The decade after 2001 saw US military interventions in Iraq, Afghanistan and Libya, with the relative failure of the aftermath of the Libyan intervention leading President Obama to adopt a more soft-power approach. Adam Weinstein writes that despite previous disastrous interventions, whoever enters the White House next January will face a chorus of calls from DC-based think-tanks for the US to become involved in the Syrian civil war, demands that the new Commander in Chief may find difficult to ignore
More than two years after the U.S. pulled its last remaining combat troops out of Iraq, the Obama ad...
The NATO involvement in Libya continues characterized by an anticipated ambiguity about next steps, ...
Balancing humanitarian intervention with the possibility of a string of interventions leaving the U....
U.S. military intervention has long been among the most visible and dramatic manifestations of Ameri...
The conflict in Syria is likely to be one of President Obama’s most important foreign policy legacie...
In its first 3 years, the Obama administration fully embraced the intervention in Afghanistan it inh...
Barack Obama, as a new President of the United States, came holding the torch of changed discourse w...
Even though U.S. Middle East policies have long followed relatively predictable patterns (Quandt 200...
During his presidential campaign, Barack Obama promised to distance the United States from the neoco...
Since 2001, the United States has made major military interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya, ...
In 2011, President Obama proclaimed, “the time has come for President Assad to step aside” (“Preside...
In 2011, President Obama proclaimed, “the time has come for President Assad to step aside” (“Preside...
Institutionalizing these wars grew out of a recognition that an approach that sought to simply win b...
If President-elect Obama makes good on his campaign promise to withdraw troops from Iraq, it would b...
One year ago, the Obama Administration came within a hair’s breadth of bombing the forces of Bashar ...
More than two years after the U.S. pulled its last remaining combat troops out of Iraq, the Obama ad...
The NATO involvement in Libya continues characterized by an anticipated ambiguity about next steps, ...
Balancing humanitarian intervention with the possibility of a string of interventions leaving the U....
U.S. military intervention has long been among the most visible and dramatic manifestations of Ameri...
The conflict in Syria is likely to be one of President Obama’s most important foreign policy legacie...
In its first 3 years, the Obama administration fully embraced the intervention in Afghanistan it inh...
Barack Obama, as a new President of the United States, came holding the torch of changed discourse w...
Even though U.S. Middle East policies have long followed relatively predictable patterns (Quandt 200...
During his presidential campaign, Barack Obama promised to distance the United States from the neoco...
Since 2001, the United States has made major military interventions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya, ...
In 2011, President Obama proclaimed, “the time has come for President Assad to step aside” (“Preside...
In 2011, President Obama proclaimed, “the time has come for President Assad to step aside” (“Preside...
Institutionalizing these wars grew out of a recognition that an approach that sought to simply win b...
If President-elect Obama makes good on his campaign promise to withdraw troops from Iraq, it would b...
One year ago, the Obama Administration came within a hair’s breadth of bombing the forces of Bashar ...
More than two years after the U.S. pulled its last remaining combat troops out of Iraq, the Obama ad...
The NATO involvement in Libya continues characterized by an anticipated ambiguity about next steps, ...
Balancing humanitarian intervention with the possibility of a string of interventions leaving the U....