Contenu du sommaire : Who won the war on terror?
Revue | Foreign Affairs |
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Numéro | September/October 2021. Vol 100 ; Number 5 |
Titre du numéro | Who won the war on terror? |
Who won the war on terror?
- Bin Laden's catastrophic success. Al Qaeda changed the world - but not in the way it expected - Nelly Lahoud p. 10
- Them and us. How America lets its enemies hijack its foreign policy - Ben Rhodes p. 22
- The good enough doctrine. Learning to live with terrorism - Daniel Byman p. 32
- Resistance is futile. The war on terror supercharged state power - Thomas Hegghammer p. 44
- From 9/11 to1/6. The war on terror supercharge the far right - Cynthia Miller-Idriss p. 54
- Winning ugly. What the war on terror cost America - Elliot Ackerman p. 66
Essays
- Beijing's American hustle. How Chinese grand strategy exploits U.S. power - Matt Pottinger p. 102
- North Korea's nuclear family. How the Kims got the bomb and why they won't give it up - Sue Mi Terry p. 115
- Strategies of restraint. Remaking America's broken foreign policy - Emma Ashford p. 128
- The United States of sanctions. The use and abuse of economic coercion - Daniel W. Drezner p. 142
- Iran's war within. Ebrahim Raisi and the triumph of the hard-liners - Mohammad Ayatollahi Tabaar p. 155
- The COVID charter. A new development model for a world in crisis - Rajiv J. Shah p. 179
- The center cannot hold. Will a divided world survive common threats? - Thomas Wright p. 192
Reviews & responses
- The case for complacency. Does Washington worry too much about threats? - Tanisha M. Fazal p. 204
- How democratic is the world's largest democracy? Narendra Modi's new India - Sadanand Dhume p. 209
- Straight of emergency? Debating Beijing's threat of Taiwan - Rache Esplin Odell and Eric Heginbotham; Bonny Lin and David Sacks; Kharis Templeman; Oriana Skylar Mastro p. 216
- Masters and commanders. Are civil-military relations in crisis? - Kori Schake; Peter D. Feaver; Risa Brooks, Jim Golby, and Heidi Urben p. 230