Book Cover  American Government 4/e     Thomas E. Patterson
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Chapter 20: Foreign and Defense Policy: Protecting the American Way


CHAPTER SUMMARY

CHAPTER SUMMARY

This chapter focuses on selected aspects of U.S. foreign and defense policy. It examines the roots of American foreign and defense policy, while studying the policymaking process. The chapter also discusses the economic dimension of national security policy, exploring both external and domestic challenges facing the United States’ future as a world leader. These are the main points of the chapter:

Since World War II, the United States has acted in the role of world leader, which has substantially affected its military, diplomatic, and economic policies.

The policy machinery for foreign and defense affairs is dominated by the president and includes military, intelligence, diplomatic, and economic agencies and organizations.

The United States maintains a high degree of defense preparedness. This preparedness mandates a substantial level of defense spending and a worldwide deployment of U.S. conventional and strategic forces. A consequence of these requirements is a military-industrial complex that benefits from and is a cause of high levels of military spending.

Changes in the international marketplace have led to increased economic interdependence among nations, which has had a marked influence on the United States’ economy and on its security planning. Increasingly, national security policy has been defined in economic rather than military terms.

 

From 1945 to 1991, U.S. foreign and defense policies were dominated by a concern with the Soviet Union. During most of that period the United States pursued a policy of containment based on the premise that the Soviet Union was an aggressor nation bent on global conquest. Containment policy led the United States into wars in Korea and Vietnam and into maintaining a large defense establishment. U.S. governmental forces are deployed around the globe and the nation has a large nuclear arsenal. The end of the cold war, however, has made some of this weaponry and much of the traditional military strategy obsolete. Cutbacks in military spending and a redefinition of the military’s role are underway.

 

With the end of the cold war, the United States has taken a new approach to foreign affairs, which President George Bush labeled a "new world order." It proposes that nations work together toward common goals and includes efforts to address global problems, such as drug trafficking and environmental pollution. The Persian Gulf War is the notable example of the multilateralism that is a characteristic of the new world order. However, multilateralism may not work in all cases, such as in the Bosnian crisis.

 

Increasingly, national security is being defined in economic terms. After World War II, the United States helped establish a global trading system in which it was the leading partner. The nation’s international economic position, however, has gradually weakened owing to domestic problems and to the emergence of strong competitors, particularly Japan and Germany. Many analysts believe that a revitalized economic sector rather than military power holds the key to America’s future position in international affairs.

 

The chief instruments of national security policy are diplomacy, military force, economic exchange, and intelligence gathering. These are exercised through specialized agencies of the U.S. government, such as the departments of State and Defense, which are largely responsive to presidential leadership. Increasingly, national security policy has also relied on international organizations, such as the UN and WTO, which are responsive to the global concerns of major nations.


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