The Great Betrayal

sub-heading:
How the Democrats Became the Party of War
How the Democratic foreign-policy establishment abandoned FDR's vision of great-power reciprocity and cooperation—and became, instead, a party of warmongers.
£18
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  • 318 pages
  • Paperback ISBN 9781682194683
  • E-book ISBN 9781682194690
  • E-book available in EPUB and PDF formats; works with Kindle and all major e-readers

about the bookabout

James W. Carden, a former State Department advisor and contributing editor and columnist at The American Conservative, tells a sweeping history of the contest between the Democratic Party’s two competing traditions: those who believe in national sovereignty, civilizational pluralism, and the cooperative principles enshrined in the UN Charter; and those who embrace a crusading interventionism, which has driven American foreign policy from the early Cold War to the wars in Libya, Syria, Ukraine, and beyond. The Great Betrayal traces this decades-old rivalry, from Truman's fateful break with Roosevelt's legacy through the Kennedy assassination, the Vietnam disaster, and the post-Cold War collapse of any serious antiwar opposition within the party. He offers smart, smarting portraits of the statesmen and intellectuals who shaped each era—and of those who tried, and failed, to hold the Rooseveltian line.

By the time Hillary Clinton became the Democratic nominee in 2016, Carden argues, the interventionists had won decisively. Even self-described progressives had made their peace with regime change, proxy war, and the unilateralism once associated with the Right. Carefully researched—and drawing his own experience within the foreign policy establishment—Carden’s work has been celebrated across the political spectrum, and offers an unflinching account of how this transformation happened and what it has cost America and the world.

About The Author / Editor

Photograph © xyz James W. Carden served as an advisor to the US-Russia Bilateral Presidential Commission and to the Special Representative for Intergovernmental Affairs at the US State Department. A contributing editor at The Nation magazine, his articles have appeared in publications on the left, right, and center, including The National Interest, The American Conservative, The Spectator (UK), The Kyiv Post, The Moscow Times, The Washington Post, The Guardian, The Los Angeles Times, the Quincy Institute's Responsible Statecraft, among many other outlets. He has filed reports and commentary from Ukraine, Russia, Armenia, Georgia, Hungary, and Germany. He is a graduate of the University of Rochester (BA, High Distinction) and the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

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The Great Betrayal

sub-heading:
How the Democrats Became the Party of War
How the Democratic foreign-policy establishment abandoned FDR's vision of great-power reciprocity and cooperation—and became, instead, a party of warmongers.
£18
£15

Pre-order now at 15% off. Books will ship in July.

Pre-Order Now

Adding to cart… The item has been added

about the bookabout

James W. Carden, a former State Department advisor and contributing editor and columnist at The American Conservative, tells a sweeping history of the contest between the Democratic Party’s two competing traditions: those who believe in national sovereignty, civilizational pluralism, and the cooperative principles enshrined in the UN Charter; and those who embrace a crusading interventionism, which has driven American foreign policy from the early Cold War to the wars in Libya, Syria, Ukraine, and beyond. The Great Betrayal traces this decades-old rivalry, from Truman's fateful break with Roosevelt's legacy through the Kennedy assassination, the Vietnam disaster, and the post-Cold War collapse of any serious antiwar opposition within the party. He offers smart, smarting portraits of the statesmen and intellectuals who shaped each era—and of those who tried, and failed, to hold the Rooseveltian line.

By the time Hillary Clinton became the Democratic nominee in 2016, Carden argues, the interventionists had won decisively. Even self-described progressives had made their peace with regime change, proxy war, and the unilateralism once associated with the Right. Carefully researched—and drawing his own experience within the foreign policy establishment—Carden’s work has been celebrated across the political spectrum, and offers an unflinching account of how this transformation happened and what it has cost America and the world.

About The Author / Editor

Photograph © xyz James W. Carden served as an advisor to the US-Russia Bilateral Presidential Commission and to the Special Representative for Intergovernmental Affairs at the US State Department. A contributing editor at The Nation magazine, his articles have appeared in publications on the left, right, and center, including The National Interest, The American Conservative, The Spectator (UK), The Kyiv Post, The Moscow Times, The Washington Post, The Guardian, The Los Angeles Times, the Quincy Institute's Responsible Statecraft, among many other outlets. He has filed reports and commentary from Ukraine, Russia, Armenia, Georgia, Hungary, and Germany. He is a graduate of the University of Rochester (BA, High Distinction) and the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

Preview

Coming Soon.

in the media