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GORDON, PHILIP H (12) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   060026


Allies at war: America, Europe, and the crisis over Iraq / Gordon, Philip H; Shapiro, Jeremy 2004  Book
Shapiro, Jeremy Book
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Publication New York, McGraw-Hill, 2004.
Description vi, 266p.hbk
Standard Number 0071441204
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
049373956.70443/GOR 049373MainOn ShelfGeneral 
2
ID:   018743


Bush, missile defence and the atlantic alliance / Gordon, Philip H 2001  Article
Gordon, Philip H Article
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Publication 2001.
Description p17-36
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3
ID:   023642


Bush's Middle East vision / Gordon, Philip H 2003  Article
Gordon, Philip H Article
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Publication 2003.
Description p155-166
Summary/Abstract At the heart of the Bush administration's approach to the Middle East is the determination to use America's unprecedented power to reshape the Middle East by supporting America's friends in the region, opposing its enemies and seeking to promote democracy and freedom. This means using force to overthrow the dictatorship in Iraq, promoting gradual political reform among the moderate Arab regimes and standing by Israel until the Palestinians understand that they will get nowhere with violence. Whether or not one thinks that it makes any sense – and there are plenty of reasons to believe that Bush's assumptions are misguided and that the approach will fail – it is important to understand and take seriously the new thinking in Washington.
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4
ID:   079078


Can the war on terror be won?: how to fight the right war / Gordon, Philip H   Journal Article
Gordon, Philip H Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Summary/Abstract It can, but only if U.S. officials start to think clearly about what success in the war on terror would actually look like. Victory will come only when Washington succeeds in discrediting the terrorists' ideology and undermining their support. These achievements, in turn, will require accepting that the terrorist threat can never be eradicated completely and that acting as though it can will only make it worse
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5
ID:   001507


Certain idea of France: French security policy and the Gaullist legacy / Gordon, Philip H 1993  Book
Gordon, Philip H Book
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Publication Princeton, University Press, 1993.
Description xx, 255p.
Standard Number 0691086478
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041062355.033044/GOR 041062MainOn ShelfGeneral 
6
ID:   054526


Cold war statesment confront the bomb: nuclear diplomacy since 1945 / Gaddis, John Lewis (ed); Gordon, Philip H (ed); May, Ernest R (ed); Rosenberg, Jonathan (ed) 1999  Book
Gaddis, John Lewis Book
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Publication Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1999.
Description ix, 398p.
Standard Number 0198294689
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041413355.825119/GAD 041413MainOn ShelfGeneral 
7
ID:   071835


End of the Bush revolution / Gordon, Philip H   Journal Article
Gordon, Philip H Journal Article
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Publication 2006.
Summary/Abstract The Bush administration's "revolutionary" foreign policy rhetoric has not changed, but its actual policies have: after squandering U.S. legitimacy, breaking the domestic bank, and getting the United States bogged down in an unsuccessful war, the Bush doctrine has run up against reality and become unsustainable. The counterrevolution should be welcomed -- and, if possible, locked in.
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8
ID:   071550


French security policy after the cold war: continuity, change, and implications for the United States / Gordon, Philip H 1992  Book
Gordon, Philip H Book
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Publication Santa Monica, Rand Corporation, 1992.
Description xiii, 57p.
Standard Number 0833012770
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
034055355.0330944/GOR 034055MainOn ShelfGeneral 
9
ID:   022407


Getting serious about Iraq / Gordon, Philip H; Indyk, Martin; O'Hanlon, Michael E 2002  Article
O'Hanlon, Michael E Article
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Publication 2002.
Description 9-22
Summary/Abstract The regime in Iraq can be changed, and Saddam deposed. But it is a much bigger, more complicated and more costly task than the Afghan model – or much of the discussion in Washington – would suggest. America would be taking pre-emptive action to remove a regime in the heartland of the Arab world. If it succeeds, it would end or at least greatly diminish the Iraqi WMD threat. It could also reduce Western dependence on Saudi Arabia (as well as Saudi dependence on the West), and remove the need to keep American troops there, thus dramatically changing the dynamics of the Middle East. But America would also be shouldering a responsibility that the Bush administration has been reluctant to assume, at a time when the war in Afghanistan is not over and that nation has yet to be rebuilt. If America decides to go into Iraq, it had better do so with its eyes wide open.
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10
ID:   065560


NATO after 11 september / Gordon, Philip H 2001  Article
Gordon, Philip H Article
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Publication 2001.
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11
ID:   062315


Trading places: America and Europe in the Middle east / Gordon, Philip H 2005  Journal Article
Gordon, Philip H Journal Article
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Publication 2005.
Description p87-100
Summary/Abstract For most of the past century in the Middle East, European powers like Britain and France were self-confident, interventionist, militaristic and prone to unilateral action. The Americans, on the other hand, were sympathetic to the locals, committed to compromise and strong supporters of international law and the United Nations. Now it’s the other way around. As case studies from Iran, Iraq, Algeria and Egypt show, the two sides have effectively traded places, as a result of their changing roles in the international system. The fact that Americans are now walking in European footsteps does not mean that they will suffer the same fate as their predecessors. If America can avoid the temptation to act like an imperial power and legitimise its efforts by promoting democracy and winning international support, it might also be able to avoid the resentment and violent resistance that doomed the British and French.
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12
ID:   079992


Winning the Right War / Gordon, Philip H   Journal Article
Gordon, Philip H Journal Article
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Publication 2007.
Key Words United States  War on Terrorism  Strategy 
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