America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy by Francis Fukuyama


America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy
Title : America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0300122535
ISBN-10 : 9780300122534
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 226
Publication : First published March 31, 2006

Francis Fukuyama’s criticism of the Iraq war put him at odds with neoconservative friends both within and outside the Bush administration. Here he explains how, in its decision to invade Iraq, the Bush administration failed in its stewardship of American foreign policy. First, the administration wrongly made preventive war the central tenet of its foreign policy. In addition, it badly misjudged the global reaction to its exercise of “benevolent hegemony.” And finally, it failed to appreciate the difficulties involved in large-scale social engineering, grossly underestimating the difficulties involved in establishing a successful democratic government in Iraq.
Fukuyama explores the contention by the Bush administration’s critics that it had a neoconservative agenda that dictated its foreign policy during the president’s first term.  Providing a fascinating history of the varied strands of neoconservative thought since the 1930s, Fukuyama argues that the movement’s legacy is a complex one that can be  interpreted quite differently than it was after the end of the Cold War. Analyzing the Bush administration’s miscalculations in responding to the post–September 11 challenge, Fukuyama proposes a new approach to American foreign policy through which such mistakes might be turned around—one in which the positive aspects of the neoconservative legacy are joined with a more realistic view of the way American power can be used around the world.   


America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy Reviews


  • Phrodrick

    Five pages in and I was sure I would hate America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy, by Francis Fukuyama. His earlier book The End Of history by title alone struck me as too silly to read. Having finished Crossroads, it is a certainty I was too hasty about Cross Roads and may need to reconsider the other. America At the Cross Roads is an effort to bring forward Neoconservative theory and prove this new approach with historical examples. His are not my politics. His book is a demonstration case that argues for the advantages of listening to input not from your own echo chamber.

    At the Cross Roads is in part a printing of his Castle Lectures in Yale’s Program in Ethics, Politics and Economics given in 2005. At the time of publication, he was the Benard L. Swatrz Professor of Political Economy and director of the International Development Program at the School of Advanced Studies, John Hopkins Univ. Therefore, a very high-level academic speaking before a very high-level group of scholars. Credentials aside, he has a tendency to establish context and validity by listing the names of other scholars. This works if you know who these people are. Some names I recognized, but recognition does not specify what part of that person’s thinking is being evoked in support of what part of the argument under discussion. This problem is mostly in the early chapters.

    He is explicit that his topic is international policy. All domestic issues he shrugs off with the exception of approval of “Broken Windows Policing” and what officers call “whack-a-mole” arrest tactics. Broken Windows has its advocates. But it is the kind of policing that gets a black man kill for the crime of selling individual cigarettes on the streets. I will later have cause to wonder about the strategies he advocates in international policy and why they have no analogue in domestic policies.

    Leaping ahead, the heart of the text can be drawn around Fukuyama disagreements wit the foreign policy position of the later Bush presidency that lead us into the second Iraq and satellite Afghan Wars. Much of this case is insightful. He is rudely harsh towards then Secretary of State, General Colin Powel. Here is where his politics keep him from speaking honestly.

    Sec Powel was coldly sacrificed before the UN. He was given equivocal intelligence and was promised it was entirely valid. When it proved to be less than he described it, as an honest man he was compromised and had to resign. What Fukuyama cannot bring himself to admit was that this administration was committed, a priori to launching a war. All policy statements and intelligence were shaped to that preselected purpose.

    This is not to say that there was no intelligence only that it was culled for the purpose of proving the need for immediate preemptive military action. Fukuyama makes it clear that the UN and modern history allow for justified preemptive action. It is that the rules for this particular defensive war to minimize a later war were never rigorously encoded. At bottom no WMD were found. America had presumed rights to action it would not have granted to most other nations. An agreed case for action by America as a allowed originator of such action; was that USA is a ‘City on the Hill” with a proven moral right and ability to apply force for the greater good of the region or world, in short American Exceptionalism is the case for America to be allowed to conduct preemptive war at itsown discretion. Or so the Bush administration argued and with important limits so does Fukuyama.

    Every time I read this, I had to wonder why China should not be allowed to make the same case for itself. They certainly feel themselves to be exceptional and backed by the superior morality of their world views. In sum, these intangible values are a matter that any country can make for itself , with or without an American ruling on that country’s suitability.

