America's Rise and Fall among Nations: Lessons in Statecraft from John Quincy Adams
By (Author) Angelo M. Codevilla
Encounter Books,USA
Encounter Books,USA
23rd August 2022
United States
General
Non Fiction
973.55092
Hardback
288
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
Drawing on the model of John Quincy Adamss career as statesman, Angelo Codevilla explores the foundations of Americas foreign policy, identifies where it went disastrously wrong in the last century, and asks what a truly America First approach to statecraft would look like today.
"In his final work, Codevilla has left us a chilling analysis of how the radically egalitarian impulse of the elite does not just erode human freedom at home, but when nation building abroad ensures tragedies for almost everyone involved"Victor Davis Hanson
Minding our own business, while leaving other peoples to mind theirs, was the basis of the United States successful foreign policy from 1815 to 1910. Best described in the works of John Quincy Adams and carried out by his successors throughout the nineteenth century, this is the foreign policy by which America grew prosperous and in peace. This policy also remains the commonsense philosophy of most Americans today.
Americas Rise and Fall among Nationscontrasts this original America First foreign policy with the principles and results of the following hundred years of progressive foreign policy which suddenly arrived with the election of Woodrow Wilson as president in 1912. The author explains why the many fruitless American warslarge and smallthat followed Wilson's handling of World War I resulted in not only a failed peace, but also more conflicts abroad and at home.
Finally,Americas Rise and Fall among Nationsexamines how John Quincy Adamss insights are applicable to our current domestic and international environments and exemplify what America First can mean in our time. They chart a clear path to escape Americas previous eleven disastrous decades of so-called progressive international relations.
The late polymath Angelo Codevilla spent a life-time warning Americans about the dangers of their growing and unaccountable military-industrial-intelligence-investigatory complex. In his final work, Codevilla has left us a chilling analysis of how the radically egalitarian impulse of the elite does not just erode human freedom at home, but when nation building abroad ensures tragedies for almost everyone involved. In his gripping account of Americas Rise and Fall Among Nations, he reminds us that America First was not just the cachet of Donald Trump, but the driving impulse of the Founders themselves.Victor Davis Hanson,Chair, The Military History Working Group, The Hoover Institution, Stanford University
Angelo M. Codevillawas professor emeritus of international relations at Boston University. He also taught at Georgetown University and Princeton University. Born in Italy in 1943, he became a U.S. citizen in 1962, married Ann Blaesser in 1966, and had five children. He served as a U.S. Navy officer, Foreign Service Officer, professional staff member of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, as well as on President Reagans transition teams for the State Department and Intelligence. Formerly a senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, he was more recently a member of its working group on military history. He ran a vineyard in Plymouth, California.
Among Codevillas books are: War Ends and Means (with Paul Seabury, 1989); Informing Statecraft (1992); The Prince (Rethinking the Western Tradition) (1997); The Character of Nations, 2nd ed. (1997); Advice to War Presidents (2009); A Students Guide to International Relations (2010); and To Make and Keep Peace (2014).