An examination of the several reasons for the failure of foreign policy reform during the controversial administration of President Jimmy Carter.
In Reversing Course, David Skidmore argues that President Carter's initial foreign policy agenda required a scaling back of U.S. commitments abroad, reflecting a decline in resources, as well as influence, in a world developing in ways necessarily reducing U.S. hegemony. By probing beneath the obvious and carefully sifting the abundant but poorly understood evidence, Skidmore finds at the root of Carter's failed effort an irresistible...
An examination of the several reasons for the failure of foreign policy reform during the controversial administration of President Jimmy Carter.