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CHAPTER 20 Global Policy LEARNING OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter, students should be able to do the following: 1. Define the key terms at the end of the chapter 2. Discuss the roles and powers of the president and Congress in foreign policymaking 3. Identify other players in the American foreign policymaking establishment and discuss their powers 4. Explain the broad contours of U.S. foreign policy history in the twentieth century 5. Explore in greater detail the history of the Cold War, containment, and the impact of Vietnam on American foreign policy 6. Suggest the impact that the end of the Cold War had on U.S. foreign policymaking, and the new challenges facing U.S. foreign policymaking since 9/11 7. Explain the difference between foreign and global policy 8. Discuss major global policy topics 9. Use the majoritarian and pluralist models to assess the role of public opinion in shaping American foreign policy CHAPTER SYNOPSIS This chapter examines the players, structures, and primary issues that define the making of foreign policy in the United States. The decisions made in this process can be understood through the conflicts of freedom versus order and freedom versus equality: in the case of foreign policy, though, those conflicts are between those who favor freedom versus those who favor maintaining the traditional order of the nation-state system; and those who favor freedom versus those who favor government action to enhance the equality of people in all nations. The history of U.S. foreign policy and current global policy challenges can be understood within this framework. The Constitution specifies that relations with other nations should primarily be the responsibility of two groups of actors: the executive branch and the legislative branch. The president, who has become the primary foreign policy authority, derives his authority from a few provisionsincluding his role as commander-in-chiefthat deal with the subject of foreign relations. Presidents have used these provisions, pieces of legislation, Supreme Court decisions, and precedent to expand their authority. The other primary actor in the foreign policymaking arena is Congress. Congress has many powers that can be used in foreign policy, though the Constitution never specifically mentions that term. Both the power to legislate and the power of the purse give Congress the ability to promote or prohibit international involvement. The Senate has specific powersincluding the power to ratify treatiesthat make it a particularly important force in foreign policymaking. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 238 Chapter 20: Global Policy There are many other actors who take part in making foreign policy: particularly important are the Department of State, the Department of Defense, the National Security Council, the CIA, and other parts of the bureaucracy that have intelligence capabilities. Each of these organizations advises the president and Congress on matters concerning national security and other U.S. interests. In addition, many other agencies pursue foreign policy goals as part of their missions, and there is an array of government corporations, independent agencies, and quasi-governmental organizations that also participate in making foreign policy. A brief review of the history of foreign policymaking reveals that the United States has gradually progressed from an isolationist to a regional to a global perspective in its foreign policy. Immediately after World War II, American foreign policy was dominated by the requirements of the Cold War and the containment of Soviet expansionism. A real turning point in Cold War foreign policy resulted from America’s unsuccessful involvement in the Vietnam War. Americans disagreed passionately both about what to do in Vietnam and how to do it. The Nixon doctrine, however, inspired a dramatic departure from the past by advocating détente, a foreign policy aimed at reducing tensions between East and West. This policy represented a significant change. President Carter’s foreign policy emphasized human rights, and can be seen as reflecting the “Vietnam syndrome,” a crisis of confidence about America’s role in the world. President Reagan had no such crisis, and undertook a major defense buildup as a means of rolling back perceived Soviet expansionism in Central America and elsewhere. When the Cold War ended in 1989, the conditions of foreign policymaking changed dramatically. As President Clinton’s policy of enlargement and engagement illustrates, it is now much more difficult to develop strong guidelines about U.S. involvement in situations around the world. These challenges were exacerbated by the events of September 11, 2001: now the idea of preemptive action challenges U.S. intelligence to keep our homeland safe while simultaneously engaging when the threat is not visible to everyone. The most pressing international issues are global policy issues: these are intermestic problems that require global action. Solutions to these problems often require domestic policies and practices to be subjected to international regulation. Global policymaking presents challenges to the very concept of national sovereignty. A review of the global policy areas of investment and trade, human rights policy and foreign aid, and environmental policy reveals both the need for, and the challenges to, effective policymaking in these areas. In a democracy, it would seem that public opinion could have a dramatic impact on foreign policy decisions. According to the majoritarian model of democracy, public opinion should be the fundamental guide for foreign policy makers. The problem with this view is that the public is not very interested in foreign policy, and most of those who are have views that are not very specific. The pluralist model of democracy, by contrast, recognizes that people are likely to learn about foreign policy from the leaders of groups they belong to, and so legitimizes the presence of these groups. Pluralism also recognizes and allows for the presence of foreign firms and governments as interest groups. Though the influence of these groups varies depending on the issue at hand, international lobbying efforts are most effective when they deal with noncrisis issues that are of little importance to the public at large. Given the public’s relative disinterest in these matters, foreign policyand now global policywill tend to be made by opinion leaders and competing interest groups. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 20: Global Policy 239 PARALLEL LECTURE 20.1 The Drama of Global Policy, Part 1: The Players and the Rules This lecture closely follows the discussion in the chapter, though it provides a framework for you to help your students think about foreign policy as an ongoing story with many players. This lecture introduces the major players and the supporting cast, and explains who interacts with whom, and what the boundaries of those interactions are (and why those boundaries exist). The remaining topics are covered in Parallel Lecture 20.2. I. Making foreign policy: the leading players and the rules A. Foreign policy: the general plan followed by a nation in defending and advancing national interests, especially its security against foreign threats. B. The protagonist: the president (the constitutional bases of presidential authority in foreign policy) 1. The Constitution allows the president to deal with other nations in several ways: a) The president is commander-in-chief of the armed forces. b) The president has the power to make treaties. c) The president appoints U.S. ambassadors and the heads of executive departments. d) The president receives (or refuses) ambassadors from other countries. 