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Victor Davis Hanson has concluded that the strategic landscape of the post-Cold War world looks less like the 19th and 20th centuries than the age of classical warfare, when actors that resembled today's nation-states regularly dealt with non-state actors ranging from giant tribal alliances to small-scale insurgencies.
John Arquilla and Victor Davis Hanson discuss the importance of many and small. . . .
It baffles me why so many people are apologetic about the U. S. having a self-interested foreign policy. . . .
Former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Friday she would "many times over liberate" Iraq again, but she regretted the Bush administration failed to work closer with Iraqis to rebuild the war-torn country. . . .
Victor Davis Hanson offers some insight into his life as a war historian — and more. . . .
Victor Davis Hanson talks about the study of war. . . .
With the Reagan Centennial Celebrations set to begin in just less than a year, www.thereaganfiles.com is conducting a series of conversations with noted Reagan historians. . . .
Victor Davis Hanson describes the several ways in which the American way of war is distinctive. . . .
In the Left’s eyes, Iran was the greatest beneficiary of the Iraq War. . . .
Much has been written of the recent Tom Hanks remarks to Douglas Brinkley in a Time Magazine interview about his upcoming HBO series on World War II in the Pacific. . . .