    Moving back from specifics as applied to the Bush Administration, Fukuyama makes a very cogent case for the real problems of nation building. Bush doctrine was bed rocked in the belief that regime change must mean replacement by a liberal free democratic government. Fukuyama is right to suggest that regime change only produces a new regime. Nation building is a long term, highly fraught process. The process must promote sufficient wealth to give people time to consider larger things. An economic Maslow's hierarchy of needs. In addition, nation building requires time and resource consuming efforts to build and protect institutions. This may involve both subversive and open efforts. The goal being to build everything from educational systems to an opposition press. International involvement may include supervision of foreign investments, be it county to county assistance programs, Non-Government Organization grants or commercial private money. Where there is money there can be corruption and minimizing may be the best that can be achieved. Planning has to accept the pre-existence of tribalism, factionalism and the history of local traditions and customs.

    One has to wonder if Fukuyama has analogs for promoting domestic tranquility.

    Despite traditional conservative rejection of international organizations, Fukuyama has a better analysis. Large international organizations like the UN are by design inefficient, but they can create instant legitimacy. The future may not be around the UN, but its replacement to create legitimacy will still have to be inefficient. NATO can be a lot more efficient, but it is also not bound to be America’s handmaiden and cannot be assumed to be will to act on demand. Ultimately the future may depend on more flexible and temporary alignments. Something between a suspect “coalition of the willing” and a reluctant NATO.

    To some degree America At the Cross Roads is a product of its time. America had broken Iraq and was not clear what it might mean to fix it. I doing this it had compromised its standing as a benevolent hegemon. He was still viewing America as the world’s only superpower. The rise of China as a powerful and aggressive claimant to be the sole hegemon for all of East Asia was not in his estimation. That China is following an American model, China demonstrates their only respect for American primacy. Both China and Russia are or are becoming increasing creditable in Africa and South America. Nothing in Cross Roads anticipates these developments.

    There is much to learn from Fukuyama. He is not nor does he desire to be an objective, apolitical analyst. He may not be in your echo chamber; he should be on your shelves.

  • Jake

    This book is slightly confused. It seems premature in that sense, as though Fukuyama is re-evaluating his ideology after the improper implementation of it. It is important to recognize this book is now 12 years old and we know a lot more about the terrible impacts of neo-conservatism.

    It is clear that ne0-conservatism has become something that he can no longer sign up to. But his argument that what neo-conservatism is, is something different to the form of neo-conservatism propagated by Bush and his cronies.
    The history of neo-conservatism did little to justify it's foundations other than explain how important a certain form of moral paradigm was to it's founding fathers. IN one of the stranger stretches in the book he tries to suggest that critiques of neo-cons can be anti-semitic because there are many Jewish thinkers in the movement. At another point he mocks cultural relativism, with a slightly straw man-esque description, before arguing later in the book that democracy should be allowed even when it doesn't look how the USA envisaged.

    At the core of the book remain Fukuyama's ideology that US Liberal Democracy and Neo-Liberal capitalism are a net good for the world and often the US will have to act unilaterally to ensure this happens. He argues that in an ideal world this would be done through a system of multi-multilateral institutions. One justification being the lack of power of institutions like the UN, this is ironic as the USA has done much to undermine the united nations.

    The book is convoluted, it's attitude to facts suspect (eg. Asian Tiger countries are a very particular form of state capitalism, not neo-liberalism. Eastern European shock capitalism was largely disasterous) and the ideas not well thought through. The book represents a last grasp at maintaining the key assumptions of an unfashionable ideology.

  • Kuszma

    Fukuyama ebben a könyvében elmagyarázza, mi is az a neokonzervativizmus*, hogyan alakult ki, és hogy ő maga miért szakított vele. Felmerült bennem olvasás közben a kérdés, hogy miért olvasok én a neokonzervativizmusról, az USA egyik (egykori?) meghatározó eszmeáramlatáról egy olyan történelmi pillanatban, amikor az amerikai csúcspolitikát szemmel láthatóan nem eszmék, hanem egy hektikus, fura hajú milliárdos irányítja**. Továbbá: miért érdekel F. konfliktusa Bush-sal a második öbölháború miatt, amikor ez az esemény egyre inkább a múlt ködébe vész – lassan már ott tartunk, hogy könnyes nosztalgiával gondolok vissza az ifjabb Bokor Gyuri gyerekre, mint az amerikai republikánus gondolat egyik, tulajdonképpen vállalható képviselőjére.