2. Over time, the executive has used these provisions, laws, Supreme Court decisions, and precedents created by bold action to emerge as the leading actor in American foreign policy. C. The protagonist II (and sometimes the antagonist): Congress (constitutional bases of congressional authority in foreign policy) 1. The Constitution mentions the word “foreign” in five places, and all of these are in Article I (which defines the legislative branch). 2. The Constitution allows Congress to deal with other nations in several ways. a) Congress has the power to create legislation. b) Congress has the power to declare war. c) Congress has the power to raise revenues and dispense funds. d) Congress has the power to support, maintain, govern, and regulate the army. e) Congress has the power to call out state militias to repel invasions. f) Congress has the power to regulate commerce with foreign nations. g) Congress has the power to define and punish piracy and offenses against the law of nations. 3. Congress has only used its power to declare war five times. 4. Most importantly, Congress uses its power of the purse to provide funds for foreign policy activities it supports, and to prohibit funds for those it opposes. 5. The Senate has specific powers that make it the leading chamber on foreign policy issues. a) The Senate must give advice and consent to treaties. b) The Senate must give advice and consent to the appointment of ambassadors and other officials involved in foreign policy. 6. The Senate rarely defeats a treaty the president has made (only twenty-one of thousands considered have been defeated), but many of those defeats have been historically significant. a) The Senate vetoed Woodrow Wilson’s treaty to join the League of Nations in 1921. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 240 Chapter 20: Global Policy b) II. U.S. entrance into the United Nations required Senate approval; despite some isolationist sentiment, the treaty passed. c) The most recent treaty rejection occurred in 1999, when the Senate rejected the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. D. The power move: presidents can avoid Senate treaty rejection by creating foreign policy through executive agreements. 1. Executive agreement: a pact between the heads of two countries. a) Executive agreements are within the inherent powers of the president and have the legal status of treaties. b) They must conform to the Constitution, existing treaties, and the laws of Congress. 2. Most executive agreements deal with minor issues. 3. Presidents have occasionally resorted to executive agreements on issues that were unlikely to win Senate consent: NAFTA is a recent example. E. The dance of power: legislation and foreign policymaking power (constitutional roots of statutory powers in foreign policy) 1. Congress has allowed the presidency certain leeway on use of discretionary fundslarge sums of money that may be spent on unforeseen needs to further the national interest. 2. Congress has also granted the president transfer authorityallowing him to take money that Congress has approved for one purpose and spend it on something else. 3. As commander-in-chief, the president has authority to commit the armed forces to respond to emergency situations, effectively involving the United States in undeclared wars. a) The War Powers Resolution (passed in 1973, in response to the Vietnam War) requires the president to consult with Congress in “every possible instance” before involving troops in hostilities. b) Troops may not stay for more than sixty days without congressional approval. c) The actual impact of the law is probably quite minimal; no president has ever been “punished” for violating its provisions. 4. President G.W. Bush had to work within the War Powers Resolution after the 9/11 attacks. a) Congress voted on September 14, 2001 to authorize the president to “use all necessary and appropriate force against [those] who committed or aided the terrorist attacks.” b) Bush relied on the resolution to attack Al Qaeda in Afghanistan and defeat the Taliban regime. c) Congress was not as quick to support the use of military force against Saddam Hussein in 2002. 5. The Senate has sought to expand its role. a) Senators have used confirmation hearings to prod the administration for more acceptable appointments. b) Senate dragged on John Bolton’s appointment as U.N. Ambassador until Congress recessed c) Bush sidestepped Senate by installing Bolton under a “recess appointment” to expire when new Congress convenes in January 2007 Making foreign policy: supporting players A. The Department of State 1. The State Department helps formulate American policy and then executes and monitors it throughout the world. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 20: Global Policy 2. B. C. D. 241 The secretary of state (the head of the State Department) is the highest-ranking official in the cabinet, and also (usually) the president’s most important foreign policy advisor. 3. Despite its size and selectivity in hiring, the State Department is often charged with lacking initiative and creativity. 4. The State Department lacks a strong domestic constituency to exert pressure in support of its policies; pluralist politics makes this a serious drawback. The Department of Defense 1. The Department of Defense is charged with promoting unity and coordination among the armed forces and providing the bureaucratic structure needed to manage the peacetime military. 2. The secretary of defense is a civilian, and has budgetary power; control of defense research; and the authority to transfer, abolish, reassign, and consolidate functions among the military services. 3. The power wielded by the secretary of defense depends upon the secretary’s own vision and willingness to use the tools available. 4. Below the secretary are the civilian secretaries of the army, navy, and air force. 5. Below the civilian secretaries are the military commanders of the individual branches of the armed forces: the Joint Chiefs of Staff. a) Joint Chiefs meet to coordinate military policy among the different branches b) Joint Chiefs serve as primary military advisers to the president, the secretary of defense, and the National Security Council. The National Security Council 1. The National Security Council (NSC) is a group of advisors created to help the president mold a coherent approach to foreign policymaking by integrating and coordinating details of domestic, foreign, and military affairs. 2. The statutory members of the NSC include the president, vice president, and secretaries of state and defense. 3. The role of the NSC varies considerably according to the wishes of the president. The intelligence community 1. Intelligence Community: sixteen agencies in the executive branch that conduct various intelligence activities that make up the total U.S. national intelligence effort. 