Book Launch: Republican Foreign Policy and the New Cold War

Book Launch: Republican Foreign Policy and the New Cold War

Please join us for a discussion on the book: We Win, They Lose: Republican Foreign Policy and the New Cold War

By Mortara Center for International Studies

Date and time

Thursday, March 21 · 12 - 1:30pm EDT

Location

Mortara Center for International Studies

36th Street Northwest Washington, DC 20007

About this event

Please join The Mortara Center for a discussion on the book: We Win, They Lose: Republican Foreign Policy and the New Cold War with authors Matthew Kroenig and Dan Negrea.

About the Book

Inspired by Trump and Reagan, this book proposes a straightforward goal for the struggle with China: we win, and they lose. Brilliant and engagingly written, this book provides a conservative foreign policy strategy—A Trump-Reagan fusion—for winning the New Cold War with China. We Win, They Lose explains why a conservative worldview is best suited for the coming confrontation with China and provides a comprehensive strategy for tackling every major foreign policy issue facing the United States, including: defense, trade, and values; Russia, Iran, and North Korea; allies and institutions; border security and immigration; energy and the environment, and more.

About the Authors

Matthew Kroenig is a Professor in the Department of Government and the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. A 2019 study in Perspectives on Politics ranked him as one of the top 25 most-cited political scientists of his generation.

Dan Negrea is the U.S. Department of State's Special Representative for Commercial and Business Affairs (CBA) in the Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs. He leads the CBA office in advocating on behalf of U.S. business interests abroad and in promoting entrepreneurship, innovation, and corporate responsibility.

Copies of We Win, They Lose: Republican Foreign Policy and the New Cold War will be available for purchase during the event.

The Mortara Center promotes scholarly, interdisciplinary research by faculty and students, advancing policy-relevant knowledge about international political, social, and economic issues, and generating communities of research and practice on key global concerns.

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