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ID133780
Title ProperStrategic recalibration
Other Title Informationframework for a 21st-century national security strategy
LanguageENG
AuthorJentleson, Bruce W
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The release of the Obama administration's 2014 National Security Strategy comes amidst increasing criticism of its strategic savvy. Some are rank partisan, some Monday-morning quarterbacking. Some, though, reflect the intensifying debate over the optimal U.S. foreign policy strategy for our contemporary era.
At one end of the debate are those advocating retrenchment, who see limited global threats on one hand and prioritize domestic concerns on the other-be they the budget-cutting of the Tea Party right or the nation-building-at-home of the progressive left. At the other end are neoconservatives and others pushing for re-assertiveness. This is based on a bullish assessment of U.S. power and the contention that it still is both in the U.S. national interest and that of world order for the United States to be the dominant nation. While retrenchment overestimates the extent to which the United States can stand apart, re-assertiveness overestimates the extent to which it can sit atop.
`In' analytical NoteWashington Quarterly Vol.37, No.1; Spr.2014: p.115-136
Journal SourceWashington Quarterly Vol.37, No.1; Spr.2014: p.115-136
Key WordsGeopolitical Dynamics ;  Economic Dynamics ;  Technological Dynamics ;  United States - US ;  U.S. Foreign Policy ;  Contemporary Politics ;  U.S. National Interest ;  World Order ;  Strategic Recalibration ;  National Security Strategy ;  Strategic Leadership ;  Strategic Environment ;  Geopolitics ;  Geo-Strategy ;  Power Elites ;  Great Power


 
 
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