America Between the Wars: From 11/9 to 9/11; The Misunderstood Years Between the Fall of the Berlin Wall and the Start of the War on Terror
Autor Derek Chollet, James Goldgeieren Limba Engleză Paperback – iun 2009
On
November
9,
1989,
the
Berlin
Wall
collapsed,
taking
the
Cold
War
down
with
it.
The
next
twelve
years
passed
in
a
haze
of
self-congratulation,
Republican
confusion,
and
angst,
and
economic
prosperity—until
they
ended
abruptly
with
a
stunning
catastrophe
on
September
11,
2001.In
America
Between
The
Wars,
Derek
Chollet
and
James
Goldgeier
blend
deep
expertise
with
broad
access
to
both
parties'
political
and
policy
establishments
to
find
out
how—and
why—America
failed
to
recognize
that
when
we
became
the
sole
superpower
with
responsibility
for
the
world's
oversight,
we
overlooked
how
the
new
world
actually
worked.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781586487058
ISBN-10: 1586487051
Pagini: 432
Ilustrații: 8 pp. b/w photo insert
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
Locul publicării:United States
ISBN-10: 1586487051
Pagini: 432
Ilustrații: 8 pp. b/w photo insert
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.59 kg
Editura: PublicAffairs
Colecția PublicAffairs
Locul publicării:United States
Notă biografică
Derek
Cholletis
a
senior
fellow
at
the
Center
for
a
New
American
Security
in
Washington,
D.C.James
Goldgeieris
a
professor
of
political
science
at
George
Washington
University
and
a
senior
fellow
at
the
Council
on
Foreign
Relations.
Recenzii
Kirkus
Reviews
“Provocative…. A careful explication of why things are as they are, with all those old arguments continuing to sizzle and pop—suggestive and highly useful for those seeking to reshape policy in the near term.”
“Provocative…. A careful explication of why things are as they are, with all those old arguments continuing to sizzle and pop—suggestive and highly useful for those seeking to reshape policy in the near term.”
The Sunday New York Times Magazine
“The problem with these narratives is that neither reflects the context of the time. As two former national security officials in the Clinton administration, Derek Chollet and James Goldgeier, explain compellingly in “America Between the Wars,” a book to be published next month, the period between the cold war and the war on terror — the 90s, roughly speaking — was a decade when foreign-policy thinkers across the ideological spectrum were groping about in darkness, trying to feel out the limits of American power and to balance the twin risks of action and inaction. During that time, the United States bounced from one unforeseen crisis to another, undertaking a military intervention every 18 months, on average — a staggering pace compared with that of the years that came before. Old ideological alliances in Washington were shattered and reformed, as pacifists lined up with conservative isolationists to battle liberal hawks and neoconservatives. New terms — “failed state,” “humanitarian intervention,” “ethnic cleansing” — entered the American lexicon. It’s fair to say, then, that McCain did evolve in his views on when and how to use American force over the course of the decade, but it’s misleading to separate his evolution from the larger transformation that was happening all around him.”
Michiko Kakutani New York Times, June 17, 2008
“Mr. Chollet … and Mr. Goldgeier … have written an astute and highly informed book, lucidly mapping the forces that have been reshaping the post-cold-war world as a clearly defined superpower rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union has given way to a far more complex and chaotic set of circumstances involving terrorism, ethnic conflict and the integration of the global economy…. The authors provide an insightful assessment of the competing perspectives within the administration of George Herbert Walker Bush that have continued to inform Washington foreign policy debates through the Iraq war and the current election cycle.… [And] shrewdly analyze President Bill Clinton’s grasp of both the upsides and downsides of globalization, which was bringing about the economic and technological integration of the world, even as it was accelerating centrifugal forces of fragmentation.”
James Mann, author of Rise of the Vulcans
“This book will likely stand as the definitive work on the politics, people and ideas involved in the foreign-policy debates of the 1990s…. A lucidly written history, devoid of rhetoric and full of invaluable information.”
Henry Kissinger
“Goldgeier and Chollet … offer illuminating insights into the forces that have reshaped today’s world.”
Lee H. Hamilton, President and Director of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
“Chollet and Goldgeier have written a highly informative, engaging, and accessible account of the period between America’s most recent major wars—the cold war and the war on terror. In this balanced and well-written story they argue that 9/11 did not change everything and that in order to analyze America’s challenges today, one must understand the foreign policy debates and clashes of the 1990s.”
Richard Holbrooke
“An indispensable history of the decade preceding 9/11.”
Philip Stephens, Financial Times
“[An] excellent book…. Studies of US foreign policy in recent years have suffered from an excess of polemic and an absence of cool analysis. This book provides welcome redress. Barack Obama, for one, should put it on his reading list.”
Weekly Standard
“America Between the Wars is a remarkably evenhanded and serious review of U.S. security policy between the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the attacks on New York and the Pentagon in the fall of 2001…. Judicious in tone, and especially insightful … this volume will likely stand as the definitive overview of that period for some time to come.”