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Power Rules: How Common Sense Can Rescue American Foreign Policy by Leslie H. Gelb
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Power Rules: How Common Sense Can Rescue American Foreign Policy

by Leslie H. Gelb

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What exactly is power, and how does a nation obtain, nourish, use, or lose it? Gelb answers these questions from his unique perspective of having been a senior official in the U.S. State and Defense Departments under various administrations, a columnist at the “New York Times,” and President of the Council on Foreign Relations. Taking Machiavelli's "The Prince" as inspiration, Gelb offers advice to President Obama, top government officials, and citizens concerned about the United States' historical and current use of power (military, economic, intelligence, domestic, and stage-setting), and how the country, while still in a unique position as the dominant world power to solve international problems, is in danger of losing this position. Gelb cites years of neglect to our education system, infrastructure, foreign policy, and economy as major causes of the current weakening of U. S. power, and suggests means to turn the situation around before it is too late. These include a renewed focus on domestic well-being; a clear-eyed, bipartisan discussion free of extreme liberal and conservative obfuscation of what can be done, as opposed to what should be done; and a renewed commitment to international coalition-building stemming from use of various "carrots and sticks."

This book is an honest and balanced critique of current U.S. foreign policy, sparing neither Democrats nor Republicans, and is spiced with explanations of previous strategic successes and failures from a person who was there on the inside. As a basic introduction to international policy from a variety of schools of thought, the book works well in illuminating a complex subject that has grown increasing difficult to understand and at the same time increasingly neglected in attention from Washington, the news media, and the average citizen. Some mild profanity and descriptions of war and human rights abuses.
  chosler | Jul 16, 2009 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0061714542, Hardcover)

From one of the nation's leading foreign-policy minds comes a provocative new account of how to think about—and use—America's power in the twenty-first century.

Inspired by Machiavelli's classic The Prince, Leslie H. Gelb offers illuminating guidelines on how American power actually works and should be wielded in today's tumultuous world, writing with the perspective of four decades of extraordinary access and influence in government, think tanks, and journalism. He argues that Washington risks losing the essential lifeblood of its national security—its power—unless American leaders relearn the lessons of how to use that power. Contrary to runaway fashion, Gelb argues that the world is not flat, power is not soft, and that we have not entered a post-American era in global affairs. The United States remains far and away the most powerful country in a world where power remains sharply pyramidal. But the U.S. is not the dominant power, and it can't dictate to others.

Gelb persuasively shows that America's future power must be based on the principle of mutual indispensability: Washington is the indispensable leader because it alone can galvanize coalitions to solve major international problems (and all nations know this), while other key nations are indispensable partners in getting the job done. The reality is this: succeed together or fail apart. Washington will also fail if it forgets that power is still, as in the days of Machiavelli, about pressure and coercion, carrots and sticks. Reason, values, and understanding are foreplay, but not the real thing. Gelb provides an incisive look at the major U.S. foreign-policy triumphs and tragedies of the last half century, and offers practical rules on how to effectively exercise power today. Power Rules is an impassioned challenge to both liberals and conservatives and a plea to reclaim the true meaning of power and the essential role of common sense in solving global problems.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400)

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