'FOREIGN POLICY' JOURNAL IS BEGUN

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-01314R000100540014-1
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 16, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 31, 2004
Sequence Number: 
14
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 29, 1970
Content Type: 
NSPR
File: 
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PDF icon CIA-RDP88-01314R000100540014-1.pdf98.31 KB
Body: 
Approved For Release 1@8: CIA-I DP88-013148000100540014-1 tz ~ 11/? tf(r~~,? ~},' U '~ 4~ii~l.t ii'-U`/ ..... C i .f.'` 4.JJflt lr/ By l1}.urrey MVIardcr wasrlfllSlot I' t scaft vr::ter n}suil is a misleadtug guide fort U.S. foreign policy . . . It is not clear why Coiiunuills t Cuba is worse than free Haiti or Greece." c, "The, Soviet Union is an established, status quo-oi-}- Futttie rela- jeuted power . . . !tions between the U.S. and! l the Soviet. Union will be more .1. new duaiterly magazine Campbell just Completed a cooperative than competitive. e that wants to Oatlt burrs year's fcl.low,~b.ip Nvith the "Jhe liltited States has, i under the seats of U S. strate- Council on Foreign Relat}ohs,' neither the power, nor the re-, 115 is now being published which publishes Foreign Al sponsibility nor the right toi .nutter the prosaic title, Tor- fairs. The older publication ev guarantee. the defense of the cign Policy. ident.lr looks on the new one Free World or to serve as, with tolerance, rather than ill(-, linchpin of international 1Vhat the journal lacks in a order." racy nmne to mar,. it off from hostility, as it carried an arti- the .stolid establishment: pmb]i- ere by Campbell in its Iatestl Other articles in We new journal are generally more or- cation, Foreign Afi:airs, it as-~ issue and identified hnn as ed-I pines to compensate for in rtol? of 1 ',a cig n Policy. Ihodo::; many could have ap- n arc i n n c e format all content. Foreign Policy is long, and slim, about half the rsidth of hbreign Af- fairs, Its editors hope it will. be swallowed easier, but pro- voIce readers more. The only discernible. ad- vantage of the narrow size is that It can slip into a pocket novel. But there the similarity )"'?`""' "1""""` '" """ 'critic surgery; Campbell: manri, Joseph S: Nye Jr.; Thends,e first issue of For urged slitin, the size of the Janes C. 'I lionupson Jr. and elg]1 Policy could. Provo ce a StAW grumpy IN } which tu11snt favored f by ~ Richard 11. Ullman, by - "harrumph" or two from the many old establislunentari,ans, chairs of Washington s staid for more conventional reasons.' Metropolitan Club. But it will hardly exhilarate the New The editorial board of Von' hat cign Police and most writers Somewhere in between for its fu ~t r su nerally is the market the editors are lowpo}ilt: a mog Vt. r t pr osQllt a .]lurk t tie Critical, accelerated reexami- C,o?eclitcrs of the journal arc (nation of American foreign Samuel ,I'. I-i.unthrgtou, Chair- policy goals and means to mall of the Department of ?ldapt to a world where U.S. Government at Harvard, and lpovter no longer dominates. Warren Delman T:Ianshel, part- leer in a Wall Street invesk nlent house, Coleman R;. Co., hlanshel is also publisher of another quarterly, The Public c Interest. That magazine and Foi'ci;n Policy are both fi- nanced by National Affairs, Inc., a non-profit m-gairizatton plainly supported by 1lanshel.. The cross-b e n c ll c r role, athwan?t the beam of the for-, eign policy establishment, that the new journal seeks to !`ill, editor, 30-year-old Johri Frank-I~. Arnon' his findint's as 400! Iin Campbell, ' Campbell is a U.S. ]Foreign Service officer, on an unusual 18-month have of tlbsence, ruining an avowedly icono- elastic publication pledged to .. ol rz ll c o That Campbell artcic in; Foreign Affairs perhaps best Affairs by the same authors. ezemplilies tite reach of the The distinction is that all new quarterly. The flavor of the articles are focused on revolution was in its title'., c]tange, as are the members of "hat is to bu cl.oric^"--?-a 1q;0 the new journal's editorial quotation by hus: ia's.J..et in board: IV. Michael Biu uen- yet the proposed solution, to f filar, %bjgniew J31zeziu_ ]:i deal with "gigantism in Wash- Richard N. Courier, ].behind A.I in the first issue, the most provocative off-beat article is "Cool It: The Foreign Policy of Young America;" by Prof.l Graham Allison of. Harvard. Allison conducted Jnter- views with about 100 "'elite' young Americans in the 25-to- 31 age group" on the East and, Weds Coasts, largely with es tablishment backgrounds, to compare their perceptions of foreign policy with what he basic axioms of young Amer}- calls" are these: E, "While there are impor- tant differences between Cbm- mtntist and democratic re. giines, the distinction between stimulate' informed "contro-~ the Communist bloc and the versies," about the conduct of Free \Vorld obfuscates ? more U.S. foreign policy. App~~~lMiditFJr` e'~ease 2004/0 =8: CIA-RDP88-01314R000100540014-1