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In this discerning book, Monteagle Stearns, a former career diplomat and ambassador, argues that U.S. foreign policymakers do not need a new doctrine, as some commentators have suggested, but rather a new attitude toward international affairs and, most especially, new ways of learning from the Foreign Service. True, the word strangers in his title refers to foreigners.
However, it also refers to American foreign policymakers and American diplomats, whose failure to "speak each other's language" deprives American foreign policy of realism and coherence. In a world where regions have become more important than blocs, and ethnic and transnational problems more important than superpower rivalries, American foreign policy must be better informed if it is to be more effective.
The insights required will come not from summit meetings or television specials but from the firsthand observations of trained Foreign Service officers.
Stearns has not written an apologia for the American Foreign Service, however. Indeed, his criticism of many of its weaknesses is biting. Ranging from a description of Benjamin Franklin's mission to France to an analysis of the Gulf War and its aftermath, he offers a balanced critique of how American diplomacy developed in reaction to European models and how it needs to be changed to satisfy the demands of the twenty-first century.
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Previews available in: English
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1
Talking to Strangers
January 18, 1999, Princeton University Press
Paperback
in English
- New Ed edition
0691007454 9780691007458
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2
Talking to strangers: improving American diplomacy at home and abroad
1996, Princeton University Press
in English
0691011303 9780691011301
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Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 179-192) and index.
"A Twentieth Century Fund book."
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