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Foreign Policy.

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Presentation on theme: "Foreign Policy."— Presentation transcript:

1 Foreign Policy

2 U.S. Foreign Policy (typical view)
The strategies or goals that America uses to guide its relations with other nations usually comprising five elements (standard view): National Security Free and Open Trade (Capitalism!) Democratic Governments World Peace Concern for Humanity

3 U.S. Foreign Policy (interest view)
A strategy or planned course of action developed by decision-makers of a state, which aims to achieve specific goals defined in terms of national interest comprising several elements. National Interest – the fundamental objective and ultimate determinant that guides the decision-makers of a state in making foreign policy. Self-preservation Independence (sovereignty) Territorial Integrity Military Security Economic Well-Being (?) Democracy, human rights, freedom

4 U.S. Foreign Policy Approaches
Realist/Idealist Dichotomy – the alternative approaches in forming foreign policy Realist: fundamentally empirical and pragmatic Idealist: focuses more in abstract principles involving international norms, legal codes, and moral/ethical values Revisionist – a foreign policy which seeks to alter the existing international territorial, ideological, or power distribution to its advantage (expansionist and acquisitive). Status Quo – a foreign policy which seeks to maintain the above same (conservative and “defensive”)

5 Evaluating U.S. Foreign Policy
Foreign policy actions are difficult to evaluate because: Short-term advantages or disadvantages must be weighed in relation to long-term consequences. Their impact of other nations is difficult to evaluate. Most policies result in a mixture of successes and failures that are hard to disentangle.

6 U.S. Foreign Policy Process
Translating national interest into specific goals/objectives. Determining the national and domestic situational factors related to policy goals. Analyzing the state’s capabilities for achieving desired results. Developing a plan or strategy to link capabilities with goals. Undertaking the requisite actions. Periodically reviewing and evaluating progress toward achievement of the desired results.

7 U.S. Foreign Policy Process
Intelligence (information gathering) Spies, corporate secrets, satellites, news, blogs Capability Analysis What is our appreciation of their capabilities Decision-Makers: those individuals who exercise the powers of making and implementing foreign policy decisions Opinion Elites General Public Cabinet Secretaries Bureaucracy “Groupthink”

8 Patterns of Power The influence and control exercised by one nation over other nations Unilateralism Alliances Collective Security World Government

9 Common Terms and Historical Context
Monroe Doctrine Gunboat Diplomacy Dollar Diplomacy (Roosevelt, Taft, Wilson) Isolationism/Internationalism Good Neighbor Policy (FDR) Marshall Plan Truman Doctrine Military-Industrial (Congressional)Complex - Eisenhower

10 Realism vs. Idealism in Foreign Policy


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