Location: The Heritage Foundation's Allison Auditorium
American Power after the Berlin Wall traces the global
projection of U.S. military power and political influence from the
end of the Cold War to the present through the prism of America's
interventions around the world. Along with summarizing the
Soviet Union's disintegration, Henriksen narrates the ascendancy
and reach of Washington's global power in a string of conflicts
from the Persian Gulf War to Panama, Somalia, Haiti, Bosnia,
Kosovo, Afghanistan, and the Iraq War. He portrays U.S.
policies of intervention, regime change, and even humanitarian
assistance as responses to rogue states, civil strife, and militant
Islam. And, he analyzes the transformation from Washington's
stability-first policies to its democracy promotion agenda in the
Middle East, which threatens this crucial region with instability,
necessitating a new grand strategy to confront terrorism and
religiously motivated conflict.
Thomas Henriksen is a Senior Fellow at Stanford University's
Hoover Institution and the U.S. Joint Special Operations
University. He is also a Trustee of the George C. Marshall
Foundation. He specializes in U.S. foreign policy, defense
issues, and counter-terrorism. He has written and lectured
widely on international affairs, political change, and "rogue
states" and has authored or edited twelve books or monographs and
numerous articles.
More About the Speakers
Thomas Henriksen
Author and
Senior Fellow,
The Hoover Institution