    Alighanem azért, mert a második öbölháború volt az a pont (és ezt Fukuyama nagyon jól érzékeli), amikor az USA elvesztegette azt az erkölcsi tőkét, amit a hidegháború végéig felhalmozott. Nem csak arról van szó, hogy amikor tömegpusztító fegyverekre hivatkozva lerohanta Irakot, akkor tulajdonképpen az egész arab világot maga ellen fordította. Nem is csak arról, hogy miután lebontotta Szaddám államát, képtelen volt helyette életképesebbet létrehozni, így létrejött azt a hatalmi űr, ami a dzsihadista szervezeteknek kedvezett – ezzel pedig a permanens háborúnak egy olyan fokozatát hozta létre, amit egésze egyszerűen nem lehet megnyerni hagyományos reguláris hadsereggel, legyen az akármilyen high-tech. A fő probléma az, hogy az USA hagyományos szövetségeseinek ekkor lett tele a hócipője az egypólusú világrenddel, ekkor mondtak először határozottan nemet arra a „jóindulatú hegemóniára”, amire hivatkozva Bush önkényesen beavatkozott egy távoli geopolitikai régióban. Mert a „jóindulatú hegemónia” csak addig működik, amíg a felek többé-kevésbé meg vannak győződve róla, hogy a nagyhatalom erejét bölcsen, a közösség érdekeit szem előtt tartva használja fel. Konfliktusok persze már az öbölháború előtt is voltak, de ekkor még az USA hivatkozhatott arra, hogy egy egyértelműen negatív erő (a Szovjetunió) ellensúlya, és az elvárhatónál nagyobb erőfeszítést tesz azért, hogy a világ többé részét megvédje. De Bush esetében már más volt a helyzet: Bush döntései nem tűntek bölcsnek, és az sem látszott, hogy saját érdekein kívül más is befolyásolná a döntésben – ez pedig létrehozta azt a szakadást a demokratikus blokkon belül, ami máig is érzékelhető.

    Fukuyama azért is bírálja Busht, mert kisajátította és kifordította a neokonzervatív eszmét. A neokonzervatívok ugyanis hagyományosan szkeptikusak azzal kapcsolatban, hogy egy állam mechanikusan, erőből demokratizálható – ők (Fukuyamával együtt) inkább abban hisznek, hogy ezek a változások a történelmi időben fokozatosan, bizonyos intézmények létrejötte után, „természetes módon” jönnek létre. Ezzel szemben Bush fogta magát, és páros lábbal beleugrott az egészbe, a gondoknak egy egészen bámulatos spirálját indítva el.

    Jól összeszedett, világos okfejtésekre alapozó könyv. Még pár jól eltalált jóslat is akad benne (például hogy a terrorizmus elleni harc színtere Nyugat-Európa lesz), ha valaki igényli az ilyesmit.

    * Ami nem tévesztendő össze az európai konzervativizmussal. Főképp azért, mert az európai konzervativizmus jórészt nem elválasztható a nemzetben és etnikumban való gondolkodástól – ami viszont értelemszerűen Amerikában sosem lehetett meghatározó tényező. Ami ezt a világnak azon a felén pótolja, az a Függetlenségi Nyilatkozat felsőbbrendűségébe vetett hit, ami gyakran elképesztő erkölcsi magabiztossággal párosul, és azzal az őszinte hittel, hogy a világ akkor tenné magával a legjobbat, ha hallgatna a bölcs és tiszta Egyesült Államokra.
    ** Merthogy az nem eszme, hogy „Make America Great Again”. Hiszen MILYEN a „Nagy Amerika”? Ha tényleg azt akarnák, hogy Amerika nagy legyen, akkor a legegyszerűbb volna azt a tervezett kerítést Mexikó túlsó határára emelni – és hopp, Amerika máris nagyobb lenne egy mexikónyival. És ez egy csapásra megoldaná az illegális bevándorlás problémáját is.

