American Democracy Now, 2nd Edition (Harrison)Chapter 17:
Foreign Policy and National SecurityChapter Outline
- The Tools of U.S. Foreign Policy
- Diplomacy
- Trade and Economic Policies
- The Military Option
- Who Decides? The Creators and Shapers of Foreign Policy
- The President and the Executive Branch
- The Departments of State and Defense
- The National Security Council and the Intelligence Community
- Congress
- The Military-Industrial Complex
- The Media
- Public Opinion
- Private Citizens
- U.S. Foreign Policy in Historical Context: Isolationism and Intervention
- The Constitutional Framework and Early Foreign Policy Making
- The Constitution and Foreign Policy Powers
- Early Isolationism
- Foreign Trade and the Erosion of U.S. Isolationism
- Hegemony and National Expansion: From the Monroe Doctrine to the Roosevelt Corollary
- World War I and the End of U.S. Isolationism
- Internationalism and the League of Nations
- World War II: U.S. Foreign Policy at a Crossroads
- The Postwar Era: The United States as Superpower
- International Agreements and Organizations
- The United Nations
- NATO
- International Financial Organizations
- The Cold War: Superpowers in Collision
- U.S. Efforts to Contain Communism: Korea, Cuba, and Vietnam
- The Korean War, 1950-1953
- The Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962
- The Vietnam Conflict, 1965-1975
- Détente: A Thaw in the Cold War Chill
- SALT I and SALT II
- The Reagan Years and Soviet Collapse
- Post-Soviet Times: The United States as Solo Superpower in an Era of Wars
- U.S. Foreign Policy After 9/11
- The Bush Doctrine: A Clash of Civilizations
- War in Afghanistan
- War in Iraq
- The Obama Doctrine: A New Tone in U.S. Foreign Policy
- Future Challenges in American Foreign Policy
- The Ongoing Threat of Terrorism
- Environmental Issues
- Technology's Potential in Foreign Affairs
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