Skip to content

TO RULE THE WAVES

Bruce Jones

How Control of the World's Oceans Determines the Fate of the Superpowers

From a brilliant Brookings Institute writer, a vivid, timely, and insightful examination of the critical role that oceans currently play in the struggle for global power, in the bestselling tradition of Robert Kaplan's The Revenge of Geography.
People have always been fascinated by the sea. From the romance of traveling by ship to the lure of adventure to the thrill of battle, the oceans have been an exciting backdrop in both history and popular fiction. The epic histories of the imperial age established naval dominance as the currency of power. But then, during the Cold War, the oceans receded from our consciousness. In the nuclear age, land battles, air power, and missile systems dominated our worries about security and for the United States, the economy was driven by domestic productiontrucking and railways that crisscrossed the continent were the only trade issues we needed to worry about. All that has changed, as 90% of all global commerce is linked to sea-based trade and again, the struggle for power on the seas is taking center stage.

Now, in To Rule the Waves author Bruce Jones takes us on a fascinating voyage through the great modern ports and naval bases of our timefrom the vast container ports of Shanghai and Hong Kong to the massive naval base of the American 5th fleet in Bahrain to the sophisticated security arrangements in the port of New York. Along the way, the book illustrates how modern trade works, and why the oceans are so crucial to our modern global economy as the three great geopolitical strugglesfor military power, for economic dominance, and for our changing climateplay out on the world's oceans.

As the realities of energy resources and the global fight over climate change becomes more urgent, Jones concludes by asking the essential question: who will rule the waves and set the terms of the world to come?

Bruce Jones is vice president and director of the Foreign Policy program at Brookings and a senior fellow in the Institution's Project on International Order and Strategy. He is also a consulting professor at the Freeman Spogli Institute at Stanford University. He served in the United Nations' operation in Kosovo, and was special assistant to the U.N. special coordinator for the Middle East peace process.
Available products
Book

Published 2021-09-14 by Scribner

Book

Published 2021-09-14 by Scribner

Comments

This is Sapiens for the seas; there is true knowledge on every page.

Read this book to come away with a deeper understanding of why the world's oceans are both vital and connected to core defense, economic, and environmental security.

[A] penetrating historical and political study.

Bruce Jones vividly shows how what happens on the oceans determines so much of what happens on land.

An important book about foreign policy. . . . deftly diagrams the connections between economic policy and national security.