Advice to War Presidents: A Remedial Course in Statecraft
Autor Angelo Codevillaen Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 mar 2009
“War
presidents”
are
hardly
exceptional
in
modern
American
history.
To
a
greater
or
lesser
extent,
every
president
since
Wilson
has
been
a
War
President.
Each
has
committed
our
country
to
the
pursuit
of
peace,
yet
involved
us
in
a
seemingly
endless
series
of
wars—conflicts
that
the
American
foreign
policy
establishment
has
generally
made
worse.
The
chief
reason,
argues
Angelo
Codevilla
inAdvice
to
War
Presidents,
is
that
America's
leaders
have
habitually
imagined
the
world
as
they
wished
it
to
be
rather
than
as
it
is:
They
acted
under
the
assumptions
that
war
is
not
a
normal
tool
of
statecraft
but
a
curable
disease,
and
that
all
the
world's
peoples
wish
to
live
as
Americans
do.
As
a
result,
our
leaders
have
committed
America
to
the
grandest
of
ends
while
constantly
subverting
their
own
goals.
Employing
many
negative
examples
from
the
Bush
II
administration
but
also
ranging
widely
over
the
last
century,Advice
to
War
Presidentsoffers
a
primer
on
the
unchanging
principles
of
foreign
policy.
Codevilla
explains
the
essentials—focusing
on
realities
such
as
diplomacy,
alliances,
war,
economic
statecraft,
intelligence,
and
prestige,
rather
than
on
meaningless
phrases
like
“international
community,”
“peacekeeping”
and
“collective
security.”
Not
a
realist,
neoconservative,
or
a
liberal
internationalist,
Codevilla
follows
an
older
tradition:
that
of
historians
like
Thucydides,
Herodotus,
and
Winston
Churchill—writers
who
analyzed
international
affairs
without
imposing
false
categories.
Advice to War Presidentsis an effort to talk our future presidents down from their rhetorical highs and get them to practice statecraft rather than wishful thinking, lest they give us further violence.
Advice to War Presidentsis an effort to talk our future presidents down from their rhetorical highs and get them to practice statecraft rather than wishful thinking, lest they give us further violence.
Preț: 307.42 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 461
Preț estimativ în valută:
58.84€ • 63.28$ • 49.04£
58.84€ • 63.28$ • 49.04£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 20 decembrie 24 - 03 ianuarie 25
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780465004836
ISBN-10: 0465004830
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 157 x 236 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: BASIC BOOKS
Colecția Basic Books
ISBN-10: 0465004830
Pagini: 336
Dimensiuni: 157 x 236 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: BASIC BOOKS
Colecția Basic Books
Notă biografică
Angelo
M.
Codevillahas
taught
political
theory
and
international
relations
at
Stanford,
Princeton,
and
Georgetown
University
and
is
presently
a
professor
of
international
relations
at
Boston
University.
He
is
the
author
of
nine
books,
includingThe
Character
of
Nations,The
Arms
Control
Delusion,
and
a
new
translation
of
Machiavelli'sThe
Prince.
He
lives
in
Boston,
Massachusetts.
Recenzii
Publishers
Weekly
“Accessible… Codevilla writes intelligently on topics as diverse as the affect of economic sanctions on Iraq in the 1990s and contemporary relations between Russia and Georgia.”
Library Journal
“Veteran international relations author Codevilla…questions basic assumptions that have guided U.S. foreign policy since Woodrow Wilson tried to make the world safe for democracy… Recommended for academic and larger public libraries.”
American Spectator
“Machiavelli could not have written a better book to give advice to ‘war presidents.'”
Claremont Review
“Compelling reading… bracing and intelligent.”
FamilySecurityMatters.org
“[An] expansive and important work…[Advice to War Presidents] should be required reading for Senators and their staff as an essential primer to the arcane world of arms control.”
First Principals
“A refreshingly unashamed conservative critique of twentieth-century U.S. foreign policy, especially with regard to war and the use of force.”
“Accessible… Codevilla writes intelligently on topics as diverse as the affect of economic sanctions on Iraq in the 1990s and contemporary relations between Russia and Georgia.”
Library Journal
“Veteran international relations author Codevilla…questions basic assumptions that have guided U.S. foreign policy since Woodrow Wilson tried to make the world safe for democracy… Recommended for academic and larger public libraries.”
American Spectator
“Machiavelli could not have written a better book to give advice to ‘war presidents.'”
Claremont Review
“Compelling reading… bracing and intelligent.”
FamilySecurityMatters.org
“[An] expansive and important work…[Advice to War Presidents] should be required reading for Senators and their staff as an essential primer to the arcane world of arms control.”
First Principals
“A refreshingly unashamed conservative critique of twentieth-century U.S. foreign policy, especially with regard to war and the use of force.”