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Chapter Eighteen: Foreign Policy and National Security. Learning Objectives. Define foreign policy, defense policy, and diplomacy. Compare and contrast moral idealism with political realism in framing foreign policy.
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Chapter Eighteen: Foreign Policy and National Security
Learning Objectives • Define foreign policy, defense policy, and diplomacy. • Compare and contrast moral idealism with political realism in framing foreign policy. • Describe the impact of issues such as nuclear proliferation and terrorism on foreign policy. • Describe and explain the current situation in Iraq, with special attention to the attitudes of the three main ethnic groups.
Learning Objectives Summarize several current foreign policy concerns, including: • The Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the internationally proposed solution, the position of the Israelis, and the position of the Palestinians; • The growing economic power of China and the concerns this provokes, especially relating to Taiwan; and • The problem of North Korea’s nuclear weapons development program.
Learning Objectives • Evaluate the formal and informal powers of the president to make foreign policy. • Identify the principal agencies that assist the president in developing foreign policy.
Learning Objectives • Trace the stages of U.S. foreign policy development including: • early foreign policy, • the Monroe Doctrine and isolationism, • internationalism, • The Cold War, • Containment and détente, and • Bush’s doctrine of preemption.
Facing the World: Foreign and Defense Policy Foreign policy includes the techniques and strategies used to achieve external goals, as well as the goals themselves. • Diplomacy • Economic Aid • Technical Assistance
Facing the World: Foreign and Defense Policy National Security Policy : National security is the protection of the independence and political and economic integrity of the United States. • Defense Policy • Diplomacy
Morality versus Reality in Foreign Policy • Moral idealism • Political realism • American foreign policy—a mixtureof both
The Major Foreign Policy Themes • Formative Years: Avoiding Entanglements • Era of Internationalism • The Cold War • Containment Policy
The Major Foreign Policy Themes Superpower Relations: • Cuba Missile Crisis • Period of Détente • Reagan-Bush Years • Dissolution of the Soviet Union
Challenges in World Politics • Emerging World Order • Threat of Terrorism • Terrorism and Regional Strife • Terrorist Attacks against Foreign Civilians • September 11 • London Bombings
Challenges in World Politics War on Terrorism: • Military Responses • A New Kind of War—Bush Doctrine
Challenges in World Politics • Iraq Wars • Persian Gulf—The First Gulf War • Iraq War • Occupied Iraq • Situation Worsens • Continuing Insurgency
Challenges in World Politics • Nuclear Weapons • United States and the Soviet Union • Nuclear Proliferation
Challenges in World Politics • Regional Conflicts • Cuba • Israel and the Palestinians • Wars and AIDS in Africa
Who Makes Foreign Policy? • Constitutional Powers of the President • War Powers • Treaties and Executive Agreements • Other Constitutional Powers • Informal Techniques of Presidential Leadership
Who Makes Foreign Policy? • Department of State • National Security Council • Intelligence community • Department of Defense
Congress Balances the Presidency • The War Powers Resolution (1973) • Presidents since 1973 have often not consulted Congress before committing troops, and that can create a situation in which Congress does not dare recall them. • Congress can limit or deny presidential requests for military assistance.
Domestic Sources of Foreign Policy • Elite and Mass Opinion • Military-Industrial Complex
Web Links • Center for Security Studies (CSS): An academic institute that provides information about human rights, national security, and other issues from a European point of view: http://www.css.ethz.ch/index_EN. • Brookings Institute: a nonprofit public policy organization based in Washington, DC. Go to:. www.brookings.edu.
What If… The United States Disposed of All of Its Nuclear Weapons? • At the height of the Cold War, both the United States and the Soviet Union possessed more than 10,000 nuclear warheads for missile launch. • Several agreements have been signed by the United States and Russia to destroy significant numbers of these weapons.
What If… The United States Disposed of All of Its Nuclear Weapons? • The United States still maintains about 5000 active and inactive nuclear warheads and more than 4000 "retired" warheads waiting for disposal. • Russia has about 2600 active warheads and more than 8000 "retired" warheads.
What If… The United States Disposed of All of Its Nuclear Weapons? • If the United States unilaterally destroyed its nuclear weapons, it is likely that the other Western powers would do so too. • Russia may also destroy theirs. • It is unclear what China, India, or Pakistan would do.
What If… The United States Disposed of All of Its Nuclear Weapons? • It is very expensive and difficult to dispose of nuclear weapons materials. • Political disagreements have slowed down the process of getting rid of nuclear weapons.
You Can Make a Difference: Working for Human Rights • In many countries throughout the world, human rights are not protected. • The strongest reason for involving yourself with human rights issues in other countries is simple moral altruism— unselfish regard for the welfare of others. • Working for peace can reduce the frequency of wars.
You Can Make a Difference: Working for Human Rights Students can: • join an organization that attempts to keep watch over human rights violations. • keep informed about the state of affairs in other nations. • write personally to governments that violate human rights. • Contact Amnesty International at www.amnestyusa.org.