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The two most respected figures in American foreign policy define the international challenges facing the next president in the must-read foreign policy book of the season.
Given the bitterness of partisan debates about foreign policy, now exacerbated by a tight race for the presidency, one might expect Brzezinski and Scowcroft to disagree vehemently about the challenges America faces abroad, the decisions that have shaped the nation's current travails and what the next president should do. Instead, they seem to see eye to eye on nearly every major foreign policy issue facing the United States…And, contrary to the operative assumption behind Sunday morning TV talk shows, it turns out that two wise interlocutors who concur can be as interesting and informative as experts with completely divergent views…The next president would do well to heed their counsel but should not underestimate the difficulty of sticking to it.
More Reviews and RecommendationsZbignew Brzezinski, formerly President Carter’s National Security Advisor, is a counselor and trustee at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and professor at Johns Hopkins University. His many books include the New York Times bestseller Second Chance. He lives in Washington, D.C.
Brent Scowcroft is President of The Scowcroft Group, an international business and financial advisory firm. He served as National Security Advisor to two presidents and as Military Assistant to President Nixon. He is the co-author, with former President George H.W. Bush, of A World Transformed. He lives in Washington, D.C.
The journalist and novelist David Ignatius is an associate editor at the Washington Post, where he writes a twice-weekly column, and also the co-host (with Fareed Zakaria) of PostGlobal on WashingtonPost.com. He lives in Washington, D.C.
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February 16, 2009:
Imagine: Two masters of foreign policy - two men who have seen its inner workings through some of the most strenuous and trying times in our recent history and have massaged and influenced the outcomes of those events - sitting down at a table with a top columnist and world-class journalist for the Washington Post. There, they all speak their minds and their thoughts are captured and recorded for all who are interested to read. This book captures some of the most important opinions and insights about some of the most important topics facing America and the world today.
Zbignew Brzezinski served under President Carter, and Brent Scowcroft did likewise under Presidents George H. W. Bush and Gerald Ford as National Security Advisors. Their combined experience is impressive, to say the least. One (Brzezinski) served under a Democrat, the other under two Republicans. Their insights, however, are neither partisan nor overstated. Both men present their views with a common ideal, and with a common concern: America. Both of these men understand like few ever will that foreign policy amounts to doing what is in the national interest, for the national good, and with the support of the national opinion. Both have had to do so at times when the last of those qualities was hard-won.
This book covers a lot of important ground. From the current conflicts in the Middle East (Israel and the Palestinians as well as Iraq and Afghanistan) to China and Russia, this is a candid look at the opinions and experience of two foreign policy professors who earned their stripes in the real-world arena of policy implementation. Far beyond the standard snippets you read in the newspapers, these two delve deeply into some of the most pressing issues facing us as a nation. They conclude with their own views on Human Dignity and what it means to truly build and show respect for others.
I don't like reviews that include too many spoilers, so I do not intend to write one here. I can say, however, that as a political junkie and as someone who has seen both of these men speak in person, I can say that this book felt like an all access pass with permission to sit at that same table with them and pick their brains. These are questions most Americans unfortunately don't even know to ask, and they are the very questions to which we most need solid answers.
At risk of sounding cliche, this is an important book and I cannot recommend it highly enough.
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October 07, 2008: You printed Bzrezinski's bio twice and left off Scowcroft's. Obviously the key to the interest in this book is the collaboration between two security advisers on the opposite side of the fence.