Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

National Security Policymaking Chapter 20. American Foreign Policy: Instruments, Actors, and Policymakers Instruments of Foreign Policy – Three types.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "National Security Policymaking Chapter 20. American Foreign Policy: Instruments, Actors, and Policymakers Instruments of Foreign Policy – Three types."— Presentation transcript:

1 National Security Policymaking Chapter 20

2 American Foreign Policy: Instruments, Actors, and Policymakers Instruments of Foreign Policy – Three types of tools: Military Economic Diplomatic – Military is the oldest and still used – Economic is becoming more powerful – Diplomatic is the quietest of the tools

3 American Foreign Policy: Instruments, Actors, and Policymakers Actors on the World Stage – International Organizations (UN) – Regional Organizations (NATO, EU) – Multinational Corporations – Nongovernmental Organizations – Individuals

4 Multinational Corporations Businesses that span the globe and operate in multiple countries Contribute about one-fifth of the global economy Have significant influence over taxes and trade regulations Can be as powerful as governments

5 Non-Governmental Organizations a.k.a. NGOs Unite people globally for common causes or goals Churches, labor unions, environmental groups, human rights groups Red Cross, Doctors Without Borders, …

6 American Foreign Policy: Instruments, Actors, and Policymakers The Policymakers – The President (commander-in-chief) – The Diplomats (secretary of state) – The National Security Establishment (secretary of defense, Joint Chiefs of Staff—commanding officers of each military branch, NSC, CIA) – Congress (oversees foreign policy)

7 United Nations (1945) A global legislative body Nearly 200 countries are members Mainly responsible for peacekeeping; also economic, education and welfare programs The UN Security Council makes most important decisions Five permanent members with veto power: U.S., China, Russia, France and UK

8 NATO (1949) North Atlantic Treaty Organization Is a military alliance formed by the U.S. and western European countries during the Cold War Since end of Cold War, some former Eastern bloc countries are members Helps prevent the threat of war by pledging support of each other during times of war

9 European Union (1952) An economic alliance Most western European countries share a common currency (for most) in 2001 No trade barriers No employment restrictions among member countries

10 CIA Central Intelligence Agency forms in US in 1947 after WWII Collects national security information from around the world to help other departments make policy decisions

11 American Foreign Policy: An Overview Isolationism: – Prior to WWI and II – Foreign policy where the U.S. tries to stay out of other nation’s conflicts, particularly in Europe. Monroe Doctrine: – U.S. official statement of isolationism World War I: – Basically ended the policy of isolationism

12 American Foreign Policy: An Overview The Cold War (post WWII) – Containment and Anti-Communism at Home: isolate the Soviets, contain its advances, use force if necessary – Cold War was not military in nature – Arms Race: Characterized by the swelling of the Pentagon, build-up of nuclear weapons and ideological divide with Soviets – Korean War & The Vietnam War

13 McCarthyism (1950’s) Named for Joseph McCarthy, a US Senator Cold war era fear that international Communism would take over the free world Paranoia that American government would be overtaken by communists Many innocent Americans were accused of being communist and some were tried

14 American Foreign Policy: An Overview The Era of Détente (1970’s-1980’s) – Détente: a slow transformation from conflict to cooperation – Strategic Arms Limitations Talks: effort to limit the growth of nuclear arms – Originally applied to the Soviet Union, and then to China

15 Reagan Rearmament 1980’s Reagan reversed the trend of diminishing defense spending Largest peacetime defense build-up in history

16 Strategic Defense Initiative SDI / Star Wars 1983 Defense plan of Reagan’s against Soviet Union Create a global umbrella in space, using computers to scan skies and devices to destroy invading missiles

17 Final Thaw President George Bush, Sr., declares a new era of cooperation with Soviets 1989 Berlin Wall tumbles Setbacks with communist China, however

18 The War on Terrorism (2001) War on terrorism became highest priority of George W. Bush administration after 9/11. – Bush supported preemptive strikes against terrorists and hostile states. – Patriot Act allowed government more power to investigate and pursue potential terrorists – Fewer civil liberties due to need to protect US

19 The Politics of Defense Policy Defense Spending – Currently takes up about one-fifth of the federal budget. – Conservatives argue against budget cuts that would leave the military unprepared. – Liberals argue for budget cuts to provide more money for programs here in the U.S. – Military spending is hard to cut since it means a loss of jobs in congressional districts.

20 The New Global Agenda The Decreasing Role of Military Power – Military power is losing much of its utility in resolving many international issues. – Economic Sanctions Nonmilitary penalties imposed on foreign countries as an attempt to modify their behavior. Generally the first “shot” in a crisis. Can be effective, but critics argue they only hurt U.S. businesses and provoke a nationalist backlash.

21 The New Global Agenda Nuclear Proliferation – Only a few countries have known nuclear weapon capabilities. – Fear is that other “rogue” countries will have nuclear weapons capabilities and use them against their neighbors or the U.S.

22 The New Global Agenda The Spread of Nuclear Weapons (Figure 20.3)

23 The New Global Agenda The International Economy – Interdependency: Mutual dependency, in which the actions of nations reverberate and affect one another’s economic lifelines. – International Trade Tariffs (a tax on imported goods) are used to protect American business. NAFTA and GATT are ways to lower tariffs and increase trade. – Balance of Trade: The ratio of what is paid for imports to what is earned for exports.

24 The New Global Agenda The International Economy (continued) – Energy America depends on imported oil, but not as much as other nations. Much of the recoverable oil is in the Middle East which is often the site of military & economic conflicts. OPEC controls the price of oil and amount its members produce and sell.

25 The New Global Agenda The International Economy (continued) – Foreign Aid Foreign aid is used to stabilize nations friendly to the United States. A substantial percentage of foreign aid is military. Foreign aid has never been very popular with Americans


Download ppt "National Security Policymaking Chapter 20. American Foreign Policy: Instruments, Actors, and Policymakers Instruments of Foreign Policy – Three types."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google