The I Index

Exercise of Power: American Failures, Successes, and a New Path Forward in the Post-Cold War World

Next in the queue

69

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

68/100

Critics

53/100

Scholars

88/100

Author:

Robert M. Gates

Publisher:

Knopf

Date:

June 16, 2020

From the former secretary of defense and author of the best-selling memoir, Duty, an examination of power in all its manifestations, and how it has been exercised, for good and bad, by American presidents in the post-Cold War world.

What The Reviewers Say

Gideon Rose,
The New York Times Book Review
Exercise in Power is written from a perspective somewhere in the middle — call it the view from the deputy’s chair, which Gates, at different points in his long career, occupied at both the C.I.A. and the National Security Council.
Tom Bowman,
NPR
Gates is right that the State Department is both woefully underfunded and also lacking experts who can help in places like Afghanistan.
Richard Moe,
The Washington Post
When the next president of the United States looks for nonmilitary means to achieve objectives abroad and to begin restoring America’s standing in the world, he would do well to read Robert M. Gates’s important new book.
Jacob Sherman,
Library Journal
This work is not a political treatise, and remains accessible throughout as the author defines 15 components as tools that administrations have used to define power.