Wishful thinking is preventing the formation of a responsible American foreign-policy strategy.
Tom DeLay may not see any problems with the phrase, "one vote, one person, one time", but the rest of America might.
George Tenet’s memoir is basically about two stories: the fight against Al-Qaeda both before and after 9/11 and the Iraq War. And on these matters, his story—if not always his performance—is basically on target.
Managing the Pentagon and managing wars are two different things, a lesson Robert McNamara learned the hard way.
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.
John Lukacs offers an intimate portrait of one of America's great strategists in George Kennan.
As a result of America’s misadventures in Iraq and Afghanistan, we have lost the global clout we derived from our role in World War II—for good.
Fascism did not die with Hitler and Mussolini in World War II. As recent events show, understanding what fascism means in the 21st century is a lesson worth learning.
Europe and its Muslims face three possible futures.
Two works address selective amnesia about communist atrocities.