ABSTRACT

This book assesses the foreign policy legacy of the Obama administration through the lens of national security and leadership. Timely, accessible chapters authored by leading scholars of presidential and international politics cover White House-Cabinet relations; Congress and War Powers; challenges including the Iran nuclear deal, ISIS, and the closing of Guantanamo Bay; drone strikes; the New Cold War with Russia; and the ways in which the Obama foreign policy legacy shaped the 2016 presidential election. In particular, the book explores the philosophical basis of counter-terrorism strategy in the Obama administration and traces how precepts differed from the administration of George W. Bush. More generally, the book contributes to an understanding of the distinctive interplay between the formal, constitutional powers of the president and the use of informal, executive powers in the quest for peace and security. Finally, the book surveys the challenges that Donald J. Trump faces in the transition to the new presidential administration.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction

The National Security Transition From Obama to Trump

chapter 5|19 pages

Obama’s National Security Cabinet

The Fight to Survive White House Micromanagement

chapter 6|15 pages

Obama and Guantanamo

The Intractable—and the Internal—Dilemma

chapter 7|15 pages

Attack of the Drones

National Security, Due Process, and the Constitutionality of Unmanned Strikes

chapter 8|30 pages

Obama, Unilateral Diplomacy, and Iran

Treaties, Executive Agreements, and Political Commitments

chapter 9|24 pages

US–Russian Relations During the Obama Presidency

From Reset to a New Cold War?

chapter 10|26 pages

The Clash of Civilizations and the Clash of Candidates

The 2016 Election