106 Quotes by Richard N. Haass

  • Author Richard N. Haass
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    Middle East history is replete with examples of missed and lost chances to make peace.

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  • Author Richard N. Haass
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    White House staff are meant to coordinate and set policy, not carry it out.

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  • Author Richard N. Haass
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    Living with a nuclear North Korea could give its leaders the confidence to act more aggressively versus South Korea. It could also, over time, drive both South Korea and Japan, as well as countries farther afield such as Vietnam, to reconsider their non-nuclear postures. The stability of a critical region of the world would suddenly be in doubt.

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  • Author Richard N. Haass
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    Good people cannot fully compensate for bad process, but they can mitigate some of its worst tendencies.

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  • Author Richard N. Haass
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    The first Iraq War was one of necessity because vital U.S. interests were at stake, and we reached the point where no other national-security instruments were likely to achieve the necessary goal, which was the reversal of Saddam Hussein's invasion and occupation of Kuwait.

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  • Author Richard N. Haass
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    Indeed, the big U.S. error after 9/11 was to treat Pakistan as if it were an ally. With an ally, it is possible to assume a large degree of policy overlap. With Pakistan, no such assumption can be made.

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  • Author Richard N. Haass
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    There's a pattern in Bush 43's presidency of being attracted to the big and the bold, and my whole reading of him is that he was instinctively uncomfortable with what you might call a modulated foreign policy - a foreign policy of adjustment, of degree.

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  • Author Richard N. Haass
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    In a global world, what happens within one country can all too easily affect others.

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  • Author Richard N. Haass
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    When great powers fade, as they inevitably must, it's normally for one of two reasons. Some powers exhaust themselves through overreach abroad, underinvestment at home, or a mixture of the two. This was the case for the Soviet Union. Other powers lose their privileged position with the emergence of new, stronger powers.

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