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Bush's policies resemble things advocated by neocons, a loose group with a distinct history and well-publicized ideas, not at all a shadowy cabal.
A new book on Iran and U.S.-Iranian relations is long on polemics and short on quality analysis.
Regime actually describes an entire system of government. And if the American regime is imperial only when Republicans are in power, then it's not a serious claim, it's just a convenient and partisan slander.
Olivier Roy provides yet more evidence of just how poor a resource so many professors are when it comes to formulating foreign and national security policies.
Notably absent from a book about Iraq is any consideration of what Iraqis think.
Who or what are neoconservatives and what is their relation to Bush's policies?
Gerecht comments on factual errorsin a November piece by Robert Dreyfuss in the American Prospect.
Norman Podhoretz, senior fellow, Hudson Institute, and editor of Commentary from 1960 to 1995, delivered the fifth in AEI's 1995-1996 Bradley Lecture Series on January 26, 1996.