2. Many attributed the 9/11 attack to failure of intelligence. a) Congress created an independent commission to investigate the charge (The 9/11 Commission). b) Commission proposed sweeping reorganization of intelligence agencies and responsibilities 3. Director of National Intelligence a) Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 created an Office of the Director of National Intelligence to coordinate all intelligence activities b) Stripped the title of Director of Central Intelligence from the head of the CIA c) DNI became principal advisor to the president and the National Security Council d) Oversees and directs the National Intelligence Program 4. The Central Intelligence Agency a) The CIA was created during the Cold War to collect information and draw on intelligence activities in other departments and agencies. b) Intelligence Directorate is responsible for collecting and processing overt information c) Operations Directorate undertakes covert activities, including espionage, coups, assassination plots, wiretaps, interception of mail, and infiltration of protest groups d) Covert operations raise more—and legal—questions for a democracy. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 242 Chapter 20: Global Policy e) Some accused the CIA’s neglecting of covert operations as a cause for 9/11. The National Security Agency a) Conducts signals intelligence using supercomputers, satellites, and other high tech equipment b) Work is highly secret c) Has more employees and a much larger budget than the CIA d) Located in the Defense Department; has always been headed by high-ranking military officers 6. The intelligence community is less communal than feudal: agencies jealously guard their turf. E. Bit players: other parts of the foreign policy bureaucracy 1. Globalization has caused the number of players concerned with foreign policy to expand. 2. The Agency for International Development (AID) oversees aid programs to nations around the globe, working with a full range of other departments and agencies. 3. Many other departments, including the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, and Energy, engage in various foreign policy activities. 4. An array of government corporations, independent agencies, and quasi-governmental organizations also participate in foreign policymaking. a) The National Endowment for Democracy b) The Export-Import Bank c) The Overseas Private Investment Corporation 5. States and localities are now also paying attention to foreign policy; most state governments now have offices charged with promoting export of state goods and attracting overseas investment. III. These are the players and what they can do: now on to the stories they have created. 5. PARALLEL LECTURE 20.2 The Drama of Global Policy, Part 2: The Stories This lecture substantially follows the discussion in the chapter, though it provides a framework for you to help your students think about foreign policy as an ongoing story with many players. This lecture follows the lecture that introduces the major players, the supporting cast, and their interactions, and delves into the specifics of their interactions during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and the challenges they will face in the twenty-first century. I. The story to this point: a review of U.S. foreign policy A. Every president comes to office with an ideological orientation for interpreting and evaluating events. 1. These orientations can be thought of in terms of the basic conflicts of freedom versus order and freedom versus equality. (See text Figure 20.1.) a) International liberals favor government action for equality of people in all nations over freedom, and favor freedom over the traditional order of the nation-state system. b) International conservatives favor freedom over government action for equality of people in all nations, and favor the traditional order of the nation-state system over freedom. c) International libertarians favor freedom over government action for equality of people in all nations, and favor freedom over the traditional order of the nationstate system. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 20: Global Policy d) B. C. 243 International communitarians favor government action for equality of people in all nations over freedom, and favor the traditional order of the nation-state system over freedom. 2. Presidents are often at ideological odds with members of Congress. 3. The story of foreign policymaking in the United States reflects theseand othertensions. Emerging from isolationism 1. For most of the nineteenth century, the limits of American interests were defined by the Monroe Doctrine. a) Monroe Doctrine: the United States rejected European interference and agreed not to involve itself in European politics. b) Isolationism: a foreign policy of withdrawal from international political affairs. 2. World War I was the first challenge to isolationism. a) The slogan that surrounded our entry into World War I“to make the world safe for democracy”gave an idealistic tone to America’s efforts to advance its own interests. b) When the Senate failed to ratify the treaty needed for entry into the League of Nations, America’s brief moment of internationalism ended, and its security interests continued to be narrowly defined. 3. World War II changed America’s orientation. a) The United States emerged from the war as a superpower, with national security interests around the world. b) After the war, the nation was forced to confront a new rival: its former ally, the Soviet Union. Cold War and containment 1. The Cold War: a prolonged period of adversarial relations between the two superpowers, the United States and the Soviet Union. a) Lasted from the late 1940s to the late 1980s b) Many crises and confrontations brought the superpowers to the brink of war. c) Avoided direct military conflict with each other 2. The Cold War was waged based on the policy of containment: the basic U.S. policy toward the Soviet Union during the Cold War, according to which the Soviets were to be contained within existing boundaries by military, diplomatic, and economic means, in the expectation that the Soviet system would decay and disintegrate. a) Militarily, the Cold War committed the United States to high defense expenditures, including maintaining a large military presence around the world. b) Economically, the Cold War required the United States to back the establishment of an international economic system that relied on free trade, fixed currency exchange rates, and America’s ability to act as banker for the world. c) Politically, the United States forged numerous alliances against the Soviet Union. (1) The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO): an organization including nations of Western Europe, the United States, and Canada, created in 1949 to defend against Soviet expansionism. (2) The United States also tried to use international institutions (such as the U.N.) as instruments of containment. 3. The early years of the Cold War were characterized by reliance on nuclear weapons through a policy of nuclear deterrence. 4. By the late 1960s, both nations had nuclear technology that would allow them to totally destroy each other; this resulted in the policy of mutually assured destruction (MAD). Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 244 Chapter 20: Global Policy 5. D. E. The end of the colonial era also had an impact on the Cold War. a) The Soviets offered to help forces involved in wars to end colonialism (wars of national liberation). b) The United States developed policies aimed at nation building: a policy once thought to shore up Third World countries economically and democratically, thereby making them less attractive targets for Soviet opportunism. Vietnam and the challenge to the Cold War consensus 1. The Cold War turned hot in Vietnam by the mid-1960s: Soviet support for a war of national liberation came into conflict with American nation building. 