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Eight years after 9/11 and in the shadow of two protracted U.S.
military campaigns in the Middle East, the enemy is not only
undefeated but emboldened and resurgent. What went wrong-and what
should we do going forward? Winning the Unwinnable War shows how
our own policy ideas led to 9/11 and then crippled our response in
the Middle East, and it makes the case for an unsettling
conclusion: By subordinating military victory to perverse,
allegedly moral constraints, Washington's policy has undermined our
national security. Owing to the significant influence of Just War
Theory and neoconservatism, the Bush administration consciously put
the imperative of shielding civilians and bringing them elections
above the goal of eliminating real threats to our security.
Consequently, this policy left our enemies stronger, and America
weaker, than before. The dominant alternative to Bush-esque
idealism in foreign policy-so-called realism-has made a strong
comeback under the tenure of Barack Obama. But this nonjudgmental,
supposedly practical approach is precisely what helped unleash the
enemy prior to 9/11. The message of the essays in this thematic
collection is that only by radically re-thinking our foreign policy
in the Middle East can we achieve victory over the enemy that
attacked us on 9/11. We need a new moral foundation for our Mideast
policy. That new starting point for U.S. policy is the moral ideal
championed by the philosopher Ayn Rand: rational self-interest.
Implementing this approach entails objectively defining our
national interest as protecting the lives and freedoms of
Americans-and then taking principled action to safeguard them. The
book lays out the necessary steps for achieving victory and for
securing America's long-range interests in the volatile Middle
East.
Eight years after 9/11 and in the shadow of two protracted U.S.
military campaigns in the Middle East, the enemy is not only
undefeated but emboldened and resurgent. What went wrong_and what
should we do going forward? Winning the Unwinnable War shows how
our own policy ideas led to 9/11 and then crippled our response in
the Middle East, and it makes the case for an unsettling
conclusion: By subordinating military victory to perverse,
allegedly moral constraints, Washington's policy has undermined our
national security. Owing to the significant influence of Just War
Theory and neoconservatism, the Bush administration consciously put
the imperative of shielding civilians and bringing them elections
above the goal of eliminating real threats to our security.
Consequently, this policy left our enemies stronger, and America
weaker, than before. The dominant alternative to Bush-esque
idealism in foreign policy_so-called realism_has made a strong
comeback under the tenure of Barack Obama. But this nonjudgmental,
supposedly practical approach is precisely what helped unleash the
enemy prior to 9/11. The message of the essays in this thematic
collection is that only by radically re-thinking our foreign policy
in the Middle East can we achieve victory over the enemy that
attacked us on 9/11. We need a new moral foundation for our Mideast
policy. That new starting point for U.S. policy is the moral ideal
championed by the philosopher Ayn Rand: rational self-interest.
Implementing this approach entails objectively defining our
national interest as protecting the lives and freedoms of
Americans_and then taking principled action to safeguard them. The
book lays out the necessary steps for achieving victory and for
securing America's long-range interests in the volatile Middle
East.
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