The End of Ambition: America's Past, Present, and Future in the Middle East
Autor Steven A. Cooken Limba Engleză Hardback – 11 sep 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197578575
ISBN-10: 0197578578
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 164 x 241 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197578578
Pagini: 208
Dimensiuni: 164 x 241 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
For decades, American interests in the Middle East were defined by preventing the disruption of oil exports, protecting Israel, and containing the Soviet Union. Steven Cook takes the reader beyond the relative successes of that era into more recent cycles of frustration and policy shortcomings...Cook reminds the reader that these states have agency, too. And thousands of years of culture and social organization. In Cook's view, America's national interests are better served by a deeper understanding of the region, and by an engaged policy informed by an emphasis on diplomacy, private sector contributions, military partnerships, and realism. Cook's frank assessment is compelling reading for the classroom, the newsroom, the boardroom, or the Situation Room.
Cook masterfully weaves together historical narrative and multi-dimensional analysis with relevant personal experience to produce an informative, objective, and often critical assessment of US foreign policy towards the Middle East since WWII, with special emphasis on the post-Cold War period. It is accessible to policymakers, students, and the interested public alike, all of whom would be well-served to read this book, especially as the author outlines lessons learned and prescriptions for course correction to what has too often been dysfunctional US policy.
Steven Cook has written a seminal and very timely examination of the 'intersection of fantasy and failure' in American foreign policy toward the Middle East. He warns against the overambition of the post-Cold War and post-9/11 periods when the US sought to remake the Middle East, and the 'under-ambition' of the post-Iraq War period when many simply wanted to 'get out'. He argues wisely and effectively for a right-sized policy that builds on enduring US interests, understands the region as it is, and appreciates both the capacities and limits of US power.
The End of Ambition is a must-read for anyone who's still captivated by the idea that America can transform an angry, broken, dysfunctional region in its own image. Cook demonstrates with a terrifying clarity that the Middle East's reputation for devouring the schemes and dreams of great powers is second to none; and is more often than not a place where grandiose American ideas have gone to die. The answer isn't withdrawal. America has interests, allies, and partners too important to ignore. Instead, his clarion call is for finding the balance between the way the region really is and the way America wants it to be. Think neither big nor small but smart: identify core US interests and carefully calibrate the means at your disposal to protect and advance them.
Following the end of the Cold War, the trajectory of American policy in the Middle East has been steered by a set of bipartisan, hubristic assumptions about American power, culminating with a series of strategic setbacks that have fueled cries for reducing America's footprint in the region. Prudent, compelling, and sober, Cook has authored an impressive book that skillfully refutes those arguing for the necessity of retrenchment and withdrawal, while also highlighting the shortcomings of successive administrations' overly ambitious approach to Middle East policy. This captivating work outlines a roadmap for scholars, students, and policymakers seeking to craft American strategy for a region that is vitally important to America's national security.
Cook masterfully weaves together historical narrative and multi-dimensional analysis with relevant personal experience to produce an informative, objective, and often critical assessment of US foreign policy towards the Middle East since WWII, with special emphasis on the post-Cold War period. It is accessible to policymakers, students, and the interested public alike, all of whom would be well-served to read this book, especially as the author outlines lessons learned and prescriptions for course correction to what has too often been dysfunctional US policy.
Steven Cook has written a seminal and very timely examination of the 'intersection of fantasy and failure' in American foreign policy toward the Middle East. He warns against the overambition of the post-Cold War and post-9/11 periods when the US sought to remake the Middle East, and the 'under-ambition' of the post-Iraq War period when many simply wanted to 'get out'. He argues wisely and effectively for a right-sized policy that builds on enduring US interests, understands the region as it is, and appreciates both the capacities and limits of US power.
The End of Ambition is a must-read for anyone who's still captivated by the idea that America can transform an angry, broken, dysfunctional region in its own image. Cook demonstrates with a terrifying clarity that the Middle East's reputation for devouring the schemes and dreams of great powers is second to none; and is more often than not a place where grandiose American ideas have gone to die. The answer isn't withdrawal. America has interests, allies, and partners too important to ignore. Instead, his clarion call is for finding the balance between the way the region really is and the way America wants it to be. Think neither big nor small but smart: identify core US interests and carefully calibrate the means at your disposal to protect and advance them.
Following the end of the Cold War, the trajectory of American policy in the Middle East has been steered by a set of bipartisan, hubristic assumptions about American power, culminating with a series of strategic setbacks that have fueled cries for reducing America's footprint in the region. Prudent, compelling, and sober, Cook has authored an impressive book that skillfully refutes those arguing for the necessity of retrenchment and withdrawal, while also highlighting the shortcomings of successive administrations' overly ambitious approach to Middle East policy. This captivating work outlines a roadmap for scholars, students, and policymakers seeking to craft American strategy for a region that is vitally important to America's national security.
Notă biografică
Steven A. Cook is the Eni Enrico Mattei Senior Fellow for Middle East and Africa Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is a columnist at Foreign Policy and the author of False Dawn, The Struggle for Egypt, and Ruling but Not Governing.