David SkidmoreParadoxes of Power
U.S. Foreign Policy in a Changing World
Introduction
I: U.S. Dominance and Its Limits
1: American Primacy in Perspective
2: The Decline of America's Soft Power
3: The Inadequacy of American Power
4: America as a European Hegemon
5: A Global Power Shift in the Making
II: An American Empire?
6: History Lesson
7: Is the U.S. an Empire?
8: The New American Militarism
9: The American Empire
10: The Case for American Empire
11: The Empire Slinks Back
III: Strategic Choice
12: Democratic Realism
13: After Neoconservatism
14: Leadership at Risk
15: Is American Multilateralism in Decline?
IV: Attitudes toward American Power at Home and Abroad
16: The Paradoxes of American Nationalism
17: Power and Weakness
18: The Effects of September 11
19: Views of a Changing World 2003
20: Taming American Power
V: Case Studies in U.S. Grand Strategy
21: The National Security Strategy of the United States of America, 2002
22: The Case for Overthrowing Saddam Was Unimpeachable
23: America's Imperial Ambition
24: Realism's Shining Morality
25: Bounding the Global War on Terrorism
26: The End of the Bush Revolution
Conclusion