Geoffrey Roberts, the author of Stalin's Wars, responds to Andrew J. Bacevich's review of the book in the September/October issue of The National Interest.
Geoffrey Roberts treads through morally hazardous territory portraying Stalin as a great statesman.
Jacob Heilbrunn analyzes a spate of recent Reagan biographies, which demonstrate that neither George W. Bush nor any of the presidential candidates can lay claim to Reagan's unique legacy.
Unflinching loyalty to the Bush Doctrine leads Robert Kaufman astray in his study of American foreign policy—and Truman, Reagan and Bush do not make a three-of-kind.
Managing the Pentagon and managing wars are two different things, a lesson Robert McNamara learned the hard way.
John Lukacs offers an intimate portrait of one of America's great strategists in George Kennan.
Policy decisions suffer when the rational center remains silent and catchphrases take over the debate.
Hollywood romanticizes terror - Nir Rosen exposes it.
Suicide terrorism may be more rational than meets the eye.
Radical Islam is its own worst enemy. It will marginalize itself unless the United States overreacts.