Description
The Uncertainty Doctrine explores the transformation of American foreign policy narratives in the aftermath of the Cold War. Alexandra Homolar argues that uncertainty, rather than traditional ideological frameworks, became the defining characteristic of US strategic discourse and hard power deployment. The book traces how policymakers and political leaders constructed narratives around unpredictability and risk to justify military interventions and assertions of American dominance.
Through detailed analysis of key speeches, policy documents, and strategic communications, Homolar demonstrates how uncertainty was weaponized as a political tool. The work examines interventions in the Middle East, NATO expansion, and counterterrorism campaigns, showing how ambiguity in purpose and strategy paradoxically reinforced American power projection. This critical examination reveals the ways narrative politics shaped concrete military and diplomatic decisions during a period of profound geopolitical transition.







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