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WAR ON PEACE by Ronan Farrow Kirkus Star

WAR ON PEACE

The End of Diplomacy and the Decline of American Influence

by Ronan Farrow

Pub Date: April 24th, 2018
ISBN: 978-0-393-65210-9
Publisher: Norton

Nations deal with each other through trade and diplomacy—or war. Guess which one the current administration favors?

“Diplomats perform many essential functions—” writes New Yorker contributor Farrow, perhaps best known for breaking the story of film executive Harvey Weinstein’s long pattern of sexual depredations, “spiriting Americans out of crises, holding together developing economies, hammering out deals between governments.” In the absence of diplomacy, the most likely alternative is war, and by the author’s account, the tendency of American foreign policy since the George W. Bush administration has been militarized. (In this, he notes, the Obama administration is not blameless.) Farrow profiles many men and women who have spent time in Foggy Bottom, the headquarters of a State Department that has been all but emptied. Says former diplomat Tom Countryman, whereas in former transitions, “there were people who were knowledgeable about foreign affairs…who had experience in government,” Donald Trump’s team brought none of this to the table. Farrow contrasts this with the likes of Richard Holbrooke, Colin Powell, Hillary Clinton, and even the freelancing Joanne Herring, who helped convince Texan Charlie Wilson to push for funding for the mujahedeen—“in the view of some, laying the foundations for 9/11.” In the vast vacuum between experience and what we have now—i.e., arrogance wedded to incuriosity and indifference—Farrow warns that “the balance of global diplomatic power is shifting.” American diplomats may be missing from the conversation, but Chinese diplomats are everywhere winning influence for their country. The author’s interlocutors warn that it might take years to rebuild the State Department, to say nothing of America’s reputation; even Condoleezza Rice warns that the diminution of America’s commitment to a democratic diplomatic mandate “would be a spectacularly bad idea.”

Excellent, wide-ranging reporting and sharp-edged analysis make this a book that’s sure to be talked about inside the Beltway—and that deserves a wide audience beyond.