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After its initial presentation, [91] it was presented as a lecture before the Council for the National Interest, [92] Code Pink, [93] the GBH Forum Network, [94] the Center for International and Regional Studies, [95] and most prominently at the University of Chicago, sometimes cited instead of the book [96] Bruce Feiler debated Mearsheimer on ...
John Joseph Mearsheimer (/ ˈmɪərʃaɪmər /; born December 14, 1947) is an American political scientist and international relations scholar. [3] He is the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago. Mearsheimer is best known for developing the theory of offensive realism, which describes the interaction ...
E183.8.I7 M428 2007. The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy[ 1 ] is a book by John Mearsheimer, Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago, and Stephen Walt, Professor of International Relations at Harvard Kennedy School at Harvard University, published in late August 2007. It was a New York Times Best Seller.
The Tragedy of Great Power Politics[1] is a book by the American scholar John Mearsheimer on the subject of international relations theory published by W.W. Norton & Company in 2001. Mearsheimer explains and argues for his theory of "offensive realism" by stating its key assumptions, evolution from early realist theory, and its predictive ...
The book argues that leaders lie to foreign audiences as well as their own people because they think it is good for their country, citing the example of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's lie about the Greer incident in August 1941, due to a deep commitment to getting the United States into World War II, which he thought was in America's national interest.
Bait and bleed. Bait and bleed is a military strategy described by international relations theorist John J. Mearsheimer in his book on offensive realism, The Tragedy of Great Power Politics (2001). The aim is to induce rival states to engage in a protracted war of attrition against each other "so that they bleed each other white", while the ...