The recent publication of State of denial, by veteran Washington journalist Bob Woodward, created firestorm of controversy over its central claim that the Bush administration is in denial over the severity of the unfolding crisis in Iraq. But one of the most revealing aspects of the book is its portrayal of the American policymaking process as dysfunctional, incompetent and beset by personal rivalries and ambitions. Woodward's account of the Bush administration's handling of Iraq reveals that bureaucratic necrosis, cronyism and internecine warfare between the Pentagon and the State Department are now the signature features of the American government. Thus an alternative reading of Woodward's book suggests that American people are no longer ...
This Trends article discusses questions surrounding whether the Bush administration intentionally di...
The war with Iraq, now three years on, will surely be regarded by historians as one of the more unus...
Operation Iraqi Freedom succeeded in overthrowing Saddam Hussein, but Iraq remains unstable because ...
Catley and Mosler provide an account of the forces driving American foreign policy today as well as ...
The American public was doubly deceived into compliance with the Iraq War – first by the government,...
The issue of empire has once again become a major political question in American foreign policy disc...
Presented first at the symposium on the future of American policy in the Middle East. Entitled “Afte...
The George W. Bush administration invaded Iraq in 2003, capitalizing on the public fear and paranoia...
This article puts in context why President of the United States of America George W. Bush has been u...
In the haze of popular memory, and even in intellectual circles, the most common explanation for the...
The United States of America and its main ally, the United Kingdom, are currently deeply committed t...
This book is a history of the State Department but, more broadly, of the American foreign policymaki...
When the current phase of our conflict with Iraq began in March 2003, much was unknown. Our politica...
This article analyses the British government’s controversial September 2002 Dossier on alleged Iraqi...
As the year 2001 unfolded, the United States stood at the apex of global power, possessing unrivalle...
This Trends article discusses questions surrounding whether the Bush administration intentionally di...
The war with Iraq, now three years on, will surely be regarded by historians as one of the more unus...
Operation Iraqi Freedom succeeded in overthrowing Saddam Hussein, but Iraq remains unstable because ...
Catley and Mosler provide an account of the forces driving American foreign policy today as well as ...
The American public was doubly deceived into compliance with the Iraq War – first by the government,...
The issue of empire has once again become a major political question in American foreign policy disc...
Presented first at the symposium on the future of American policy in the Middle East. Entitled “Afte...
The George W. Bush administration invaded Iraq in 2003, capitalizing on the public fear and paranoia...
This article puts in context why President of the United States of America George W. Bush has been u...
In the haze of popular memory, and even in intellectual circles, the most common explanation for the...
The United States of America and its main ally, the United Kingdom, are currently deeply committed t...
This book is a history of the State Department but, more broadly, of the American foreign policymaki...
When the current phase of our conflict with Iraq began in March 2003, much was unknown. Our politica...
This article analyses the British government’s controversial September 2002 Dossier on alleged Iraqi...
As the year 2001 unfolded, the United States stood at the apex of global power, possessing unrivalle...
This Trends article discusses questions surrounding whether the Bush administration intentionally di...
The war with Iraq, now three years on, will surely be regarded by historians as one of the more unus...
Operation Iraqi Freedom succeeded in overthrowing Saddam Hussein, but Iraq remains unstable because ...