America at the Crossroads

http://dbpedia.org/resource/America_at_the_Crossroads an entity of type: Thing

America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy is a 2006 book written by Francis Fukuyama. This book briefly discusses the history of neoconservatism, with particular focus on its major tenets and political implications. Fukuyama outlines his rationale for supporting the Bush administration, as well as where he believes it has gone wrong. Fukuyama argues that the Iraq invasion was poorly planned and orchestrated, and that the George W. Bush administration underestimated the social construction that would be necessary to create a new democracy after the war. rdf:langString
rdf:langString America at the Crossroads
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rdf:langString Francis Fukuyama
rdf:langString Ken Jowitt
rdf:langString Preface, ix
rdf:langString The Neoconservative Legacy, p. 21
xsd:gMonthDay --09-11
rdf:langString If you were to ask Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, or President Bush himself who Leo Strauss was, you would probably draw blank stares. The idea of Straussian influence gained currency only because Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy secretary of defense, studied briefly with Strauss and with Allan Bloom, who was himself a student of Strauss. But Wolfowitz never regarded himself as a Strauss protégé, and his foreign policy views were much more heavily influenced by other teachers, in particular Albert Wohlstetter.
rdf:langString So the logic behind an anticipatory strategy is powerful. However, its strategic application demands the combined wisdom of Pericles and Solomon. To begin with, the premise for an anticipatory attack posits a hostile leader and regime platonically impervious to any environmental changes whether domestic or international. This is not always a mistaken premise — Hitler and Pol Pot are cases in point — but it is almost always mistaken. Over time, most regimes do change substantially if not essentially. One has only to look at the Soviet Union after 1956 and China after 1978.
rdf:langString America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power and the Neoconservative Legacy
rdf:langString Rage, Hubris, and Regime Change: The Urge to Speed History Along
rdf:langString America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy is a 2006 book written by Francis Fukuyama. This book briefly discusses the history of neoconservatism, with particular focus on its major tenets and political implications. Fukuyama outlines his rationale for supporting the Bush administration, as well as where he believes it has gone wrong. Fukuyama argues that the Iraq invasion was poorly planned and orchestrated, and that the George W. Bush administration underestimated the social construction that would be necessary to create a new democracy after the war. Fukuyama highlights the controversies that surround neoconservatism, describing how it has evolved into something he can no longer support. He suggests that neoconservativism can be described as having four common principles through the end of the Cold War: * A belief that the internal character of regimes matters and that foreign policy must reflect the deepest values of liberal democratic societies. * A belief that American power has been and could be used for moral purposes, and that the United States needs to remain engaged in international affairs. * A distrust of ambitious social engineering projects. * A skepticism about the legitimacy and effectiveness of international law and institutions to achieve either security or justice. At the conclusion of the book, Fukuyama proposes a new order in international politics, stating the world needs a change in its actual institutions, advocating what he calls multi-multilateralism.
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