2. The Vietnam War damaged the Cold War consensus on the value of containment. a) Some critics complained that the government lacked the will to use enough military force to win the war. b) Others argued that the United States was relying on force to solve political problems. c) Still others objected that the United States was intervening in a civil war. 3. The United States signed a peace agreement and pulled its forces out of Vietnam, and in 1975, the country was unified under a Communist regime. 4. Even during the war, President Nixon began to shift U.S. foreign policy toward the Nixon Doctrine: Nixon’s policy, formulated with Henry Kissinger, that restricted U.S. military intervention abroad absent a threat to its vital national interest. 5. Nixon was also responsible for the policy of détente: a reduction of tensions; particularly used to refer to a reduction of tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union in the early 1970s during the Nixon administration. a) This policy led to the conclusion of a major arms agreement, the Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty (SALT I). b) There was also greater cooperation between the United States and Russia in other spheres, such as space exploration. 6. Jimmy Carter’s foreign policy reflected the influence of the “Vietnam syndrome,” a crisis of confidence that resulted from America’s failure in Vietnam and the breakdown of Cold War consensus about America’s role in the world. a) Carter tended to downplay the importance of the Soviet threat, seeing revolutions in Nicaragua and Iran as products of internal forces rather than of Soviet involvement. b) Carter’s administration also de-emphasized the use of military force, but could not offer an effective alternative when Iranians took American diplomats hostage, or when the Soviets invaded Afghanistan. The end of the Cold War 1. Ronald Reagan was untroubled by the Vietnam syndrome. 2. Pursued the policy of peace through strength: Reagan’s policy of combating communism by building up the military, including aggressive development of new weapons systems a) Increased defense spending was focused on major new weapons (such as the Strategic Defensive Initiative, also known as “Star Wars”). b) During this period, the Cold War climate became even chillier. 3. When Mikhail Gorbachev came into power in the Soviet Union (1985), things changed substantially. Gorbachev wished to reduce the USSR’s commitments abroad and concentrate its resources on domestic reforms. 4. By 1988, the United States and the USSR had concluded agreements outlawing intermediate-range nuclear forces (the INF treaty) and providing for the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan. 5. In 1989, the Berlin Wall was torn down, symbolizing the end of the Cold War. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 20: Global Policy Who won? Some believe that Communism collapsed because of Reagan’s policies. b) Who won? Some believe that the combined appeal of western affluence, Gorbachev’s policies, and the desire to overcome the nuclear threat led to the end of the Cold War. c) Who won? Some argue that both powers lost by spending trillions of dollars on defense and ignoring needs in other sectors of the economy. A new story: foreign policy without the Cold War 1. George Bush faced a classic national security challenge when Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990: not only had a friend been attacked, but the U.S. oil supply had been put in jeopardy. a) Bush emphasized multilateral action and the use of international organizations like the U.N. to counter the threat. b) The two superpowers (the United States and Russia) were able to cooperate in the U.N. Security Council against Saddam Hussein. c) The threat galvanized Americans in support of Bush’s military action to repel the invasion. 2. Bill Clinton did not have such a visible threat to vital U.S. interests, and struggled through his presidency to provide clear, coherent foreign policy leadership. a) The Clinton administration pursued the policy of enlargement and engagement. (1) Enlargement: increasing the spread of market economies and adding to the membership of NATO. (2) Engagement: rejecting isolationism and striving to achieve greater flexibility in a chaotic global era. b) Critics worried that the policy did not provide adequate guidelines about when, where, and why the United States should be engaged. c) Clinton had foreign policy successes in brokering peace in Northern Ireland and in working to broker a peaceful end to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The hot war on terrorism 1. The attack on September 11, 2001, transformed George W. Bush’s presidency. 2. Bush announced his plan to eliminate the threat to order posed by international terrorism, and implied that the sovereignty of other nations would not limit the United States from eliminating terrorism. 3. Bush made foreign policy the center of his administration. 4. He presided brilliantly over the campaign against Al Qaeda in Afghanistan, heading a truly international coalition. 5. After succeeding in Afghanistan, Bush invaded Iraq, explicitly dropping the doctrine of containment and invoking preemptive action: the policy of acting against a nation or group that poses a severe threat to the United States before waiting for the threat to occur; sometimes called the “Bush Doctrine.” 6. War in Iraq dragged on for three years with very little success, apart from toppling Saddam Hussein. Moving the story forward: from foreign policy to global policy 1. Global policy: like foreign policy, a general plan to defend and advance national interests, but global policy embraces a broader view of national interests. 2. Global policy confronts the silent, cumulative effects of billions of individual choices made by people everywhere on the globe. 3. Global policy requires global action; the players are international organizations that cooperate on a worldwide scale. a) F. G. H. 245 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 246 Chapter 20: Global Policy 4. II. U.S. leadership is less evidentand less acceptedwhen such global issues as world trade, world poverty, the environment, human rights, and the challenges of emerging democracies are in play. New stories: global policy issue areas A. Global problems are intermestic: issues in which international and domestic concerns are mixed. 1. Not only are economies tied together, but the air we breathe, the illnesses we contract, and even our climate can be affected by events in other countries. 2. Opponents of international organizations regard global interactions as compromising nations’ sovereignty. B. Investment and trade 1. At the end of World War II, the United States dominated the world’s economy. This dominance slowed, but even through the 1970s the United States was able to invest heavily abroad. 2. The United States was able to make tactical use of economic policy in making foreign policy during the Cold War. a) The United States lowered trade barriers for Western Europe and Japan to shore up anti-Soviet forces. b) The United States did not allow products with possible military use to be exported. 3. The situation changed in the 1980s. a) Gaping deficits in the federal budget were partially financed by selling U.S. Treasury obligations at high interest rates to foreigners. b) The value of the dollar soared, making American goods expensive for the rest of the world, and foreign goods cheap in the United States. c) Foreign firms became less interested in investing in the United States, and American economic problems deepened. 