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America in the Arctic

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America in the Arctic offers a timely and compelling case for why the United States must deepen its commitment to a region threatened by climate change and geopolitical rivalry.
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  • 25 March 2025
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As climate change accelerates, the Arctic has become a frontline of global competition. Melting ice, rising temperatures, and swelling seas have made remote regions at once newly accessible and rife with new dangers. Vladimir Putin’s Russia has embarked on a substantial military buildup in the Arctic, and China has also turned its attention northward. The United States, however, has only recently begun to reestablish its Arctic presence after many years of waning influence.

America in the Arctic offers a timely and compelling case for why the United States must deepen its commitment to a region threatened by climate change and geopolitical rivalry. Mary Thompson-Jones surveys past and present U.S. relations with the Arctic lands: Canada, Iceland, Greenland, Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden, and Russia. She traces the history of the U.S. presence in the far north from the purchase of Alaska through the Cold War, arguing that lessons from the past should inform America’s relationships with its Arctic neighbors today. At its best, U.S. Arctic policy balanced security interests with residents’ needs and international cooperation on environmental and regional issues. In recent years, many policymakers scrambling to reassert U.S. leadership have framed their goals solely in security terms. Thompson-Jones argues that climate change now poses the greatest challenge, calling for a new approach that is inclusive of all the Arctic’s inhabitants. Bringing together national security expertise and historical insight, this book charts a course for American Arctic policy in a warming world.

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Price: $35.00
Pages: 344
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 25 March 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231198400
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / Diplomacy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Geopolitics, HISTORY / Maritime History & Piracy

Mary Thompson-Jones makes a convincing argument that the United States must reengage in a region threatened by the dual risks of climate change and degrading security and that the best approach is a broad-based effort, going beyond Alaska to include regional gateway states such as Maine to forge stronger economic and diplomatic ties with our Arctic partners. The opening up of the Arctic is the equivalent of the discovery of an unknown ocean—and how we navigate this new reality will have enormous long-term ramifications for the United States and the world. This book amounts to a finely crafted chart that can help guide us though the rough seas ahead to a peaceful and prosperous future in the region.
Mary Thompson-Jones is a professor of national security affairs at the U.S. Naval War College and a former foreign service officer who attained the rank of minister counselor. She is the author of To the Secretary: Leaked Embassy Cables and America’s Foreign Policy Disconnect (2016). Her diplomatic experience spans more than two decades serving in the Czech Republic, Canada, Guatemala, Spain, and Washington, DC.

Acknowledgments
Prologue
1. Imagining the Arctic: Maps, Geology, and Climate
2. Alaska: The Superlative State
3. Canada: The Trouble with Gentlemen’s Agreements
4. Iceland: Caught Between Three Worlds
5. Search for Sovereignty: Greenland, Denmark, and the United States
6. How Norway Gained an Archipelago and America Became an Arctic Power
7. Finland and Sweden: Transforming NATO’s Arctic Flank
8. Russia’s Beloved and Unsustainable Arctic
9. Reestablishing Presence: How America Is Returning to the Arctic
Conclusion: America’s Arctic Future—Navigating a Militarized and Melting Domain
Notes
Index