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home > by publication type > books > How Did This Happen?
| Authors: | Gideon Rose, Managing Editor, Foreign Affairs James F. Hoge Jr., Editor, Peter G. Peterson Chair, Foreign Affairs |
|---|
November 2001
352
ISBN 1586481304
$14.00
In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, one question has been on the mind of every American: “How did this happen?” PublicAffairs and Foreign Affairs came together to publish a book that seeks to answer this question in all its critical aspects: the motives and actions of the terrorists, the status of the U.S. military, the context of the Middle East, airport security, and diplomatic pressures.
The book provides readers with an authoritative but accessible account of the issues that led to the present crisis—not as a symposium of opinion, but as a series of narratives on different aspects of the situation, providing perspective, information, and sound interpretation. How Did This Happen? brings together such noted experts as Fouad Ajami, Karen Armstrong, Richard Butler, Samuel R. Berger, Wesley K. Clark, William J. Perry, Alan Wolfe, and Fareed Zakaria to help make the events of that terrible day more understandable, even as we steel ourselves for actions yet to come.
Among the conclusions of twenty-three essays on the causes and consequences of the September 11 attacks: the terrorists will not provoke the “clash of civilizations” that Osama bin Laden promoted, nor reduce the U.S. presence in the Middle East; larger U.S. defense budgets will lessen the pressure to choose between new force structures and expensive weapons systems; the attacks increased the need for support from partners abroad, including former Cold War adversaries Russia and China; the United States should reconsider whether its close ties with repressive regimes truly serve long-term U.S. interests.
Read the Foreign Affairs review by Peter L. Bergen.
James F. Hoge Jr. is the editor of Foreign Affairs.
Gideon Rose is the managing editor of Foreign Affairs.
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Complete list of CFR Books.
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This report argues that the United States must lead with domestic action on climate change and proposes a U.S. negotiating strategy for a global UN climate agreement that includes commitments from all major economies, while also promoting a less formal Partnership for Climate Cooperation that would focus the world's largest emitters on implementing aggressive emissions reductions.
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About Independent Task Forces at the Council.
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After two decades of liberalization, many countries around the world are adopting new restrictions on foreign direct investment (FDI) that could retard continued progress. The authors make recommendations for correcting this protectionist drift by proposing guidelines for how countries can better regulate FDI yet still reap its economic benefits.
In this Council Special Report, the authors make a strong case that the Bush administration’s policy of diplomatic isolation of Syria is not serving U.S. interests, and offer informed history and thoughtful analysis of the country and its external behavior.
Complete list of Council Special Reports.
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