In Debriefing the President: The Interrogation of Saddam Hussein, John Nixon tells the fascinating story of Saddam Hussein’s capture and interrogation. At the same time, writes Joe Devanny, Nixon excoriates the George W. Bush administration’s approach to intelligence and policy in the build-up to the Iraq war. This is a short, highly readable book, suffused with controlled anger at the intelligence community’s shortcomings, but also offering some striking lessons for would-be intelligence analysts and policymakers, underlining the risks of unchallenged assumptions and the pitfalls of decision-making with imperfect information and political bias
In Jimmy Carter and the Middle East: The Politics of Presidential Diplomacy, Daniel Strieff seeks to...
In Trading Secrets, former Financial Times security correspondent Mark Huband aims to provide a uniq...
Sasha Jesperson reviews the bestselling book on the West’s relationship with Al-Qaeda, finding a poi...
Winner of the 2014 Lionel Gelber Prize for Foreign Affairs, The Blood Telegram chronicles how Nixon ...
Matthew Partridge finds Dick Cheney’s memoir to be candid and honest, charting the former American V...
In Going to War in Iraq: When Citizens and the Press Matter, Stanley Feldman, Leonie Huddy and Georg...
In Eisenhower and Cambodia: Diplomacy, Covert Action and the Origins of the Second Indochina War, Wi...
Review of The War Over Iraq: Saddam\u27s Tyranny and America\u27s Mission. By Lawrence F. Kaplan and...
Matthew Partridge finds Michael Scheuer‘s work to be extremely useful as a guide to the motivations ...
Wilson's Long drive Through A Short War is a personal account of their time in Iraq during...
Review of Peter L. Hahn. Missions Accomplished? The United States and Iraq since World War I. Oxford...
This paper is an analysis of Alexander Thompson\u27s book Channels of Power: The UN Security Counci...
The author reviews the book The Way of the Knife by Mark Mazzetti, specifically looking at the under...
Demobilizing Irregular Forces is one of the first comprehensive introductions to the process of disa...
Detained Without Cause is a collection of oral history accounts by six New York based Muslim immigra...
In Jimmy Carter and the Middle East: The Politics of Presidential Diplomacy, Daniel Strieff seeks to...
In Trading Secrets, former Financial Times security correspondent Mark Huband aims to provide a uniq...
Sasha Jesperson reviews the bestselling book on the West’s relationship with Al-Qaeda, finding a poi...
Winner of the 2014 Lionel Gelber Prize for Foreign Affairs, The Blood Telegram chronicles how Nixon ...
Matthew Partridge finds Dick Cheney’s memoir to be candid and honest, charting the former American V...
In Going to War in Iraq: When Citizens and the Press Matter, Stanley Feldman, Leonie Huddy and Georg...
In Eisenhower and Cambodia: Diplomacy, Covert Action and the Origins of the Second Indochina War, Wi...
Review of The War Over Iraq: Saddam\u27s Tyranny and America\u27s Mission. By Lawrence F. Kaplan and...
Matthew Partridge finds Michael Scheuer‘s work to be extremely useful as a guide to the motivations ...
Wilson's Long drive Through A Short War is a personal account of their time in Iraq during...
Review of Peter L. Hahn. Missions Accomplished? The United States and Iraq since World War I. Oxford...
This paper is an analysis of Alexander Thompson\u27s book Channels of Power: The UN Security Counci...
The author reviews the book The Way of the Knife by Mark Mazzetti, specifically looking at the under...
Demobilizing Irregular Forces is one of the first comprehensive introductions to the process of disa...
Detained Without Cause is a collection of oral history accounts by six New York based Muslim immigra...
In Jimmy Carter and the Middle East: The Politics of Presidential Diplomacy, Daniel Strieff seeks to...
In Trading Secrets, former Financial Times security correspondent Mark Huband aims to provide a uniq...
Sasha Jesperson reviews the bestselling book on the West’s relationship with Al-Qaeda, finding a poi...