Robert Kaplan advocates a pagan ethos for American statesmen in the 21st century, but not all pagans think alike.
Can John Mearsheimer's analysis of "offensive realism" explain or guide U.S. foreign policy? Better, perhaps, than the author realizes.
Walter Russell Mead's new book deploys the ideas and heirs of Hamilton, Wilson, Jefferson and Jackson to illuminate the future of U.S. foreign policy.
A dissection of the few pluses and many minuses of the crusading approach to American foreign policy.
Preventing the spread of atomic weaponry is less in our control than we think.
Brands deserves congratulation on his new biography, an honest, enjoyable, sympathetic portrait of our twenty-sixth president, aside from a melodramatic prologue and some unfortunate bows to modern psychology.