4. Dependence on foreign oil is an increasingly severe problem. a) In 1960, the United States produced seven million barrels of oil and met over 80 percent of its needs. b) Today, the United States imports two-thirds of the oil it consumes. c) As other nations (especially China) increase their consumption, prices are climbing. 5. The United States became more closely tied to other countries through international tradebut this is a complicated story with many actual, and potential, plotlines. a) Pursuing a true free trade policy would allow for the unfettered operation of the free market. (1) Free trade: an economic policy that allows businesses in different nations to sell and buy goods. (2) Free trade would allow the principle of comparative advantage to work unhindered: all nations benefit when each nation specializes in those goods it can produce most efficiently, and then trades them to obtain funds for the things it can produce only at a comparatively higher cost. (3) The United States does not have pure free trade, but it has generally favored a relatively free trade regime in the last half of the twentieth century. (4) Other nations do not always have such liberal policies, though, which may put American goods at a disadvantage in the world market. b) Americans want not only freedom, but fairness, in the world market. (1) Fair trade: requires policymakers to create order through international agreements outlawing unfair business practices. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 20: Global Policy (2) C. 247 The World Trade Organization (WTO) was created in 1995 to regulate trade among its member nations. (3) Rulings against U.S. laws have been highly technical and have had a limited impact. c) Managed trade: government intervention in trade policy in order to achieve a specific result (such as paying down a balance-of-payment deficit). (1) This approach is a clear departure from a free trade system. (2) The United States has negotiated agreements with Japan to insure that American firms get a larger share of the Japanese market for various products. d) Protectionists: those who wish to prevent imports from entering the country and therefore oppose free trade. (1) Protectionists are concerned with preserving American industries and jobs. (2) Most unions and many small manufacturers opposed NAFTA. (3) But protectionism is a double-edged sword: countries whose products are kept out of the United States retaliate by refusing to import American goods. (4) Protectionism also complicates foreign policymaking about other issues: it is a distinctly unfriendly toward nations that may be our allies. Human rights, poverty, and foreign aid 1. NATO’s campaign against “ethnic cleansing” in the Balkans made clear that western democracies would go to war to champion human rights. 2. Support for moral ideals such as freedom, democracy, and human rights fits well with U.S. interests. 3. Nevertheless, the relationship between America’s human rights policy goals and its economic policy goals has often been problematic. Many of the “big emerging markets” (BEMs), such as China, Indonesia, and Turkey, have problematic records in the areas of human rights, worker’s rights, and child labor. 4. The United States uses other economic tools to pursue human rights policy objectives. a) Development aid, debt forgiveness, and loans with favorable credit terms are all used to assist developing nations. b) The United States also donates American goods, which directly benefits the American businesses that supply the products. c) Growing income disparities between the industrialized North and the nonindustrial southern nations may lead to political instability and threaten the interests of the democracies in the developed world. 5. Foreign aid is an easy target when the budget is tight. a) Foreign aid recipients do not vote in American elections. b) Americans overestimate the amount that goes to foreign aid (half of survey respondents believe 15 percent of the budget goes to aid to other countries; in actuality, the amount is less than 1 percent). (See Figure 20.2 in text.) 6. In the last month of his administration, President Clinton signed the treaty to establish the International Criminal Court. a) The Court has jurisdiction over individuals on charges of genocide, war crimes, and other crimes against humanity. b) The treaty was controversial because the armed services feared that American troops abroad could be vulnerable to prosecution as a result of military actions. c) President George W. Bush “unsigned” the treaty in 2002. d) In 2005, ninety-nine countries, but not the United States, were members. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 248 Chapter 20: Global Policy D. The environment 1. Environmental issues have posed the challenge of freedom versus order in the international arena. 2. Third World leaders have not wanted limits imposed on their freedom to industrialize under the terms of global order defined by the developed nations. 3. The United States has often drawn attacks from both developed and underdeveloped nations for claiming special privileges in international agreements accepted by other nations. a) The United States has been unwilling to abide by the terms of the Biodiversity Treaty that was the product of the “Earth Summit” in Rio de Janeiro in 1992. b) Similar problems occurred in regard to the 1997 understanding on global warming that was developed in Kyoto. c) In 2006, the Bush administration did accept a study that found “clear evidence of human influences on the climate system.” III. Viewers or actors? the public and global policy A. Historically, the public has paid little attention to traditional foreign policy issues, except for issues of war and peace and the spread of communism. B. Globalization has made nations more interdependent, and events in other countries have more of a direct impact on life in the United States. C. The public and the majoritarian model 1. A 2004 survey reveals that Americans’ interest in the news of other countries, and their interest in American relations with other countries, has not changed much since 1974 (except for a spike in the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 attacks). 2. Most people think globalization is mostly good, but there are still a substantial number who think “protecting American workers” is very important. 3. The study confirmed that Americans continue to have a low level of support for “bringing a democratic form of government to other nations.” 4. Public opinion seems to have little unique effect on foreign policy. D. Interest groups and the pluralist model 1. Interest groupsincluding foreign firms, groups, and governmentshave hired lobbying firms to represent their issues in Washington. a) The influence of these groups varies depending on the issue. b) Given that the public has little interest in foreign affairs, interest groups can have a great effect on global policies outside matters of national security (e.g., the China Trade Bill). 2. Passage of the 2000 China Trade Bill illustrates the pluralist model in action. a) It was the kind of technical, complex bill that interested only small segments of the population. b) Lobbying on both sides was intense; the bill passed both the House and Senates by large margin. E. Global and foreign policy decision making may be the least majoritarian aspect of policymaking. