Foreign Policy Begins at Home
The biggest threat to America's security and prosperity comes not from abroad but from within, writes CFR President Haass in this provocative book.
See more in United States, U.S. Strategy and Politics
President, Council on Foreign Relations
U.S. foreign policy; international security; globalization; Asia; Middle East
The biggest threat to America's security and prosperity comes not from abroad but from within, writes CFR President Haass in this provocative book.
See more in United States, U.S. Strategy and Politics
Richard N. Haass contrasts the decisions that shaped the conduct of two wars between the United States and Iraq involving the two presidents Bush and Saddam Hussein, and writes an authoritative, personal account of how U.S. foreign policy is made, what it should seek, and how it should be pursued.
See more in Iraq, Wars and Warfare
A description of an unprecedented moment in which the United States has a chance to bring about a world where most people are safe, free, and can enjoy a decent standard of living.
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Richard Haass says that businesses have much to learn from government as they compete in an increasingly complex global landscape.
See more in Business and Foreign Policy, Geoeconomics, International Finance
Richard Haass writes that foreign policy is having only a modest impact on the U.S. electorate in the presidential primaries.
See more in U.S. Election 2008
Richard N. Haass, an expert on the Middle East and South Asia from years in government, says that the latest developments in Pakistan lead him to see that country heading into a period of considerable “drift.”
See more in Pakistan, Democratization, Elections, Terrorism
CFR President Richard N. Haass examines the global challenges facing the next U.S. president and advocates an interest-based approach to foreign policy.
See more in Grand Strategy, Presidency
Richard Haass writes that transatlantic cooperation will be less predictable and more selective in future.
See more in United States, Europe/Russia, NATO
See more in Middle East, Conflict Assessment, U.S. Strategy and Politics
After a recent trip to Pakistan, CFR President Richard N. Haass says there is a good chance for considerable political change in that country, but warns that extremists are beginning to spread out into Pakistan's urban areas.
See more in Pakistan, Democratization, Elections, U.S. Strategy and Politics
Richard N. Haass, CFR president and an expert on the Middle East, says the congressional testimony by the top two U.S. officials in Iraq has to a large extent “regained control of the Iraq debate” for the Bush administration.
See more in Iraq, Defense Strategy, Peacekeeping
See more in United States, Presidency, U.S. Election 2008
See more in Iraq, International Peace and Security
See more in Ireland, Yemen, International Peace and Security
CFR President Richard N. Haass testifies before the House Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming about the implications of oil dependence and climate change.
See more in United States, Climate Change, Energy
See more in Israel, Palestinian Authority, International Peace and Security
See more in Iraq, Congress and Foreign Policy, Grand Strategy
See more in Energy/Environment, UN, Peacekeeping
See more in Iraq, Grand Strategy
Richard N. Haass, CFR president and a well-known Middle East expert, says what President Bush’s Iraq speech “represented more than anything else was the re-Americanization of the effort.”
See more in Iran, Iraq, Syria, Wars and Warfare, Presidency
See more in Defense Strategy, Congress and Foreign Policy, Presidency, Public Diplomacy
Richard N. Haass states, "... the American era in the Middle East is over."
See more in Middle East, Defense Strategy, Public Diplomacy
See more in Iraq, Wars and Warfare, International Peace and Security, Grand Strategy
Council on Foreign Relations
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CFR President and Author of Foreign Policy Begins at Home: The Case for Putting America's House in Order
+1.212.434.9543; for all media requests, contact Sarah Doolin at +1.212.434.9886 or sdoolin@cfr.org