Like so many women, Brzezinski thought if she worked hard, she would eventually be rewarded.
Mr. ZBIGNIEW BRZEZINSKI (Former U.S. National Security Advisor): Nobody one will come in if there's no cease-fire.
Mr. BRZEZINSKI: Yes, and we did in Afghanistan, and the country supported it and the world supported it.
Mark Francis Brzezinski, of Virginia, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Sweden.
Over the headset, I tried to summarize a recent essay by Zbigniew Brzezinski, the national-security adviser to President Jimmy Carter.
The fact of the matter is that Brzezinski's view is in line with the general disposition of Obama's foreign policy.
At the time, Brzezinski's on-air TV career had stalled, and when she landed the gig at "Morning Joe, " she never negotiated.
After all, Brzezinski was working her tail off on "Morning Joe, " helping take it from an unknown MSNBC show to a political commodity.
"We might be able to make progress and other countries are more likely to join us, " says Zbigniew Brzezinski, a former National Security Adviser.
He briefly served in the Johnson and Carter administrations (he was a particularly close friend of Zbigniew Brzezinski, one of Barack Obama's early backers).
Brzezinski's book was born from personal experience and her admitted failure of not cutting herself a fair deal and getting the money she deserved.
Brzezinski, I said, seemed to argue that the United States had yet to come to terms with the strategic requirements of a post-colonial era.
In forming these views, he is assisted by his foreign policy team which includes Zbigniew Brzezinski, Mark Brzezinski, Anthony Lake, Susan Rice and Robert Malley.
Professor Ajami, we were just speaking with Zbigniew Brzezinski, who said that the U.S. is getting deeper and deeper into a conflict which it, quote, fundamentally misunderstands.
We begin with Mr. Brzezinski, President Carter's national security advisor.
Perhaps the rhetoric of war makes Brzezinski and others uncomfortable.
Mark Brzezinski has openly called for unconditional negotiations with Iran.
And, apparently directed by Obama's campaign staff, Ignatius based much of his column on his belief that Obama's foreign policy views have been shaped by his "informal" adviser, Brzezinski.
Zbigniew Brzezinski, President Carter's national security chief, argues that American foreign policy works best either when the president himself formulates it or when a strong secretary of state does.
Zbigniew Brzezinski, who was President Carter's national security advisor, says the U.S. has to help negotiate a cease-fire if it wants to get a strong international force on the ground.
And it is likely that he owes a significant portion of his support in the American Jewish community to the campaign's success in distancing Obama from men like Brzezinski and Malley.
To Brzezinski's dismay, his mission was overtaken by events.
This behavior, said Mika Brzezinski, the best-selling author of "Knowing Your Value: Women, Money and Getting What You're Worth" and co-host of MSNBC's "Morning Joe, " is not unusual for women, but it's disastrous.
Some observers, including Zbigniew Brzezinski, a former national security adviser, say the U.S. should step back, arguing that as tragic as the situation is, there are many other problems of greater importance.
Brzezinski served as a senior foreign policy adviser to Barack Obama during his 2008 presidential campaign, and his views are not terribly out of place among Obama's senior advisers in the White House.
So given Obama's positions toward Israel on the one hand and Iran and its allies on the other, it seems clear enough that the logical endpoint of Obama's policies would look something like Brzezinski's recommended course of action.
The likes of Baker, Scowcroft, Brzezinski and Hamilton and their students comprise a permanent Middle East policy ruling class that endures regardless of who is in power and what their actual views about Middle Eastern realities happen to be.
Professor FOUAD AJAMI (Johns Hopkins School for Advanced International Studies): Well, first of all, it would stand to reason that Zbigniew Brzezinski would say so, and I think Mr. Brzezinski should know something about getting lost in the alleyways of the Middle East.
Mr. BRZEZINSKI: I think the United States is getting itself involved in a deeper and deeper conflict which it fundamentally misunderstands, and if it persists in the policies in which it has embarked, and worse, if it widens the scale of that conflict in the Middle East and in the Persian Gulf region, then I do not see how the United States will win.
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