Senator Barack Obama’s election in November as the next president of the United States raises many questions about the future direction of American for- eign and national security policy. None is more important than the question whether the Obama presidency will bring about a significant course correction in the grand strategy of the United States. Will an Obama administration cut defense spending dramatically while recapitalizing America’s instruments of “soft power”
The nature of the challenges we foresee for the Navy and the nation in the decades ahead has resulte...
This article reviews American policy toward Syria since the onset of its civil war there. It concent...
This article examines the interplay of discourse and practice in American grand strategy under Presi...
As the United States enters its tenth year at war with an amorphous yet brutal enemy, it is worth st...
With the arrival of a new American president in 2009, the power and constitutional authority of the ...
The election results may have an effect on American foreign policy, but this will probably not be as...
Five years ago, in November 2008, Barack Hussein Obama was elected the 44th US president. Senator Ob...
This essay responds to a question posed by the William Mitchell Law Review for its annual national s...
For the past decade, much has been debated and written about U.S. security interests in Africa. The ...
The article aims at analyzing the development of the U.S. Africa Command during the three presidenti...
Academic grand strategists are very much aware of the importance of, the need for, and situational d...
American security policy rests on a three-legged stool consisting of defense, diplomacy, and develop...
Barack Obama ran for the presidency on a policy of change-change in domestic policy and change in fo...
This article explores the social construction of American grand strategy as nexus of identity and na...
The end of the Cold War, the ongoing democratization of much of the rest of the world, and the succe...
The nature of the challenges we foresee for the Navy and the nation in the decades ahead has resulte...
This article reviews American policy toward Syria since the onset of its civil war there. It concent...
This article examines the interplay of discourse and practice in American grand strategy under Presi...
As the United States enters its tenth year at war with an amorphous yet brutal enemy, it is worth st...
With the arrival of a new American president in 2009, the power and constitutional authority of the ...
The election results may have an effect on American foreign policy, but this will probably not be as...
Five years ago, in November 2008, Barack Hussein Obama was elected the 44th US president. Senator Ob...
This essay responds to a question posed by the William Mitchell Law Review for its annual national s...
For the past decade, much has been debated and written about U.S. security interests in Africa. The ...
The article aims at analyzing the development of the U.S. Africa Command during the three presidenti...
Academic grand strategists are very much aware of the importance of, the need for, and situational d...
American security policy rests on a three-legged stool consisting of defense, diplomacy, and develop...
Barack Obama ran for the presidency on a policy of change-change in domestic policy and change in fo...
This article explores the social construction of American grand strategy as nexus of identity and na...
The end of the Cold War, the ongoing democratization of much of the rest of the world, and the succe...
The nature of the challenges we foresee for the Navy and the nation in the decades ahead has resulte...
This article reviews American policy toward Syria since the onset of its civil war there. It concent...
This article examines the interplay of discourse and practice in American grand strategy under Presi...