  • John

    Why read "America at the Crossroads" eight years later? Before answering, let me say that this book was written in 2006 and largely probes the foreign policy of the first George W. Bush administration, and how the Iraq war will forever cast the term 'neoconservative' in a particular light.

    This book marks a transition in Francis Fukuyama, who one indirectly gets the picture of dealing with a lot of cognitive dissonance with soon-to-be-former ideological friends, from a political philosopher and policy analyst primarily aimed with explaining a Hegelian unfolding of world history to democracy ("End of History") to a policy practitioner aware of the full historical difficulty of institution building and the multi-millennium impacts of culture on the kinds of achievable political society ("Origins of Political Order").

    The distinction called out in this volume is that trust in democracy and a skepticism of international projects is better when it is not interpreted that cultures will automatically build democracies for themselves and that international institutions are untrustworthy dilutions of the will of a democratic state, but instead that our democratic peers are wise council and that international institution building is a careful continual attention and tuning to the unintended consequences of aide and development.

    This leads me to why one might still consider reading this book, and that is because the problems are still with us and the advice about development and institution building still seems in the kind of spirit we might like to develop. Any challenge worth having is ongoing or chronic: maintaining friendships, businesses, communities, homes, international relations, a natural environment, and so on, but there are also chronic situations that aren't necessarily worthwhile, but where we've gotten ourselves by our actions and how we continue to cope with them defines our character. At the time of writing, the Iraq war is over, but the development of institutions still sees chronic problems. Even heartening transitions, like that of the Ukraine, have not proven to be uncomplicated.

    What was it like to live with the fear that rouge states would provide nuclear or biological weapons to extremist groups with demonstrated capabilities to make terrible attacks? It feels the same, as the problem is still with us, whether moderated or exacerbated being well beyond my ability to estimate. What was it like to live when the dominant thrust of United States international policy was reacting to this situation? What it was not was a new permanent order, even if it felt like it, as developing relationships never stops. This book takes us to that truth showing itself at that time.

  • Nehal Abdurhaman

    الكتاب يتكلم عن أحداث 11 سبتمبر , و أخطاء بوش في الإدارة وحرب العراق



    أعتقد إني أخطأت في شراء الكتاب
    فالكتاب للسياسين المتعمقين جدا لكن سأحاول أن أكمل قراءته و أحاول أن أكمل الفهم

  • Tomislav

    The book contains several essays, and although it gained most attention because of Fukuyama’s opinions of the Iraq war it is not focused only on that issue. First part of the book explains neoconservatism, large parts are devoted to post-Cold War global diplomacy, general opinions on economic and political development, and the current state of international institutions. Iraq war is the issue that loosely connects all the other topics, and the book balances well between political theory and historical events. Even now, opinions on global security and events leading to the Iraq war serve as an interesting read in political history.

    Fukuyama presents a short history of neoconservatism, a movement of disillusioned anti-communist leftists who embraced cultural conservatism during the 1960s, along with opposition to welfare state and social engineering, later even accepting some of the Reaganomics. Several main characteristics of neoconservatism are pointed out, such as advocacy of interventionist foreign policy, distrust of international institutions and Straussian belief in the importance of internal character of regimes. He downplays the influence of Leo Strauss in the movement and especially in high politics since Strauss was not a doctrinal thinker and didn’t really leave much practical advice on public and foreign policy. He also points out complexities of the Straussian idea of regime and regime change, which is based on suspicion of Enlightenment rationalism, presupposes myth-making and difficult changes of informal institutions.

    Thus, Straussian philosophy couldn’t imply the naïve idea that Iraq or any other country would revert to a natural state of democracy once the dictatorship is overthrown. Instead, he attributes such interventionist enthusiasm to younger authors such as William Kristol and Robert Kagan who advocated a unilateralist, militaristic type of Wilsonianism and in triumphalist post-Cold War climate became dominant in the previously more heterogeneous neoconservative movement. Fukuyama also gives his opinions about what went wrong in American diplomacy and intelligence analysis, presenting some alternative solutions, even an alternative justification for the war. From the historical overview of successful (Germany, Japan) and less successful (Philippines, South America) US attempts at social engineering, it is concluded that institutional change is achievable only when there is a strong internal demand for it. He attempts to balance between realism and liberalism, between criticism of US foreign policy and limitations of existing international institutions, advocating a pluralist, competitive approach for global organizations. Most of the issues that Fukuyama mentions are still unsolved and debated today, so the book hardly lost any relevancy.

