level of scholarship and sensitivity he shows his subjects in this book are a testament to what must be in those works. He clearly spent a lot of time on the ground getting to understand the world of the Indian Ocean and the paths of progress it takes today. He writes rather beautifully of the crumbling ancient cities living in the shadows of new foreign-built commercial ports and the rich cultural heritage of all his subjects. Globalization is everywhere in the region, but Kaplan makes it clear that this is not necessarily new. Though he makes no statements as to his politics, his contempt for the human-rights abuses in many of these states is clear (he refuses to refer to Burma as Myanmar, the name give it by the current ruling junta), giving time to the opposition figures in order to provide a historical and social context to the violence. His thesis, that the Indian Ocean will soon become a major center of world power, is somewhat subtle but pervasive; however, he spends very little time with the sub-titular topic of American power. Largely, the world he sees is a multi-polar one where the Indian Ocean is patrolled by Indian, Chinese, and Indonesian fleets as well as American carrier groups. The power in his posited future is a soft one of trade, aid, and mutual support. One of the blurb-writers on the back cover stated that he hoped Kaplan was wrong in his theories this time, but I feel he must have not read the whole book. Kaplan does suggest that there are risks of failed states and extremism, but ultimately the only really successful nations in the region are the democracies. As the Indian Ocean coast becomes a greater cast of players on the world stage, it seems that the whole human race will benefit from their resurgence as a heart of world exchange.