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 20: Global Policy 249 FOCUS LECTURE 20.1 Human Rights and U.S. Foreign Policy Concern for international human rights as a dimension of United States foreign policy has moved in and out of the U.S. policy agenda since World War II. In the process, definitions of human rights have ranged from very narrow (concern for freedom and civil liberties) to extremely broad (concern for equality and social, economic, and cultural rights). I. U.S. foreign policy between World War II and the present varied with presidential eras. A. Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1933–1945) 1. Roosevelt initially gave little direct attention to foreign policy. a) His welfare-oriented legislation in the 1930s indicated the basic approach his administration would take. b) Roosevelt adopted a “good neighbor policy” toward Latin America. 2. In the 1940s, increasing attention was given to international human rights. a) A broadly defined Economic Bill of Rights (1944) argued that a decent standard of living for all people is required for world peace and that individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and independence. b) Although this policy was U.S.-centered, Roosevelt saw it as applicable to the world at large. B. Truman and Eisenhower (1945–1961) 1. After World War II, concern for human rights reached its culmination in the drafting and U.S. endorsement of the United Nation’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights (December 10, 1948). Afterward, there was a downturn in attention to human rights issues. 2. The Cold War period of preoccupation with the USSR brought a domestic backlash to the liberal, internationalist outlook of the New Deal. a) International human rights obligations were seen as encroaching upon the sovereignty of the United States and conflicting with the Constitution. b) There was resistance to the idea, gaining credence elsewhere, that human rights are an international matter, not only a domestic issue. c) In this mood, the United States did not ratify the 1951 genocide convention. 3. By 1953, the Eisenhower administration had abandoned any U.S. effort to increase the promotion of international human rights, and human rights were at the bottom of the hierarchy of national interests. a) Secretary of State John Foster Dulles contended that human rights were relevant only to the extent that they could be used to divide the world into the “free world” and the “captive world.” b) The United States was willing to intervene militarily in the affairs of a developing nation if U.S. economic interests were involved or if there was the perception of “communist influence,” as in Iran in 1953, Guatemala in 1954, and Lebanon in 1958. c) The United States was not, however, prepared to intervene in the domestic affairs of a state that engaged in significant human rights violations if it also opposed communism. C. Kennedy and Johnson (1961–1969) 1. This was a period of expansive international liberalism, typified by the Peace Corps, the Alliance for Progress, official support for self-determination (especially when it Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 250 Chapter 20: Global Policy D. was threatened by the Soviet Union), and global involvement in the internal affairs of foreign societies. a) Americans believed that development would produce stability and democracy. b) There was a willingness to look at economic rights as important in promoting civil and political rights, especially in developing countries. c) President Kennedy believed the United States had a moral responsibility toward other countries (an attitude of noblesse oblige) and that problems of developing countries were problems of the United States—including human rights violations. 2. The primary focus, however, was still on protecting U.S. economic interests and responding to perceived threats from communism. Examples include the following: a) Anti-Castro interventionist activities, such as the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961. b) Intervention in the Dominican Republic in 1965. c) Escalating involvement in Vietnam. Nixon and Ford (1969–1977) 1. There was a reversal in mood in U.S. foreign policy, resulting in a downturn in support for human rights at the presidential level. 2. Nixon emphasized the legitimacy of territorial sovereignty and of the existing political order. 3. There was little concern with human rights, even in communist countries. a) Kissinger believed that U.S. national interests (which did not include human rights abroad) must shape our international commitments. b) He scorned introducing human rights concerns into serious diplomacy, feeling that such concerns were “moralistic encumbrances upon the serious business of negotiating stable arrangements of state power.” c) “This was evident in the United Nations, where the United States, during [Ambassador Daniel] Moynihan’s tenure, stridently used human rights as an ideological tool against the Third World in an effort to dilute the anti-apartheid campaign.” (Richard Falk, Human Rights and State Sovereignty [New York: Holmes and Meier, 1981] p. 13.) 4. During the Nixon years, the war in Vietnam continued, but was restructured to reduce the number of American troops and to rely more on bombing raids and on the South Vietnamese army. a) Nixon escalated the war while talking about “peace with honor.” b) In 1970, he authorized the bombing of Cambodia as a secret tactic. c) When the bombing of Cambodia became public knowledge, outrage erupted in the United States, particularly on college campuses. d) Four American college students were killed at Kent State University (in Ohio) by National Guardsmen who fired into a crowd of demonstrators. 5. Even as bombing intensified, Nixon was involved in secret talks in Paris that ultimately led to the open peace talks. a) Nixon left office in 1974 as a result of the Watergate scandal. b) It was actually during the presidency of Gerald Ford that South Vietnam collapsed (1975). In the years following that collapse, large numbers of Vietnamese sought refuge in the United States. c) Like many other foreign policy operations, Vietnam left the United States with a complex legacy of loss and grief, and with new immigrants to assimilate. 6. Nixon, like many other presidents, often preferred private diplomacy before public discussion of policy. a) Private diplomacy led to the surprise opening of diplomatic relations with Communist China in 1971 and 1972. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 20: Global Policy After Nixon’s death in 1994, his China accomplishments remained among his most noted foreign policy actions. Carter (1977–1981) A. Human rights were a major personal concern for President Carter. 1. Carter referred to human rights in his inaugural address (and in his announcement of his candidacy for the presidency). a) This allowed Carter to reassert U.S. leadership abroad without heavy expenditures or an elaborate foreign policy. b) It was consistent with his world view and his interest in international morality, restoring to the United States its traditional role as “defender of democracy and individual liberty.” c) He believed that the United States should fulfill its commitments as expressed in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights documents. 