Gabriel Schoenfeld is a Senior Fellow at the Hudson Institute in Washington, D.C. and a resident scholar at the Witherspoon Institute in Princeton, New Jersey. His essays on national security and modern history have appeared in leading publications including the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, the Weekly Standard, the New Republic, the Atlantic, the National Interest, and Commentary, where he was senior editor from 1994 to 2008. Schoenfeld holds a PhD in political science from Harvard University.
"Accurately titled, well documented, and persuasive."
*Hayden B. Peake - CIA, The Intelligence Officer's Bookshelf*
"A subtle and instructive brief…Scrupulously honest."
*Alan M. Dershowitz - New York Times Book Review*
"Essential reading for anyone seriously interested in national
security and freedom of the press in these testing times."
*Leonard Downie Jr. - Washington Post*
"Illuminating, extremely intelligent, learned, engaging, and
important. This is a truly great book…centrally relevant to
manifold national-security debates today."
*Jack Goldsmith, author of The Terror Presidency*
"An intellectually muscular argument that chisels away at some
cherished myths…A timely, sure-to-be-controversial take on a
problem that has no easy resolution."
*Kirkus Reviews, starred review*
"[A] provocative consideration of the conflict between the need for
government secrecy and the role of a free press....succeeds in
scrutinizing an issue of vital importance and putting it into a
much broader context."
*Publishers Weekly*
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