Rise of the Revisionists : Russia, China, and Iran
โ Scribed by Gary J. Schmitt; Dan Blumenthal; Reuel Marc Gerecht; Frederick W. Kagan; Walter Russell Mead
- Publisher
- AEI Press
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 122
- Series
- American Enterprise Institute Series
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Rise of the Revisionists: Russia, China, and Iran is a five-essay volume, edited by the American Enterprise Institute's Gary J. Schmitt, that examines the three rising powers as they challenge the US and the global order in three critical regions of the world. Essays by the American Enterprise Institute's Frederick W. Kagan on Russia and Dan Blumenthal on China and by Foundation for the Defense of Democracies Senior Fellow Reuel Marc Gerecht on Iran analyze the historical roots of each country's ambitions, their strategic goals, and possible US policies for meeting the challenges and threats posed by each. Those essays are framed by an introduction by Gary Schmitt that places the tests facing the US foreign policy in a broader strategic framework and by a concluding essay by Hudson Institute Scholar Walter Russell Mead that looks to the Father of History, Thucydides, to provide insight into the complex set of domestic and foreign realities that shape American statecraft in this most challenging time.
โฆ Subjects
Hegemony-China.; POL011000; POL012000; POL047000
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><b>How three key figures in Moscow, Beijing and Tehran built ruthless irregular warfare campaigns that are eroding Western power.</b></p><p>Conventional warfare โ clashes between large military forces โ defined twentieth-century power. But today, facing a dominant American military, principal adv
An examination of why Russia chose to jeopardize its embryonic partnership with the West in favour of alignment with states like China, Iran and Iraq.
<span>This book analyzes Russian and Chinese revisionism in the face of US and Western post-Cold War liberal international order building and asks why both powers have turned revisionist in the late 2000s. The study develops a neoclassical realist model of international order building and contestati
This book analyzes Russian and Chinese revisionism in the face of US and Western post-Cold War liberal international order building and asks why both powers have turned revisionist in the late 2000s. The study develops a neoclassical realist model of international order building and contestation and