  • Emre Sultan

    This book was written in the wake of the failure in Iraq hence it had a major influence on the writer. apparently he declared that the neocons' policy had to be toppled down , and the new American foreign policy ought to be more dependent on soft power and hidden sovereignty and hegemony .. no more Americans' iron fist !
    A book like that , in 2006 , is like a rational promotion for the democrats , especially Obama's new open minded policy , to be the new POTUS!


  • Faisal ElBeheiry

    كما يقول المثل المصري "أسمع كلامك أصدقك،أشوف أمورك أستعجب"، فكر تيار المحافظين الجدد نظريا يحتوي علي مبادئ راقية جدا مجموعة في الأربع نقاط التالية، لكن الواقع أنة فكر إمبريالي، يؤيد الكيان الصهيوني بتفسيرات توراتية بأن وجود الكيان الصهيويني مهم لنزول المسيح الثاني و ذلك سر قوة اللوبي الصهيوني في أمريكا.
    المبادئ الكل��سيكية لحركة المحافظين الجدد:
    ١/الإيمان بأن الطبيعة الشخصية الداخلية لأنظمة الحكم تهم، و يجب علي السياسة الخارجية أن تعكس أعمق قيم المجتمعات الليبرالية الديمقراطية، و أن كل الدول تسعي للقوة بغض النظر عن نوع نظام الحكم.
    ٢/الإيمان بأن قوة أمريكا قد إستخدمت و يمكن أن تستخدم من أجل أغراض أخلاقية.
    ٣/عدم الثقة في مشاريع الهندسة الإجتماعية الطموحة.
    ٤/إرتياب في مشروعية القانون الدولي وفي فعاليتة و في مشروعية مؤسساتة و فعاليتها في تحقيق الأمن و العدالة.

    ملخص الكتاب علي هيئة ملف Microsoft Word مرفوعا علي خدمة التخزين السحابي Box.com علي الرابط التالي:
    https://app.box.com/s/llpgwwnibl6rnrv...

  • Bibliomantic

    Reading this text I got the impression that Francis Fukuyama is a very serious man. I cannot imagine him laughing. Perhaps I’m wrong, and Mr. Fukuyama is fun to be around, but in this book at least he comes across as someone who sees some serious problems and has not time for humor or irony. Well, he does employ irony from time to time, but it’s with the flair of a mortician, or perhaps a copy editor.

    With that in mind, Fukuyama does indeed tackle some very serious issues, and does so very capably, ranging from hardcore theory to its practical manifestations, as well as reality on the ground and what we can practically expect as outcomes or potential solutions. Fukuyama is comfortable on both sides of the theory-praxis divide, and that I think makes it possible for him to merge two seemingly contentious positions, realism and Wilsonianism. In street language, he wants to merge the hardcore Kissinger-style approach of dealing with power relations vis-à-vis states with the Wilsonian approach of actually caring how those states are structured. Further, he wants to do this via, what he terms, multi-multilateralism. On the way there, Fukuyama goes over the long history of the neocon phenomenon (no, it did not start with Cheney) and rather intelligently jabs at the Bush administration’s legacy. He also offers some fresh approaches to the understanding of Islamic extremism. He does not see it as a Huntington’s large scale clash of civilizations, but rather as a smaller version of same that occurs within alienated emigrant communities. He sees them as channeling their angst into epistemes of very much Western rather than exclusively Middle Eastern origin. In this Fukuyama is partly inspired by the work of the great Oliver Roy, who has written extensively on the subject. Fukuyama also very rationally analyzes recent and current conflicts and international issues, and he often reframes events in a way that seems to imply that there are certain things that flew over the heads of other analysts, not to mention those running our government (past and present). He finishes by offering his own prescriptions for managing geopolitical order and disorder with a strong but more cooperative US foreign policy. Although I think that aspects of the approach he suggests would be difficult to sustain from one administration to another, I remain impressed.

  • Chris


    In this book Francis Fukuyama repudiates the label of neo-conservative, though not a lot of the elements of it. Basically what he's trying to do is simultaneously say that realism is misguided, since the internal dynamics of states matters a lot in how they conduct their external relations, while denigrating liberalism as weak (implicitly, anyway) and the current crop of neoconservatives as naive and over-simplifying.

