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Ameryka i świat By Zbigniew Brzeziński - HCDJ

Tekst oryginalny
America And The World By Zbigniew Brzezinski - HCDJ
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Znajduje się w: Swannanoa, North Carolina, Stany Zjednoczone
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Parametry przedmiotu

Stan
Dobry: Książka, która była czytana, ale nadal jest w dobrym stanie. Na okładce widoczne są ...
ISBN
9780465015016
Book Title
America and the World : Conversations on the Future of American Foreign Policy
Item Length
9.2in
Publisher
Basic Books
Publication Year
2008
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Item Height
1in
Author
David Ignatius
Genre
Political Science
Topic
General, International Relations / General, American Government / General
Item Width
6.1in
Item Weight
20.1 Oz
Number of Pages
304 Pages

O tym produkcie

Product Information

The two most respected figures in American foreign policy define the international challenges facing the next president in the must-read foreign policy book of the season.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Basic Books
ISBN-10
0465015018
ISBN-13
9780465015016
eBay Product ID (ePID)
65667706

Product Key Features

Book Title
America and the World : Conversations on the Future of American Foreign Policy
Author
David Ignatius
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Topic
General, International Relations / General, American Government / General
Publication Year
2008
Genre
Political Science
Number of Pages
304 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9.2in
Item Height
1in
Item Width
6.1in
Item Weight
20.1 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
Jz1480.B687 2008
Reviews
The American Conservative "In the coming years, we can only hope that policymakers embrace the enlightened realism of Brzezinski and Scowcroft.", FromThe New York Times Reviewed by Michiko KakutaniIn the months before the American invasion of Iraq, among the few members of the foreign policy establishment to speak out forcefully about the dangers of going to war unilaterally against Saddam Hussein were Brent Scowcroft, national security adviser to the first President Bush, and Zbigniew Brzezinski, national security adviser to President Jimmy Carter.In August 2002 Mr. Scowcroft warned that a "virtual go-it-alone strategy against Iraq" would degrade "international cooperation with us against terrorism," and he presciently predicted that such a war "would not be a cakewalk," as some members of the George W. Bush administration contended, but could involve "a large-scale, long-term military occupation" and "would be very expensive - with serious consequences for the U.S. and global economy."That same month Mr. Brzezinski cautioned that "war is too serious a business and too unpredictable in its dynamic consequences - especially in a highly flammable region - to be undertaken because of a personal peeve, demagogically articulated fears or vague factual assertions." In February 2003, he added that "an America that decides to act essentially on its own regarding Iraq" could "find itself quite alone in having to cope with the costs and burdens of the war's aftermath, not to mention widespread and rising hostility abroad."In a trenchant new book, "America and the World: Conversations on the Future of American Foreign Policy," Mr. Brzezinski and Mr. Scowcroft (along with the Washington Post columnist David Ignatius, acting as moderator) incisively discuss the fallout of the Bush administration's war in Iraq, including the empowerment of Iran, the recruitment of more terrorists and the inflaming of hatreds within the region. They also survey the foreign policy landscape as a whole: the consequences of globalization, the rise of China as a new economic behemoth, the ambitions of a new Russia under the leadership of Vladimir V. Putin and Dmitri A. Medvedev.Their wide-ranging dialogue gives the reader an acute sense of the daunting challenges (including nuclear proliferation, global warming and terrorism) confronted by America in a rapidly changing international environment, even as it emphasizes the importance of the coming presidential election in picking a leader to grapple with those issues at what could well be a hinge moment in modern history.In addition to the continuing problems in Iraq, Mr. Scowcroft says, there exists now the overarching "possibility of a general Middle East conflict in which the costs of Iraq would look minuscule." Both he and Mr. Brzezinski underscore the importance of the Israeli-Palestinian peace process - which they suggest could change the psychology of the region and act as a catalyst for dealing with Hamas, Hezbollah, Syria and Iran - and both stress the importance of the next president's engaging in that process immediately."We have an unusual moment now," says Mr. Scowcroft, noting: "We have an