2. Carter restructured the State Department. a) He created the Bureau of Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs and the InterAgency Group on Human Rights and Foreign Assistance. b) The group included representatives from: the Treasury Department; Departments of Agriculture and Commerce; National Security Council; Overseas Private Investment Corporation; Agency for International Development; and InterAmerican Development Bank and the World Bank. B. Carter was rather specific in his understanding of human rights. 1. Specific human rights were defined, categorized, and prioritized both in Carter’s 1978 speech on the thirtieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and in a 1977 speech by his secretary of state, Cyrus Vance. a) Personal security rights come first. Carter stated: “Of all human rights, the most basic is to be free of arbitrary violence [torture; cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment; arbitrary arrest or imprisonment; and denial of fair trial]—whether that violence comes from governments, from terrorists, from criminals, or from selfappointed messiahs operating under the cover of politics or religion. ... The first duty of government is to protect its citizens.” (1) Compare this statement to the “original purpose” of government in Chapter 1—to protect life and property. (2) The difference is that “human rights” limits the government’s use of arbitrary violence. (3) Thus, “human rights” really amounts to freedom from government oppression—or what we referred to in Chapter 16 as civil liberties. b) Civil liberties and political rights: Freedom of thought, religion, assembly, speech, press, movement, participation in government—these are necessary in order to fulfill the following type of rights. c) Economic and welfare rights: Food, shelter, health care, education, and the right to emigrate and reunite families. (1) Compare securing these rights with government’s role in promoting equality. (2) These are the rights described in Chapter 16. 2. There was no clear articulation of what specific institutions were to be responsible for implementing these rights, but Carter spoke of greater commitment to the United Nations. 3. Emphasizing the need to be “realistic” and pragmatic, Cyrus Vance outlined three sets of questions that would serve as broad guidelines in determining U.S. action in response to human rights violations. b) II. 251 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 252 Chapter 20: Global Policy a) b) c) C. The nature of the particular case under consideration As assessment of the prospects for effective action A wide-ranging perspective, including concern for U.S. security issues and for the welfare of people in other countries 4. Vance’s deputy secretary of state, Warren Christopher, said, “Human rights, while a fundamental factor in our foreign policy, cannot always be the decisive factor.” Carter’s success in implementing human rights was uneven, but he was more successful than any previous president had been. 1. His administration withheld at least some economic or military assistance from numerous countries, including Brazil, Chile, El Salvador (aid was cut in 1980, but restored in 1981), Ethiopia, Guatemala (military aid was cut in response to the killing of thousands of Indians), and Paraguay. 2. His administration gave mixed support to the United Nations arms embargo against South Africa. 3. His administration did not cut aid, however, to other nations with human rights violations—South Korea, the Philippines, and Nicaragua under Somoza. 4. The Carter administration also enjoyed cooperation from the Soviet Union on the issue of Jewish emigration in the years before the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan: Year Number of Jews Allowed to Emigrate 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 (Soviet invasion of Afghanistan) 1981 D. 14,261 16,736 28,864 51,320 21,471 9,447 Within the United States, Carter’s human rights policy drew criticism from both the right and the left. 1. The left felt that Carter ultimately supported the status quo and that the United States was hypocritical because it supported some states with material used for state terrorist activities. a) Examples: the Philippines under Marcos; Iran under the Shah; and South Korea, Indonesia, and Morocco. b) In fact, at least one statistical study found that “states which engage in government-supported violations of civil liberties and state terror are more likely to receive substantial arms transfers from the United States than states with more favorable records.” (Deborah J. Gerner, “Weapons for Repression? U.S. Arms Transfers to the Third World,” in Foreign Policy and State Terror, edited by Michael Stohl and George Lopez [Westwood, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1987].) 2. Critics on the right made these points: a) The United States cannot and should not interfere in another state’s domestic affairs; sovereignty is absolute, and morality should not be instilled into international affairs. b) Even if the United States should “do something” about human rights, it is not clear that we have sufficient influence abroad to accomplish very much, and trying to do something might do more harm than good. c) There is a fundamental difference between totalitarianism (communist) and authoritarian (noncommunist) regimes, and the latter are preferred to the former according to our self-interest. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 20: Global Policy 253 Outside the United States, Carter’s policy was also viewed differently. 1. Many opposition leaders and other individuals in developing nations reacted positively to Carter’s initiatives, and he is still warmly regarded within such circles. 2. Leaders of some other countries, however, did not like Carter’s attacks on their human rights policies. a) Argentina refused to participate in the grain embargo against the Soviets in part because of Carter’s criticism of its human rights record. b) The United States risked alienating Israel by addressing the question of Palestinians’ rights in Israel and its occupied territories. c) Several countries (e.g., Uruguay and Brazil) refused to accept U.S. military and economic assistance because of U.S. criticism. 3. Carter commented, “Our country paid a price for its emphasis on human rights. There were leaders of oppressive regimes who deeply resented any comment about their politics, because they had reason to fear the reaction of their own people against them when their oppression was acknowledged by the outside world” (Keeping Faith, p. 151). III. Reagan and Bush (1981–1993) A. Reagan’s basic approach was mostly a reaction to, and criticism of, the Carter administration. 1. Reagan was attracted by Jeane Kirkpatrick’s article “Dictatorships and Double Standards” (Commentary, November, 1979), which was critical of Carter’s policies, and he appointed her ambassador to the United Nations. 2. Whereas Carter’s focus was on human rights, broadly defined, Reagan stressed “international terrorism” by nonstate actors. 3. Reagan distinguished between authoritarian and totalitarian regimes, arguing that the former were less of a problem than the latter. According to this view, a) The best way to advance human rights is “by strengthening our resolve and our resources to defend our allies who are threatened by totalitarian aggression or subversion” (Ernest W. Lefever, Hearings Before the Subcommittee on International Organizations of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, 96th Congress, 1st Session). b) In general, repressive regimes are acceptable if they are also anticommunist. 