This book examines the Bush Doctrine and its effect and influence on the new national security agenda of President Obama.
"The Bush Doctrine is more condemned than understood, let alone defended, and Stanley Renshon not only does this but makes clear that most of the critics have failed to come to grips with the real and pressing problems that will confront the Obama administration.With strong arguments and a penetrating view of the world, this is a stimulating and important book."-Robert Jervis, Columbia University
"National Security in the Obama Administration is a serious, fascinating, and timely account of the Bush Doctrine, its legacy, and its implications for the Obama administration's unfolding foreign policy."-Robert Kagan, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
"Stanley Renshon's book transcends the bitterly polarized and all too often unedifying foreign policy debates that characterized much of the presidency of George W. Bush. In this important new work, he not only provides a welcome reassessment of the Bush Doctrine, but explains how external threats and pressing foreign policy challenges shape the choices of the Obama administration. While major alterations of style and method are evident in Obama foreign policy, changes in substance and doctrine appear to be far less pronounced.Renshon's important new book illuminates the reasons why."-Robert J. Lieber, Georgetown University
"Dr. Renshon's psychoanalysis of the Bush Doctrine is a useful set of guidelines to understand the state of U.S. foreign policy during President Obama's first few months in office. In reflecting on recent events, his words are fairly prescient as the emerging Obama doctrine continues to take form."-Daniel W. Opstal, American Intelligence Journal, Vol 29 No 1