Image for Pandora's Trap

Pandora's Trap : Presidential Decision Making and Blame Avoidance in Vietnam and Iraq

See all formats and editions

How important is presidential personality and leadership style in foreign policy decisions?

To answer this question, Thomas Preston takes readers inside the Bush administration's decision-making process and use of intelligence to better understand how administration officials justified the Iraq War—and how they sought to avoid blame for the consequences of their actions.

Based on extensive interviews with key Bush administration officials, Preston offers students of American foreign policy, presidential decision making, the dynamics of blame avoidance, and future practitioners with an in depth examination of how presidential personality and leadership style impacted Bush's central foreign policy failure.

In addition, Preston looks critically at the oft-cited comparisons of Iraq to Lyndon Johnson's leadership during the Vietnam War, exploring where the analogy fits and a number of important differences.

He shows how both presidents' styles exacerbated their managerial weaknesses in these cases and the limits of blame avoidance strategies.

The book provides a cautionary tale for future leaders to consider more carefully the long-term consequences of satisfying their short term policy desires by lifting the lid to any new Pandora's trap.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£30.40 Save 20.00%
RRP £38.00
Product Details
0742562646 / 9780742562646
Paperback / softback
01/12/2013
United States
280 pages
150 x 227 mm, 390 grams