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Chapter 17
Foreign and Defense
Policymaking
American Government:
Policy & Politics,
Eighth Edition
TANNAHILL
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
In This Chapter We Will Cover:
• The history of American foreign
policy
• The international community
• The means and ends of American
foreign and defense policy
• American foreign policy after 9/11
• American defense policy
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
The History of American
Foreign Policy
• Periods of U.S. Foreign Policy
– From Isolationism to Internationalism
• For most of the first century of the nation’s
history, the U.S. avoided what President
Washington called “entangling alliances.”
– Monroe Doctrine
– World War I
– World War II
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
The History of American
Foreign Policy
– The Cold War and the Policy of
Containment
• The relationship between the United
States and the Soviet Union was the
dominant element of American foreign
policy after World War II.
–The Marshall Plan
–Containment
–The Truman Doctrine
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
The History of American
Foreign Policy
– Détente
• In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the
two superpowers entered an era of
improved relations known as Détente.
–Strategic Arms Limitation Talks
(SALT) 1969
–Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty
1972
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The History of American
Foreign Policy
– American Foreign Policy in the
1970s: Recognition of Limits
• The Nixon Doctrine declared that
although the United States would help
small nations threatened by communist
aggression with economic and military
aid, those countries must play a major
role in their own defense.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
The History of American
Foreign Policy
– American Foreign Policy in the
1980s: A Resurgent America
• The Reagan Doctrine called for the
United States to offer military aid to
groups attempting to overthrow
communist governments anywhere in
the world.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
The History of American
Foreign Policy
– The Disintegration of the Soviet
Union and the End of the Cold War
• In the late 1980s, a new Soviet leader,
Mikhail Gorbachev, recognized that the
Soviet system was failing. He responded
with bold economic and political reforms.
–Perestroika
–Glasnost
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The International Community
• The nation-state is a political community,
occupying a definite territory, and having an
organized government.
• Diplomatic relations refers to a system of
official contacts between two nations in which
the countries exchange ambassadors and
other diplomatic personnel and operate
embassies in each other’s country.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
The International Community
• The United Nations (UN) is an
international organization founded in
1945 as a diplomatic forum to resolve
conflicts among the world’s nations.
• The World Health Organization
(WHO) is an international organization
created to control disease worldwide.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
The International Community
• The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) is an organization created to
promote economic stability worldwide.
• The World Trade Organization (WTO)
is an international organization that
administers trade laws and provides a
forum for settling trade disputes among
nations.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
The International Community
• The North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) is a regional
military alliance consisting of the United
Sates, Canada, and most of the
European democracies.
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The International Community
• The North American Free Trade
Agreement (NAFTA) in an international
accord among the Unites States,
Mexico, and Canada to lower trade
barriers among the three nations.
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The Ends and Means of American
Foreign and Defense Policy
• Ends
– The United States has consistently
pursued three foreign and defense policy
goals throughout its history: national
security, economic prosperity, and the
projection of American values abroad.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
The Ends and Means of American
Foreign and Defense Policy
• Means
– The United States attempts to achieve
foreign policy goals through the use of
military force, economic, diplomatic, and
cultural means.
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American Foreign Policy After 9/11
• The United States: is the world’s
“indispensable nation” (M. Albright).
• Internationalist versus unilateralist views
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American Defense Policy
• Defense Spending
– In general, defense spending rises during
wartime and falls during peacetime.
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Defense Spending as Percentage of
GDP
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Defense Forces and Strategy
• Strategic (nuclear) and conventional
(non-nuclear) forces
• Strategic forces
– MAD - mutual assured destruction
– National Missile Defense (NMD) System
• Conventional forces
– 1.4 million troops in uniform
– Substitute firepower for manpower?
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U.S. Military Personnel
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Concluding Review Questions
• What are the arguments for and against
the policy of preemption?
• What are the most important themes in
the history of American foreign policy?
• How has the environment for American
foreign and defense policymaking
changed since the end of the Cold War?
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006
Concluding Review Questions
• What are the four principle means
through which the United States has
pursued its foreign policy goals?
• What factor has the greatest impact on
changes in defense spending relative to
the overall economy?
• What impact have the events of
September 11, 2001 and the war in Iraq
and the following occupation had on
American defense policy?
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2006