4. State sovereignty constitutes an absolute and total barrier to including human rights as a topic of discussion or cause for action in the foreign policy arena. The Reagan administration, however, took a leading role in helping remove Marcos from the Philippines and Duvalier from Haiti. Expediency helped to determine these moves, for the United States had learned from its experience with the Shah not to back dictators to the bitter end. 5. Subsequent events in Haiti indicate that the Reagan policy was inadequate in creating democratic processes there. B. Reagan policy in Central America during the 1980s became part of the Iran-Contra scandal that unfolded in the late 1980s. 1. Under President Reagan and Vice President Bush, American military officers, both active and retired, became advisers and fund raisers for Nicaraguan counterrevolutionaries. 2. These advisers/fund raisers operated in secret and in direct opposition to congressional decisions. In 1982, Congress enacted the Boland Amendment specifically to prohibit any U.S. involvement in Nicaraguan military or civil disputes. 3. The secrecy of the operations became the subject of intense scrutiny by a congressional investigating committee, and several people were found guilty of lying to Congress and other misdemeanors. E. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 254 Chapter 20: Global Policy 4. President Reagan, both during his time in office and in his retirement, continued to insist that he had no personal knowledge of the secret and illegal operations. 5. In his autobiography, Oliver North, a defendant in the Iran-Contra case, claimed that then-President Reagan did indeed know of his covert operations. C. One of the most debatable aspects of Reagan-Bush foreign policy was the impact of Reagan’s arms buildup on the breakup of the Soviet Union. 1. Some argue that the U.S. arms buildup of the 1980s forced the USSR to compete, thus straining its economy. 2. This line of thought suggests that it was primarily the Cold War struggle for military predominance that forced the changes that led to the dismantling of the Soviet Union. 3. A contrasting view suggests that the internal problems in the Soviet economy and its own military-industrial complex were more important factors in its collapse. 4. This view stresses the undemocratic nature of Soviet politics and the inevitability of the eventual breakdown and push for democracy. 5. The debate over the impact of Reagan’s foreign policy will continue, but there is no question that the United States must evolve a foreign policy appropriate for the post– Cold War world. IV. Clinton (1993– 2001) A. Bill Clinton’s foreign policy has been labeled indecisive by most political observers, on both the left and right. B. He campaigned on several human rights themes. 1. However, in office he reneged on promises regarding trade relations with China. 2. He also struggled with policy regarding Haiti and the thousands of refugees who tried to enter the United States by boat. C. Clinton’s basic approach appears most like Jimmy Carter’s: a human rights emphasis. Yet Clinton was very concerned about economic relations and about avoiding another Vietnam. D. Clinton’s challenge will remain the challenge of U.S. foreign policy for the foreseeable future. 1. The United States is the major power in the world, both militarily and economically. 2. Many of the world’s nations are underdeveloped and have large impoverished populations. 3. Many nations have weapons that could threaten world security. 4. Increasing economic competition requires a new approach to foreign policy. 5. The relationship among individual nations is evolving as nations form economic blocs, such as NAFTA (Canada, Mexico, and the United States) and the EEC (European Common Market). 6. The world is probably safer in some ways than it was during the Cold War, yet it is still dangerous in terms of isolated groups, individuals, or nations armed with weapons of mass destruction. 7. The role of the United States is changing, yet to some degree it still resembles its past role as the “world’s policeman.” 8. From Clinton onward, all American presidents will have to decide where, when, how, and—especially—why U.S. military force should be used in a world without a communist threat. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 20: Global Policy 255 PROJECTS, ACTIVITIES, AND SMALL-GROUP ACTIVITIES 1. The majoritarian model of democracy advocates more reliance on the public’s opinionsin this case, regarding the construction of foreign policy. It may be interesting to find out what kinds of foreign policies would result if your class represented all American citizens in a majoritarian political system. Give students a short objective questionnaire on the major global policy questions that are relevant today. Make sure that most of the policy alternatives are available for each issue, as well as a “don’t know” category. Summarize the results and discuss them with your class. How much variation did you find in the policy orientation of your students? Discuss with your students whether the policy views held by the majority of the class correspond to those of the American public. (It might be best to administer the questionnaire during the class session before the chapter is assigned.) 2. Economic aid is one of the positive economic inducements U.S. policymakers use in persuading countries to support the policies of the United States. Ask students to use the U.S. Statistical Abstract to construct a table of the twenty largest recipients of American aid for the last five years. Ask them to distinguish between military and nonmilitary aid. Have students develop explanations for high levels of aid in terms of U.S. foreign policy interests and domestic politics. 3. Prepare your students for this small group activity by asking them to bring a current newspaper, online article, or magazine to class. (Your preference may be for them to read an article on some foreign policy issue before class.) Students can form small groups to analyze the following issues: What three circumstances or events would create a legitimate reason for U.S. military intervention in another nation? What are some events or circumstances that do not legitimize U.S. military intervention? Students may use current events as examples. Allow groups about fifteen minutes and then reconvene the class. Each group can report on their discussion. What themes seem to be repeated? What trends in attitude does the class represent? Ask students to identify themselves as isolationist or interventionist; ask them to evaluate their attitudes about unilateral action versus multilateral action. INTERNET RESOURCES Department of State www.state.gov/ Interested in a career in foreign service? Want to learn more about a specific foreign policy issue or country? Check out the State Department’s home page. Central Intelligence Agency www.cia.gov/ View data about other countries, and learn more about agency operations. National Security Council www.whitehouse.gov/nsc The National Security Council is the president’s principal forum for considering national security and foreign policy matters with his senior national security advisors and cabinet officials. The WWW Virtual Library: International Affairs Resources www.etown.edu/vl/ This site is a good place to start when searching for information on foreign affairs. Amnesty International Online www.amnesty.org/ Visit this site to learn more about human rights abuses or to become active in the cause of human rights. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.