Practical Lessons from US Foreign Policy: The Itinerant Years
231Practical Lessons from US Foreign Policy: The Itinerant Years
231Paperback(1st ed. 2020)
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Overview
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9783030273149 |
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Publisher: | Springer International Publishing |
Publication date: | 11/05/2019 |
Edition description: | 1st ed. 2020 |
Pages: | 231 |
Product dimensions: | 5.83(w) x 8.27(h) x 0.00(d) |
About the Author
Kenneth Weisbrode is Assistant Professor in the Department of History at Bilkent University, Turkey. He is a former defense analyst who has worked at the Atlantic Council of the United States, the European University Institute, the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and the United States Institute of Peace.
Table of Contents
Chapter One: Introduction: How Did We Get Here?Part I
Chapter Two: Global Challenges
1. We’re All Powerful and All Alone (1999)
2. US Must Avoid Temptation to Shift Priorities Toward Asia (2001)3. Bush Should Seize His Chance to Recast US Ties with China (2001)
4. US Needs Alliances, Not Short-Term Allies (2002)
5. Thank the Friends: Doing America’s Work at the UN (2002)
6. A Nuclear Arms Race (2003)
7. Bush’s Corrosive Campaign of Fear (2003)
8. The Nature of Freedom (2004)
9. America’s Strategic Surrender (2006)
10. US Must Take Offensive Against Nuclear Terrorism (2007)
11. The False Promise of 1989 (2009)
12. Diplomacy 2.0 (2010)
13. US Diplomats: A Vanishing Species? (2010)
14. End of a Nuclear Era (2013)
Chapter Three: National Policies
15. Back to Basics: US Foreign Policy for the Coming Decade (2000)
16. Diplomatic Cathedral-Building (2002)
17. Ike-Like Diplomacy Instead of War (2002)
18. The Way to Rid the World of Nuclear Weapons (2003)
19. American Diplomacy – What You See is What You Get (2007)
20. Mugged by Reality? (2008)21. Obama’s World Tour: A Rising or a Setting Sun? (2010)
22. The Strange Rebirth of American Leadership (2011)
23. Pivots Forward, Backward, and Sideways (2012)
24. Recipe for a Post-Hegemonic USA (2013)
Part II
Chapter Four: Regional Problems
25. The Consequences of Russia’s Actions – Who Will Cast the First Stone? (1999)
26. Don’t Rush to the Altar With India (2001)
27. Afghanistan Stalemate Fosters Reevaluation of Stabilization Tactics (2001)
28. Asia Needs a Common Defence (2001)
29. The European Way: Asians Need a Regional Security Net (2002)30. East Asia: Connecting the Dots Isn’t Optional (2002)
31. Juggling a Two-Front Crisis (2003)
32. Time for Jaw-Jaw with North Korea (2003)
33. NATO Can’t Be Globocop (2004)
34. The US is Losing Ground on Korea Talks (2004)
35. The Coming Showdown with Iran (2009)
36. The Elusive Afghanistan Strategy (2009)
37. Obama, “America’s First Pacific President”? (2009)
38. The Putin Doctrine and Preventive Diplomacy (2014)
Chapter Five: Regional Solutions
39. Save the Caucasus from Balkan-like Crisis (2000)
40. Defending Missile Defense (2001)
41. NATO and the Future of War (2001)
42. Afghanistan Interim Government “Solution” Could Leave Regional Problems Intact (2001)
43. EU to Adopt Higher Profile in Recasting Europe (2002)
44. European Defense: An Alliance with 2 Tiers (2003)
45. Rescuing the UN Security Council: Should We? Can We? (2004)
46. Enlarge the North Korean Problem (2005)
47. Democratic Lessons from Helsinki and Central Asia (2005)
48. Chart New Course for Lasting Peace (2006)
49. French Return to NATO Military Command Could Spur Greater Alliance Mission Clarity (2009)
50. A Possible “Off-Ramp” in North Korea (2013)
51. Redirecting US Diplomacy (2014)
52. A Middle East, Whole and Free (2015)
Chapter Six: Conclusion: What Have We Learned?
What People are Saying About This
“This interesting book touches on a variety of critical questions about America’s role in the world since the Cold War. Even though I do not fully agree with all of its arguments, I believe it will provoke productive—and badly needed—discussion about the road traveled and the road ahead.” (Hal Brands, author of American Grand Strategy in the Age of Trump (2018))
“There is one immutable fact about cooperative security—when practiced well, it works. Countries can solve together problems that none of them can solve alone. Ambassador Goodby and Professor Weisbrode are superb guides through the past two decades of American policy, pointing out how cooperative security could have helped us—and still could help us—to address global challenges like nuclear proliferation and climate change.” (Gloria Duffy, President, The Commonwealth Club, and former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense)
“The idea that America has lost its vision of global leadership has become a commonplace in the era of Trump. This thoughtful and wide-ranging compilation of op-eds reveals both the deeper history of these developments and the existence of longstanding efforts to counter them. For two decades, the esteemed diplomat-historian duo of Goodby and Weisbrode have delivered a series of prophetic warnings about the dangers and consequences of America’s failure to apply and adapt the principles of collective security—diplomacy, international institutions, and regional alliances—to a rapidly changing and globalizing world. Together with their reflections on these writings, this volume offers a nuanced assessment of the US international order that dominated the second half of the twentieth century, as well as a rebuke of the dark ‘America First’ nationalism that has reemerged in the Trump era. This sober yet ultimately hopeful book is vital reading for the current and future generation of America’s leaders and all who are dedicated to the prospect of a more peaceful, equitable, and sustainable world.” (Hannah Gurman, author of The Dissent Papers: The Voices of Diplomats in the Cold War and Beyond (2012))
“This engaging collaboration of a diplomatic practitioner and a political historian offers its analysis and critique of US foreign policy—the good, the bad, and the ugly—in the years 1998–2015. Arrogance and ignorance, we learn, have appeared in American leadership predating the Trump administration.” (Peter J. Katzenstein, Walter S. Carpenter, Jr. Professor of International Studies, Cornell University, USA)