    Their idea that a democracy could be installed in Iraq thus magically making a dictatorship into a liberal democracy was flawed, because what Strauss and others believe by the word "regime" is far deeper to society than simply the cast of characters in power; it's a societal mindset, and as such, it's very difficult to change regimes.

    He nonetheless advocates trying to do so, in a activist, muscular foreign policy with Wilsonian ideals, proposing that the UN is flawed and should be abandoned in favor of a world policy club limited to democracies, and that the development of political institutions should take its place alongside military and economic assistance to struggling and failed states.

    I'm not sure he's not just taking the over-simplistic neo-con line and adding an asterisk, thus trying to invest it with depth. He also takes a lot of administrative and political decisions at face value, and doesn't think much about the complex motives of those in charge. But it's still an interesting thought, and I'd prefer this guy to Wolfowitz any day.

  • Mark Maguire

    I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and welcomed the clarification over the Author's previous "End of History and the Last Man" validation of the omnipotence of Liberal Democracy and Capitalist economy.

    The book was written as a counterpoint to the "Bush Doctrine" or pre-emptive war; the "War on Terror", and the circumnavigation of International institutions in favour of the construction of the fabled "Coalition of the Willing". The Author argues that the imposition of the Patriot Act; the rhethorical war against Al-Qaeda, and the elevation of the hunt for Bin Laden to a comparable "war against Islam" have served only to de-stabilise and alienate, compromising US relations throughout the World, fostering distrust and undermining the vision of American Freedom as a viable model for aspirant nations, particularly in the wake of the illegal Iraq War. In essence, the A-political Last Man whom triumphed over the "Evil Empire" in the former Eastern bloc, has been hoist by his own pertard.


    The Author argues for the adoption of "realistic Wilsonianism" which seeks to create "overlapping institutions" within the international political circuit which would negate the need for the Neo-Conservative World View and doctrine of "Pre-emptive" war by resolving the imperfections within institutions such as the UN and NATO.

    This is a recommended read for anyone whom wishes to gain an inside view of the Neo-Conservative docrine and how it's administration has created an inherently poisonus and short-termist view, based upon pre-supposed American moral superiority versus the rest.


  • Socrate

    În timpul primului mandat al președintelui Bush, Statele Unite au fost atacate pe propriul teritoriu de grupul islamic radical al-Qaeda, în cel mai sângeros act terorist singular din istorie. Administrația Bush a răspuns acestui eveniment fără precedent printr-o serie de politici noi, ra-
    dicale. În primul rând, a creat o agenție federală complet nouă. Departamentul Securității Interne, și a determinat Congresul să adopte Legea Patriot, destinată să ofere forțelor de ordine interne puteri sporite de a acționa împotriva potențialilor teroriști. În al doilea rând, a invadat Afganistanul, o țară de la celălalt capăt al lumii, și a înlăturat regimul taliban care adăpostea organizația al-Qaeda. În al treilea rând, a anunțat noua doctrină strategică a războiului anticipativ - în realitate, o doctrină a războiului preventiv - care afirmă atacarea inamicului în locul descurajării sau îndiguirii, care au constituit trăsăturile distinctive ale politicii Războiului Rece. În al patrulea rând, a invadat Irakul și a distrus regimu lui Saddam Hussein, pe motiv că acesta deținea sau căuta să obțină arme de distrugere în masă.
    Primele două inițiative constituie răspunsuri inevitabile la atacurile din 11 septembrie 2001, solicitate de reprezentanții ambelor partide și susținute cu o largă majoritate de poporul american. Deși au existat critici față de unele aspecte ale Legii Patriot, care ar limita excesiv libertățile individuale, este greu de imaginat că națiunea ar fi putut continua abordarea lipsită de energie a siguranței interne după atacurile de la World Trade Center și Pentagon.

  • Steven Peterson

    Chapter 7 begins with these words: "It seems very doubtful at this juncture that history will judge the Iraq war kindly." Such words from one of the more impressive conservative voices in the United States, Francis Fukuyama, make this an important work.

