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Learning from the Cold War - by Jonathan Stevenson (Paperback)
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Highlights
- An ingenious look at the Cold War?and how it can help America move forward Adding a fresh perspective to the debate about America's options in the ?
- About the Author: Jonathan Stevenson is a professor of strategic studies at the Naval War College, and was Senior Fellow for Counter-terrorism and editor of Strategic Survey at the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS).
- 320 Pages
- Political Science, Terrorism
Description
Book Synopsis
An ingenious look at the Cold War?and how it can help America move forward
Adding a fresh perspective to the debate about America's options in the ?war on terror, ? this lucid retrospective by one of the most admired voices in the national security arena answers an important and largely ignored question: How can the brilliance and energy of the great Cold War thinkers be recaptured and applied to the strategic challenges posed by transnational terrorism? In recounting the failures and successes of American strategists during the Cold War, Jonathan Stevenson synthesizes a massive amount of information from past and present to remind us that protecting the United States today will take more than good intelligence?it will also require exceptional imagination.
Review Quotes
" A penetrating and inventive exploration of the Cold War and its aftermath."
-Jessica Stern, author of "Terror in the Name of God"
About the Author
Jonathan Stevenson is a professor of strategic studies at the Naval War College, and was Senior Fellow for Counter-terrorism and editor of Strategic Survey at the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). He spent most of the 1990's as a journalist in sub-Saharan Africa and Northern Ireland, and his previous books include We Wrecked the Place: Contemplating an End to the Northern Irish Troubles and Losing Mogadishu. He has published articles in Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, and The National Interest, as well as in The New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal, and The New Republic. He lives in Mystic, CT.