Amitai Etzioni

Amitai Etzioni served as a senior advisor to the Carter White House; taught at Columbia University, Harvard and The University of California at Berkeley; and is a university professor and professor of international relations at The George Washington University. His latest book is Hot Spots: American Foreign Policy in a Post-Human-Rights World.


Essays

War is costly. Nation building is costlier. And nation-building projects almost never succeed, as this analysis demonstrates.

U.S.-Pakistani relations are in crisis. Strategic fear of India prevents Pakistan from bending to U.S. demands. Easing India-Pakistan tensions could change the dynamics of the U.S.-Pakistan alliance.

A community-based security approach for the land of the two rivers.

In the opening round of an exchange on democracy promotion that will continue over the coming weeks, five TNI authors examine themes and questions raised in Paul Saunders's essay.

The Bush Administration’s focus on democracy overlooks the need for security.

The Great Debate

Several TNI regulars assess the campaign's last debate.

Reviews

A new book exposes the weak feedback loops that doom Washington to repeat the same mistakes.

Commentary

How would the former senator approach Beijing?

A recent book has the right idea, but leaves policymakers to fill in the blanks.

The task of securing Assad's chemical arsenal is simply too big for America's covert forces.

The New York Times' proposal for the president's second-term foreign policy combines wooly-headed idealism with half-baked ideas.

Efforts to prepare the Afghans to fend off the Taliban on their own suffer from cultural tone-deafness.

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January 14, 2013