    Nonetheless, this is a powerful volume--and it builds on a slender work that is a genuine contribution in the debate over democratic nation building--his 2004 volume, State-Building. Indeed, these two works should probably be considered together.

    The former lays out the prerequisites for any effort at democratic nation-building. It is a hard-headed work that complements a large literature--and is one that neocons in the Bush administration should have taken seriously.

    This work attempts to show how the neoconservatives "lost their way." Fukuyama, once a player in this movement, reflected upon where the movement was going and has concluded that it has taken a wrong turn. Other revieweers accuse him of apostasy, opportunism, and so on. But this is a work from a leading intellectual that must be confronted and taken seriously. It will be interesting to revisit his observations a few years from now, when the destiny of Iraq is clearer.

  • Bookmarks Magazine

    Francis Fukuyama has often been more poised and clinical than his neoconservative contemporaries (including William Kristol and Paul Wolfowitz). Perhaps this makes his backflip away from mainline neocon thought understandable, but it doesn't make it any more forgivable. Many reviewers censure the Johns Hopkins University professor for not providing a personal defense of his defection. All the political lather threatens to obscure the actual book, which contains a concise history of neoconservative thought and a thoughtful, if not totally new, proposal for more peaceful (or "soft power") means of nation building. That might give heart to liberals, but his colleagues feel he has abandoned the convictions of his 1992 book, The End of History and the Last Man, and committed the ultimate political sin: swapping horses at midterm.

    This is an excerpt from a review published in
    Bookmarks magazine.

  • Stephen

    I read this book years ago, shortly after its publication in 2006. I read a review in the NYT Sunday Book Review, actually cutting out the two page review, folding it up and sticking it in the book. I think I was obsessed, for lack of a better word in trying to understand the thinking behind the neo-conserative philosophy as practiced by the Bush cabal. I did not understand it when I read it, and if I re-read the book, I still would probably not understand. I think Fukuyama was the appropriate person to pen this very short tome, having dis-associated himself with the individual cretins who were responsible for the brainwashing of George Bush and cementing the title of world's biggest terrorist nation for the United States. Nuf said. It is a short book, well documented and researched drawing on copious writings of the stalwarts responsible for the mess that is now the Middle East.

  • Jeff

    The first part of the book which is basically a history of neoconservatism by someone who knows what he's talking about (as opposed to 80% of the people who drop the term in conversation). Fukuyama's history of the neocons is excellent and highly recommended. The second part of the book describes the direction Fukuyama would have American foreign policy take. It can be summed up in one word: Kerry-esque.

  • Doug

    I like the analysis on what neoconservatism is, how the Bush administration veered away from some of its core principles, and some the mistakes they made along the way, but his solution is pretty much comes straight out of
    After Victory: Order and Power in International Politics, so just read that.

  • أبو محمد

    This book was written in the wake of the failure in Iraq hence it had a major influence on the writer. apparently he declared that the neocons' policy had to be toppled down , and the new American foreign policy ought to be more dependent on soft power and hidden sovereignty and hegemony .. no more Americans' iron fist !
    A book like that , in 2006 , is like a rational promotion for the democrats , especially Obama's new open minded policy , to be the new POTUS!


  • Terry

    Powerful, fascinating account of the neoconservative history since the 1930's and its current legacy vision which includes the author's criticism of the Iraq war and the Bush administration's misjudgment of the world's reaction

  • Jonathan Lu

    interesting to see an objective perspective from a self-described former neoconservative that fits logically as closer to center-left. In the same style of but far more philosophical than Zakaria or Friedman. Worth a read from one of the greatest experts on geopolitics today.

  • Joana Marinho

    Fukuyama is brilliant in tracing the flaws of the foreign policy during the Bush Administarttion, presenting possible multilateral solutions to the acute problems of failed/weak states, autocracies and humanitarian crisis.

  • J Fay

    I enjoyed this book, but it's pretty dense going if you're not used to books about political theory.
    http://irisheagle.blogspot.com/2008/0...

  • Phil Mitchell

    This is a good history of Neo-conservatives from one of the fathers of the movement. Straight and with no spin.

  • Brenden

    America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy by Francis Fukuyama (2006)

  • Neeraj Bali

    Fukuyama tours schools of the America's foreign policy though and points out the infirmities of the neo-conservative approach...