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Dangerous Doctrine - How Obama's Grand Strategy Weakened America (Hardcover)
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Dangerous Doctrine - How Obama's Grand Strategy Weakened America (Hardcover)
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Much like Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, President Barack
Obama came to office as a politician who emphasized conviction
rather than consensus. During his 2008 presidential campaign, he
pledged to transform the role of the United States abroad. His
ambitious foreign policy goals included a global climate treaty,
the peaceful withdrawal of American military forces from Iraq and
Afghanistan, and a new relationship with Iran. Throughout Obama's
tenure, pundits and scholars have offered competing interpretations
of his "grand strategy," while others have maintained that his
policies were incoherent or, at best, ad hoc. In Dangerous
Doctrine, political scientist Robert G. Kaufman argues that the
forty-fourth president has indeed articulated a clear, consistent
national security policy and has pursued it with remarkable
fidelity. Yet Kaufman contends that President Obama has imprudently
abandoned the muscular internationalism that has marked US foreign
policy since the end of World War II. Drawing on international
relations theory and American diplomatic history, Kaufman presents
a robust critique of the Obama doctrine as he situates the
president's use of power within the traditions of American
strategic practice. Focusing on the pivotal regions of Europe, the
Middle East, and Asia, this provocative study demonstrates how
current executive branch leadership threatens America's role as a
superpower, weakening its ability to spread democracy and counter
threats to geopolitical order in increasingly unstable times.
Kaufman proposes a return to the grand strategy of moral democratic
realism, as practiced by presidents such as Harry S. Truman, Ronald
Reagan, and George W. Bush, with the hope of reestablishing the
United States as the world's dominant power.
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