The world is tipping into chaos. Why?
In this acclaimed and influential book, Pulitzer Prize–winning columnist Bret Stephens shows how the retreat of American power, orchestrated by Barack Obama, has created the power vacuums now being filled by our enemies. From Vladimir Putin’s quest to restore the old czarist empire, to China’s efforts to dominate the South China Sea, to Iran’s nuclear ambitions, to ISIS’s dreams of an Islamic caliphate, we have entered an era in which our foes no longer fear us and our friends no longer trust us.
With his stylistic flair and analytical brilliance, Stephens explains the ideological roots of Obama’s suspicions of American power. He demonstrates how a false belief in American decline has led to a disastrous prescription of retreat, as if the cure for domestic weakness is international weakness. In a prophetic chapter, he warns of what the world could look like in 2019 if we do not change course. And he lays out the right formula for U.S. foreign policy—the same formula that brought order to our once crime-ridden streets.
America in Retreat is shaping the greatest foreign policy debate of our decade.
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Release date
November 18, 2014 -
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- ISBN: 9781101631423
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- ISBN: 9781101631423
- File size: 742 KB
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- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
Starred review from October 6, 2014
Stephens, a Pulitzer-winning foreign affairs columnist for The Wall Street Journal and former editor of The Jerusalem Post, eloquently warns of mounting U.S. isolationism and the chaos that may result. This compact volume responds to current concerns, particularly among progressives and libertarians, that the U.S. military is overly committed abroad. Readers of Stephens’s WSJ columns will recognize persistent themes: the return of al-Qaeda and the future of Iran; escalating Russian aggression; and Chinese militarism. Others will discover a thoughtful case for Pax Americana. Stephens’s lucid review of isolationism starts with Henry Wallace and Sen. Robert A. Taft in the 1940s, giving context to current American thinking on the left and right that “we should not be the world’s policeman.” He paints Americans as an idealistic yet complacent people who, after expecting too much from winning the Cold War, have ever since felt “fleeced, like a tourist in a Mideast bazaar.” We might want to come home and be comfy, but like it or not, Stephens insists, the U.S. will remain the leading world power, and must plan for escalating global disorder. Given the U.S.’s recently renewed commitments in the Middle East, Stephens’s clear, convincing apologia for American power will make especially timely reading for American foreign policy’s skeptics and opponents. Agent: Chris Calhoun, Chris Calhoun Agency. -
Kirkus
October 15, 2014
In his first book, the Pulitzer Prize-winning foreign affairs columnist for the Wall Street Journal surveys the tumultuous international scene and calls for America to do what great nations have always done: Lead.By any objective measure, writes Stephens, the United States is not in decline. We'll be the world's leading power for decades to come, the chief adversary for the likes of China, Russia and Iran, and "the preferred target for any ambitious terrorist group." For the past 10 years, however, the nation has been in retreat, shrinking from international responsibilities. In this mostly persuasive polemic, the author outlines the persistent tension in our history-in both major parties-between the impulse to retire entirely from the world or to try to save it. Stephens rejects isolationism outright, but he also warns against the messianic foreign policies that have motivated presidents as different as Woodrow Wilson and George W. Bush. Instead, he calls for America to accept a much more pedestrian, if absolutely necessary, role: to keep order. He realizes that war-weary, recession-battered Americans won't want to hear it, but necessity obliges us to resume the burden we shouldered during the Cold War as the world's policeman. This middle course-America as the world's "stop-and-frisk" cop (and Stephens is fully aware of the opprobrium his argument will generate)-dispenses with fanciful notions of redeeming the world, of winning hearts and minds, in favor of more modest, still difficult, aims: shaping behavior of would-be foes, deterring our enemies, acting forthrightly in our self-interest, and seeking incremental rather than transformational change. Fending off international disorder, he concedes, will require increased defense spending and wider deployment of more assets for the protection of our friends. More than anything, halting our retreat requires a political will currently not much in evidence. A provocative, carefully reasoned argument, anathema to politicians as disparate as Barack Obama and Rand Paul.COPYRIGHT(2014) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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