阅读理解 If there is one central, recurring mistake the United States makes when dealing with the rest of the world, it is to assume that creating political stability is easy. The adversaries in Iraq and Afghanistan remind us that "the most important distinction among countries concerns not their form of government but their degree of government." Look around. So many of the world's problems—from terrorists in Waziristan to the devastating AIDS epidemic in Africa to piracy in Somalia—are caused or made worse by governments that are unable to exercise real authority over their lands or people. That was the central insight of Samuel P. Huntington, the greatest political scientist of the last half-century, who died on Christmas Eve.
Huntington is most famous for The Clash of Civilizations, but his scholarly reputation properly rests on his earlier work. His analysis of political order had immediate, real-world applications. While studying the topic, he was asked by Lyndon Johnson's adrninistration to assess the progress of the Vietnam War. After touring the place he argued, in 1967 and 1968, that America's strategy in South Vietnam was fatally flawed. The Johnson administration was trying to buy the people's support through aid and development. But money wasn't the key, in Huntington's view. The segments of South Vietnam's population that had resisted the Viet Cong's efforts had done so because they were secure within effective local communities structured around religious or ethnic ties. The United States, however, wanted to create a modern Vietnamese nation and so refused to reinforce these "backward" sources of authority. This 40-year-old analysis describes our dilemma in Afghanistan today.
Huntington noticed a troubling trend. Sometimes, progress American style—more political participation or faster economic growth—actually created more problems than it solved. If a country had more people who were economically, politically and socially active and yet lacked effective political institutions, such as political parties, civic organizations or credible courts, the result was greater instability. That has been the story of parts of the Third World over the past three decades. Think of Pakistan, whose population has gone from 68 million in 1975 to 165 million today, while its government has proved ill equipped to tackle the basic tasks of education, security and social welfare.
Living through change, people have often stuck with their oldest and most durable source of security: religion. That was the most important message of The Clash of Civilizations. While others were celebrating the fall of communism and the rise of globalization, he saw that with ideology disappearing as a source of human identity, religion was returning to the fore.
单选题 16.The central insight of Samuel P. Huntington refers to
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】根据central insight of Samuel P.Huntington可定位至第一段,其中提到,“世界上如此之多的问题,包括恐怖分子、艾滋病及海盗,都是由政府的无能引起的或使情况恶化……以上是亨廷顿的主要见解”,因此正确答案为B项。
单选题 17.Huntington's analysis of political order had immediate, real-world applications in that
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】根据immediate,real-world applications可定位至第二段。其中提到“他对政治秩序的分析立即被运用到现实世界中”,而后面整段说的是他对越南战争的分析,解释了越南战争为何失败以及如今美国在阿富汗的困境,因此本题正确答案为C项。
单选题 18.What is the troubling trend that Huntington has noticed?
【正确答案】 D
【答案解析】根据the troubling trend可定位至第三段。其中提到,“有时候,美国化的推进——更多的政治干预或更快的经济发展——实际上造成了更多的问题而非解决了问题”,这就是令人困扰的趋势,故选D。
单选题 19.To which of the following statements would the author most likely agree?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】第四段中说到,“如果一个国家缺乏有效的政治机制,例如政党、民间组织或权威的法庭,其结果将是社会更加动荡”,因此B项为正确选项。
单选题 20.The most important message of The Clash of Civilizations is that
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】根据most important message定位至末段。其中提到,“生活在动荡变幻局势下的人们通常坚持 安全感最古老最持久的来源:宗教。这就是《文明的冲突》一书所要传达的最重要的信息”。故选C项。