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Avoiding Trivia: The Role of Strategic Planning in American Foreign Policy
Paperback

Avoiding Trivia: The Role of Strategic Planning in American Foreign Policy

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After World War II, George Kennan became the State Department’s first director of policy planning. Secretary of State George Marshall’s initial advice to Kennan: above all,
avoid trivia.
Concentrate on the forest, not the trees, and don’t lost sight of the big picture. Easier said than done. Avoiding Trivia critically assesses the past, future, and future role and impact of long-term strategic planning in foreign policy. Strategic planning needs to be a more integral part of America’s foreign policymaking. Thousands of troops are engaged in combat while homeland security concerns remain. In such an environment, long-term coordination of goals and resources would seem to be of paramount importance. But history tells us that such cohesiveness and coherence are tremendously difficult to establish, much less maintain. Can policy planners -in the Pentagon, the State Department, Treasury, NSC, and National Intelligence Council -rise to the challenge? Indeed, is strategic planning a viable concept in 21st century foreign policy? These crucial questions guide this eye-opening book. The contributors include key figures from the past few decades of foreign policy and planning -individuals responsible for imposing some sort of order and strategic priority on foreign policy in a world that changes by the minute. They provide authoritative insight on the difficulties and importance of thinking and acting in a coherent way, for the long term. Contributors: Andrew P. N. Erdmann, Peter Feaver, Aaron L. Friedberg, David F. Gordon, Richard N. Haass, William Inboden, Bruce W. Jentleson, Steven D. Krasner, Jeffrey W. Legro, Daniel Twining, Thomas Wright, Amy B. Zegart.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Brookings Institution
Country
United States
Date
5 May 2009
Pages
216
ISBN
9780815703068

After World War II, George Kennan became the State Department’s first director of policy planning. Secretary of State George Marshall’s initial advice to Kennan: above all,
avoid trivia.
Concentrate on the forest, not the trees, and don’t lost sight of the big picture. Easier said than done. Avoiding Trivia critically assesses the past, future, and future role and impact of long-term strategic planning in foreign policy. Strategic planning needs to be a more integral part of America’s foreign policymaking. Thousands of troops are engaged in combat while homeland security concerns remain. In such an environment, long-term coordination of goals and resources would seem to be of paramount importance. But history tells us that such cohesiveness and coherence are tremendously difficult to establish, much less maintain. Can policy planners -in the Pentagon, the State Department, Treasury, NSC, and National Intelligence Council -rise to the challenge? Indeed, is strategic planning a viable concept in 21st century foreign policy? These crucial questions guide this eye-opening book. The contributors include key figures from the past few decades of foreign policy and planning -individuals responsible for imposing some sort of order and strategic priority on foreign policy in a world that changes by the minute. They provide authoritative insight on the difficulties and importance of thinking and acting in a coherent way, for the long term. Contributors: Andrew P. N. Erdmann, Peter Feaver, Aaron L. Friedberg, David F. Gordon, Richard N. Haass, William Inboden, Bruce W. Jentleson, Steven D. Krasner, Jeffrey W. Legro, Daniel Twining, Thomas Wright, Amy B. Zegart.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Brookings Institution
Country
United States
Date
5 May 2009
Pages
216
ISBN
9780815703068