BRET STEPHENS, winner of the 2013 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is the foreign affairs columnist and deputy editorial page editor of The Wall Street Journal. He was previously the editor in chief of the Jerusalem Post. He was raised in Mexico City, educated at the University of Chicago and the London School of Economics and lives with his family in New York City.
An exceptionally intelligent, well-written book filled with interesting data and analysis that's well worth reading--and I don't even agree with most of it. Stephens [is] fast becoming the most influential conservative writer on foreign policy. So read it to your delight, or to hone your best arguments against it. --Fareed Zakaria, Fareed Zakaria GPS An important book for your well-being. --Bill O'Reilly, The O'Reilly Factor This book is the Wall Street Journal columnist at his best: substantive, historically informed, and with the kind of cutting style that helped him earn his Pulitzer Prize two years ago. --The Weekly Standard Bret Stephens has written not just a good book on American foreign policy. He has written an important book....Anyone even minimally conversant with human nature and history -- and Mr. Stephens is far more than that -- understands exactly the dangers that are caused by an American Retreat and the lethal global disorder it makes inevitable. --The American Spectator With a command of American history, a mastery of big foreign policy ideas, and a supple grasp of the conundrums of current events, Stephens shows that the dichotomy between domestic and international responsibilities is facile. For the world's sole superpower, international affairs inevitably impinge on our economy and our security. Defending our principles abroad advances our interests at home. --PETER BERKOWITZ, RealClearPolitics Given the U.S.'s recently renewed commitments in the Middle East, Stephens's clear, convincing apologia for American power will make especially timely reading for American foreign policy's skeptics and opponents. --Publishers Weekly, Starred Review A provocative, carefully reasoned argument, anathema to politicians as disparate as Barack Obama and Rand Paul. --Kirkus Reviews Although you can read the 288 pages of this well-researched, well-written, and passionately argued book over a weekend, its message will stay with you for years . . . . [Stephens] argues--with impeccable logic, a dizzying array of well-sourced quotations, and reliable statistics--that if the United States continues to retreat from its position as the world's policeman, disaster will strike both the world and the United States sooner rather than later. --ANDREW ROBERTS, Commentary magazine Wise counsel for a constructive, tough-minded, and sensible foreign policy. Read and learn. --GEORGE SHULTZ, U.S. Secretary of State, 1982-1989 At a time when the president of the United States explicitly renounces the role of 'global policeman' and a remarkable proportion of Americans--conservatives and liberals alike--seem irresistibly drawn to isolationism in all but name, Bret Stephens has written a shrewd, sharp, and shamelessly unfashionable defense of American power as a force for good in the world. He makes it clear why now, even more than in the past, the supposed benefits of Uncle Sam's retreat will swiftly be eclipsed by the very real costs of advancing terrorism and authoritarianism. --NIALL FERGUSON, Laurence A. Tisch Professor, Harvard University; author of The Great Degeneration and Civilization Bret Stephens has produced a powerful and exceptionally literate rebuttal of America's neoisolationists and a practical prescription for America's reemergence as the world's essential good cop, maintaining global order without seeking to remake the world in our own image. Americans ignore his message at their own peril. --KAREN ELLIOTT HOUSE, Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter, editor, and publisher; author of On Saudi Arabia Bret Stephens takes on the urgent question of America's role in the world at a time of crises and upheavals. Writing trenchantly, he argues that the United States is drifting into a dangerous 'retreat doctrine.' The result will be global disorder from which the United States will not escape. While engaging seriously with the arguments of those with whom he disagrees, Stephens also depicts a frighteningly realistic scenario of such disorder just five years hence. America in Retreat will stir vigorous debate--and stimulate sober thought. --DANIEL YERGIN, author of The Quest and the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Prize Bret Stephens has the guts to make the case--and make it brilliantly--for why Americans need America to be the world's policeman (or at least the world's police chief when we can get allies to join our force). This book is worth buying even if you read only chapter 9 in which Stephens foresees the chilling disorder in the world if America does not reassert its global leadership. That should be effective shock treatment for the isolationists in both parties as we think about the world we want to leave our children and grandchildren. --JOSEPH I. LIEBERMAN, U.S. senator from Connecticut, 1989-2013 From the Hardcover edition.