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TITLE: National Review
[RARE and interesting magazine of politics!]
ISSUE DATE: APRIL 1, 1991; VOL. XLIII, NO. 5
CONDITION: Standard magazine size, Approx 8oe" X 11". COMPLETE and in clean, VERY GOOD condition. (See photo)

IN THIS ISSUE:
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COVER: COLIN POWELL. Pax Americana? Cover photo: Wally McNameelWoodfin Camp & Associates.

COVER STORY: America's Black Eisenhower: Another dividend of the Gulf War is the prominence of General Colin Powell, who just happens to be black. John Ranelagh recounts Powell's deft and rapid rise to power.

ARTICLES:
On the Scene: The Saudis, Ian Alexander reports, are as nervous as ever about their neighbors. . . . Paul Ericson finds the Kuwaitis determined to return to normalcy. . . . The most obvious Soviet reaction to Desert Storm, says Elisabeth Ru-binfien, is a severe case of Schwarzkopf envy.

VICTORY KIND ITS AFTERMATHS:
How the War Was Won: Trevor N. Dupuy identifies the keys to Desert Storm's success: classical military theory and the American genius for logistics.

Running into the Sand: J. B. Kelly debunks the importance of Arab sensitivities and the applicability of democratic idealism to the Gulf.

New American Order: William McGurn reviews the domestic truths revealed in the course of the war.

Winning the Peace: Henry R. Nau says that a strong U.S. commitment to the Gulf is the safest course in the long run.

Playing Washington's Hand: Adam Garfinkle demonstrates that even the New World Order can't bring Arab—Israeli peace.

Handling the United Nations: Brian Crozier explains why President Bush's success in Turtle Bay is unlikely to be repeated.

My Life in the Peace Movement: Neal B. Freeman recounts what it's like to win new respect in the Beltway.

BOOKS, ARTS & MANNERS: Joseph Sobran finds Under God: Religion and American Politics to be vintage Garry Wills: thought-provoking when the author digresses, trite or simply wrong when he pursues his thesis. . . . Peter Ackroyd's Dickens has all the energy and joyous excess of Dickens himself, to Joe Mysak's great delight. . . . James Gardner finds John Richardson's Life of Picasso a first-rate biography that evokes the man in order to understand the genius. . . . Chilton Williamson Jr. ponders the novel Red Love, in which David Evanier explores what happens when good people love bad ideology. . . . Ralph de Toledano compares Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, and Jelly Roll Morton, the three fathers of classic jazz.

SECTIONS:
Letters.
From the Editor.
On the Record.
The Week.
Trans-O-Gram.
On the Right.
Off the Record.


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