Stephen WaltVerified account

@stephenWalt

Professor of International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School. In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.-- George Orwell

Joined June 2011

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  1. Retweeted

    The U.S. needs to draw the right lessons from disappointments of the past 20-plus years and identify what will guide foreign- and national security policy from this point forward, FP's writes.

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  3. Retweeted
    Apr 27

    & International Security have joined forces to offer an *essay competition* for high school/undergraduate-aged girls and women! Contest participants are invited to an instructive & interactive *info session* on May 5th. Sign-ups here:

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  4. Apr 25

    11. In sum, I have spent a fair bit of time on research efforts that didn't bear fruit. I learned from each "failure," however, and I'm glad I pulled the plug when I did. I suspect my experience is quite common, and I hope other scholars will chime in on this subject too.

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  5. Apr 25

    10. Three years ago, a journal editor invited me to write an essay on what he called the "death of IR theory." I spent a summer writing several drafts. Reactions from a diverse set of colleagues were polite but strongly negative. I decided they were right and hit the shredder.

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  6. Apr 25

    9. A few years ago, I began researching the phenomenon of political "insiders" who at some point have a dramatic change of heart and then go public (e.g., Ellsberg). I was hoping to find a common thread in their experiences but came up empty. It's on the shelf for now.

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  7. Apr 25

    8. In 2008, I began a project on the reasons why states find it hard to "cut losses" and collected a lot of material for it. I eventually published a chapter on the subject in an edited volume, but decided I didn't have anything more to say on that topic. So I didn't.

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  8. Apr 25

    7. . . .one door closed, another opened: Wohlforth's article helped get me thinking about how other states were reacting to unipolarity, which eventually led me to write TAMING AMERICAN POWER.

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  9. Apr 25

    6. In the late 1990s, I started to write a theoretical article on the nature of unipolarity. Bill Wohlforth's 1999 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY article on this topic scooped me completely, and it was clearly better than anything I'd have written. Oh well. But then....

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  10. Apr 25

    5. When I began working on REVOLUTION AND WAR in 1988, I had lots of clever ideas about how the backgrounds & biographies of revolutionary leaders might explain their behavior once in power. This approach led precisely nowhere and I dropped the idea from the book.

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  11. Apr 25

    4. As post-docs way back in 1983, Charlie Glaser and I wrote a paper on the actual use of nuclear weapons in war. We eventually produced a complete draft, but neither of us was very happy with it. We wisely put it aside and turned to other topics.

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  12. Apr 25

    3. This anecdote is a useful reminder that not every promising idea pans out. I wish more scholars--and especially senior figures--would describe projects they undertook that they eventually discarded. In that spirit, here's a list of some of the blind alleys I've walked down.

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  13. Apr 25

    2. In a candid survey of his career in ANNUAL REVIEWS, Bob Keohane briefly describes a book-length project on reputation and compliance that he ultimately chose not to publish, in part because the evidence didn't fit his initial conjectures.

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  14. Apr 25

    1. Here is a thread on research projects that don't go as we might have hoped.

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  15. Retweeted
    Apr 25

    Trump, Modi, Bolsonaro. How many people have needlessly died because of populist nationalism during ?

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  16. Retweeted
    Apr 23

    And America is sitting on tens of millions of Astra Zeneca vaccines.

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  17. Retweeted
    Apr 22
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  18. Retweeted
    Apr 22

    Another way of saying it: you may thing you are doing the right thing, and in a theoretical way you might be right, but in the real world, noble intentions often translate into foreign policy failures. See this by :

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  19. Apr 19

    I understand thinks ending US military involvement in is a mistake. Given how wrong he was about the , the , the UN, North Korea, and so much more, one might call it a ringing endorsement of Biden's decision.

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  20. Retweeted
    Apr 18

    Why is Biden’s decision the right call? Because staying longer would not alter the outcome of the war, FP's writes.

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