Present
Dangers: Crisis and Opportunity in American Foreign and
Defense Policy by Robert
Kagan (Editor), William Kristol (Editor)
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- Paperback: 392 pages ;
Dimensions (in inches): 1.21 x 9.01 x 6.03
- Publisher: Encounter Books; ;
(September 2000)
- ISBN: 1893554163
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Book
Description
This original collection offers hope to
those who believe that the cause of world peace requires a new
American foreign policy and repairing our depleted
military.
The
twelve contributors to this book show why America must take
another look at our possible adversaries and real strategic
partners. Present Dangers offers practical strategies for
policymakers eager to disarm adversaries like North Korea and
Iraq and head off the terrorist threat.
Intellectuals,
historians and policy-makers such as James Ceasar, Ross Munro,
Peter Rodman, Richard Perle, Rueel Marc Gerecht, Nicholas
Eberstadt, Jeffrey Gedmin, Aaron Friedberg, Elliott Abrams,
Frederick Kagan, Willliam Schneider, William Bennett, Paul
Wolfowitz, and Donald Kagan all challenge America to make sure
that foreign affairs, a sleeping issue for the last eight
years, gets a wake-up call in election year 2000.Table of
contents, notes, bibliographic essay.
Two leading advocates of "conservative
internationalism" in foreign policy assemble a like-minded
group of deep thinkers in Present Dangers.
According to the editors--Robert Kagan
of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and William
Kristol of The Weekly Standard--America's most
significant threats come from within, rather than without.
They worry that "the United
States, the world's dominant power on whom the maintenance of
international peace and the support of liberal democratic
principles depends, will shrink its responsibilities and--in a
fit of absentmindedness, or parsimony, or indifference--allow
the international order that it created and sustains to
collapse."
As might be expected, the Clinton
administration comes in for a thrashing on these pages. Ross H.
Munro, an expert on China, writes: "However history judges
[President] Clinton, the assessment of how his administration
dealt with a rising China is certain to be harsh."
In a chapter on Russia, Peter W.
Rodman slams the Clintonites for "sentimentality," an
"absurd doctrinal fetish" with arms control, and
"an unwillingness to assert major American strategic
interests and impose a penalty for harm done to them, lest the
poor Russians feel hurt."
There are other essays, too: Richard
N. Perle on Iraq, Elliott Abrams on the Middle East, and William
J. Bennett on the importance of morality and character in
foreign policy. Clear thinking and straightforward writing mark
each chapter.
As a whole, Present Dangers is an excellent primer
on how a Republican foreign policy might look in the early years
of the 21st century.
But to be sure, a Republican foreign policy would not
inevitably look this way; in one of the book's best sections,
James W. Caesar examines the realist and isolationist schools of
conservative thought and contrasts them with the view expressed
throughout Present Dangers.
Yet this is a strong and convincing call for "a
strong commitment to vigorous American global leadership, to
American power, and to the advancement of American democratic
and free-market principles abroad." --John J. Miller
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