Israeli government that is weak. We have a Palestinian entity that is weak. And, really for the first time, we have Arab countries ready to support a solution." He adds that "the region is incredibly fragile right now" and worries about the time it will take for the new president to get up to speed.Although they come from opposite sides of the political aisle (Mr. Scowcroft is a Republican, Mr. Brzezinski a Democrat), both are foreign policy realists who believe that the United States must constructively engage with a rapidly changing world, not react defensively to it. And while they disagree on aspects of the expansion of NATO and the timing of an American, FromThe Washington Post Reviewed by MoisÉs NaÍmAs octogenarian white guys with high-level U.S. foreign policy experience go, Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft could not be more different. Brzezinski was born in Poland and Scowcroft in Utah. The former made his name as a professor at Harvard and Columbia, the latter as a general in the Air Force. Brzezinski became Jimmy Carter's national security adviser, and Scowcroft was Richard Nixon's military assistant before serving as national security adviser to Gerald Ford and George H. W. Bush. Today, Scowcroft is one of the Republican Party's elder statesmen in the foreign policy arena, while Brzezinski plays a similar role for the Democrats.Given the bitterness of partisan debates about foreign policy, now exacerbated by a tight race for the presidency, one might expect Brzezinski and Scowcroft to disagree vehemently about the challenges America faces abroad, the decisions that have shaped the nation's current travails and what the next president should do. Instead, they seem to see eye to eye on nearly every major foreign policy issue facing the United States. We know this because last spring Washington Post columnist David Ignatius sat down with both men for several days of wide-ranging discussion. America and the World is an edited transcript of their conversations. And, contrary to the operative assumption behind Sunday morning TV talk shows, it turns out that two wise interlocutors who concur can be as interesting and informative as experts with completely divergent views.One of the issues on which Brzezinski and Scowcroft largely agree is Iraq. When the idea of striking Iraq was first floated in the aftermath of 9/11, both voiced doubts about its wisdom. For Scowcroft, criticizing the invasion must have been particularly difficult, given his close ties to the Bush family. Nonetheless, he published a prescient article in the Wall Street Journal titled, "Don't Attack Saddam." In that August 2002 piece, Scowcroft warned that invading Iraq would "seriously jeopardize, if not destroy, the global counterterrorist campaign we have undertaken" and would be "very expensive -- with serious consequences for the U.S. and global economy." But in this book, Ignatius ably steers Scowcroft and Brzezinski beyond criticism of the decisions that led to war and toward consensus on what to do now: Exit slowly -- and only after a more stable regional context has been nurtured, especially by engaging Iran and reinvigorating the peace process between Israel and the Palestinians.As Scowcroft and Brzezinski move on to discuss China, Russia and Europe, a central point they repeatedly make is that the United States must shed the bunker mentality that has infused its foreign policy since 9/11. According to Ignatius, both men want "to restore a confident, forward leaning America. . . . Their idea of a twenty-first century American superpower is a nation that reaches out to the world -- not to preach but to listen and cooperate and, where necessary, compel."That position, in turn, is rooted in a recognition of what Brzezinski calls the global political awakening. "For the first time in history," he contends, "all of the world is politically activated . . . creating massive intolerance, impatience with inequality . . . jealousies, resentment, more rapid immigration." These demands for dignity and higher living standards (which governments often are unable to meet), coupled with the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, lead Brzezinski to observe ominously that "today, it's much easier to kill a million people than to govern a million restless, stirred-up, impatient people."To both Scowcroft and Brzezinski, the conviction that globalization is spreading not just trade and technology, but also resentment and impatience, is cause, Boston Globe "..had Sarah Palin read this handy primer before the election, she might have had more to talk about than the view of Russia. The rest of America should read it now to understand what lies before us."
Text by
Brzezinski, Zbigniew, Scowcroft, Brent
Copyright Date
2008
Target Audience
Trade
Lccn
2008-482173
Dewey Decimal
328.73
Dewey Edition
22

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