|
Who is this America-bashing Noam Chomsky?: Someone who should have stuck to syntax
|
As Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez tore into President Bush in a
U.N. speech last month, he waved a book by the far-left critic Noam
Chomsky and urged everybody to read it. Chavez's endorsement put the
book, Hegemony or Survival: America's Quest for Global Dominance, on
the best-seller lists. But not everybody is a Chomsky fan.
Noam Chomsky's popularity owes little or nothing to the eminent
place that he occupies in the world of ideas. That place was won many
years ago in the scienc...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
WHO SPEAKS FOR AMERICA? WHY DEMOCRACY MATTERS IN FOREIGN POLICY.(Review)
First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life
; WHO SPEAKS FOR AMERICA? WHY DEMOCRACY MATTERS IN FOREIGN POLICY. By ERIC ALTERMAN. Cornell University Press. 224 pp. $25. Beneath the technocratic jargon and competing claims that obscure so many of today's foreign policy debates, there remains a familiar philosophical divide. Across that divide,
|
|
'Hello, America? It's the World.'.(foreign policy of the USA)(presidential candidates)(Brief Article)
Newsweek International
; ... the events inevitably drew the presidential candidates into discussing foreign affairs on the campaign trail. And the breaking news from overseas ensured that the vice presidential candidates had to address foreign policy in their debate far more extensively ...
|
|
Does America Need a Foreign Policy? Towards a Diplomacy for the 21st Century.
Perspectives on Political Science
; Kissinger, Henry Does America Need a Foreign Policy? Towards a Diplomacy for the 21st Century New York: Simon and Shuster 318 pp., $30.00, ISBN 0-684-85567-4 Publication Date: June 2001 Former secretary of state and national security adviser Henry Kissinger's question is a rhetorical one. Of course
|
|
From the jaws of victory: America's foreign policy.
The Economist (US)
; A lack of coherence in foreign policy is undermining America's capacity to play its natural role as a stabilizing force in the world, argues Raymond Seitz, a former career diplomat who served as America's ambassador to Britain in 1991-94. SPRING came exuberantly to Washington this year. Flowering
|
|
Easily enough for two volumes; American foreign policy.(Dangerous Nation: America's Place in the World from Its Earliest Days to the Dawn of the Twentieth Century)(Book review)
The Economist (US)
; ROBERT KAGAN rose to prominence in 2003 with Of Paradise and Power , a bestseller about America and Europe, which began: It is time to stop pretending that Europeans and Americans share a common view of the world, or even that they occupy the same world. Now he has returned to the stage with
|
|
Hegemony or Survival: America's Quest for Global Dominance.(The Bubble of American Supremacy)(A Bitter Harvest: US Foreign Policy and Afghanistan)(Book Review)
New Zealand International Review
; HEGEMONY OR SURVIVAL: America's Quest for Global Dominance Author: Noam Chomsky Published by: Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, 2003, 278pp, $24.95. THE BUBBLE OF AMERICAN SUPREMACY Author: George Soros Published by: Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, 2004, 208pp, $29.95. A BITTER HARVEST: US Foreign
|
|
Condi's challenge; America and its allies.(A new foreign policy?)(Condoleezza Rice)
The Economist (US)
; Second term + new team = second thoughts? IN THE January 2000 edition of Foreign Affairs, two eminent Republicans outlined America's main diplomatic tasks. There is work to do with the Europeans, wrote one. Foreign policy in a Republican administration will most certainly be internationalist. In
|
|
Why America doesn't lead: foreign policy must flow from the top down, not the bottom up. (President Clinton's stand on foreign policy) (Editorial)
The Economist (US)
; RICHARD NIXON made the point, even from the grave. His last book, Beyond Peace , published this week, complains that America should have taken the lead in Bosnia. His America, he implies, would have done so. A succession of clear-eyed memos in the last years of his life told various presidents how
|
|
Foreign-policy primer: As Bush moves closer to victory, it's time for him to solidify his views on America's international role.(Knight Ridder Newspapers)
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service
; Dear Governor Bush: The odds look high that we'll be calling you president-elect soon, so we'd like to clarify some of your ideas about a Bush foreign policy. Or, should we say, some of your advisers' ideas. We know few voters punched the hole next to your name on account of your expertise on
|
|
Which America? Bush can reshape a foreign policy that has left U.S. isolated.
Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service
; The following editorial appeared in the San Jose Mercury News on Sunday, May 9: X X X Which America do you want the world to know? That's one of the most important questions voters will be ...
|