Incoming Resources
- The freedom agenda, why America must spread democracy (just not the way George Bush did), James Traub
- Building the continental empire, American expansion from the Revolution to the Civil War, William Earl Weeks ; [maps by Victor Thompson]
- War in a time of peace, Bush, Clinton, and the generals, David Halberstam
- At war with ourselves, why America is squandering its chance to build a better world, Michael Hirsh
- Fear's empire, war, terrorism, and democracy, by Benjamin R. Barber
- The inheritance, the world Obama confronts and the challenges to American power, David E. Sanger
- Franklin D. Roosevelt and foreign affairs, Edited by Edgar B. Nixon, v.3
- The accidental superpower, the next generation of American preeminence and the coming global disorder, by Peter Zeihan
- Seize the moment, America's challenge in a one-superpower world, Richard Nixon
- Colossus, the price of America's empire, Niall Ferguson
- Statecraft, and how to restore America's standing in the world, Dennis Ross
- Daydream believers, how a few grand ideas wrecked American power, Fred Kaplan
- Blueprint for action, a future worth creating, Thomas P.M. Barnett
- Terrorism and U.S. foreign policy, Paul R. Pillar
- For the record, selected statements, 1977-1980, Henry Kissinger. --
- After the empire, the breakdown of the American order, Emmanuel Todd ; translated by C. Jon Delogu
- The dark game, true spy stories, Paul B. Janeczko
- The wages of globalism, Lyndon Johnson and the limits of American power, H.W. Brands
- America as empire, global leader or rogue power?, Jim Garrison
- A Cartoon history of United States foreign policy since World War I, by the editors of the Foreign Policy Association. Introd. by Richard H. Rovere. --
- Franklin D. Roosevelt and foreign affairs, Edited by Edgar B. Nixon, v.2
- The United Nations and the United States, Gary B. Ostrower
- Beyond peace, Richard Nixon
- Diplomacy, Henry Kissinger
- Power rules, how common sense can rescue American foreign policy, Leslie H. Gelb
- A concise history of U.S. foreign policy, Joyce P. Kaufman
- American power and the new mandarins. --
- United States foreign policy for the 1970s, building for peace. A report by President Richard Nixon to the Congress, February 25, 1971
- Battlegrounds, the fight to defend the free world, H.R. McMaster
- President Roosevelt and the coming of the war, 1941, a study in appearances and realities
- Making war to keep peace, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick
- In the time of the Americans, FDR, Truman, Eisenhower, Marshall, MacArthur-- the generation that changed America's role in the world, by David Fromkin
- Tangled web, the making of foreign policy in the Nixon Presidency, William P. Bundy
- Dangerous nation, Robert Kagan
- The myths of August, a personal exploration of our tragic Cold War affair with the atom, Stewart L. Udall
- Second chance, three presidents and the crisis of American superpower, Zbigniew Brzezinski
- The nightingale's song, Robert Timberg
- Soft power, the means to success in world politics, Joseph S. Nye, Jr
- War on peace, the end of diplomacy and the decline of American influence, Ronan Farrow
- America at the crossroads, democracy, power, and the neoconservative legacy, Francis Fukuyama
- The Icarus syndrome, a history of American hubris, Peter Beinart
- Crisis, the anatomy of two major foreign policy crises, Henry Kissinger
- Collision course, the Cuban missile crisis and coexistence /, Henry M. Pachter. --
- White House years, Henry Kissinger
- A hole in the world, an unfolding story of war, protest and the new American order, Jonathan Schell
- Does America need a foreign policy?, toward a diplomacy for the 21st century, Henry Kissinger
- Tension between opposites, reflections on the practice and theory of politics, Paul H. Nitze
- Special relationships, a foreign correspondent's memoirs from Roosevelt to Reagan, Henry Brandon
- Memo to the President elect, how we can restore America's reputation and leadership, Madeleine Albright with Bill Woodward
- Taming American power, the global response to U.S. primacy, Stephen M. Walt