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Title: GOVT


1
GOVT
  • CHAPTER 16
  • Foreign Policy

2
Learning Objectives
3
Who Makes U.S. Foreign Policy?
4
The Presidents Role
  • As commander in chief, the president oversees the
    military and guides defense policies.
  • The Constitution authorizes the president to make
    treaties, and to form executive agreements.
  • The president has ultimate control over the use
    of nuclear weapons.
  • As head of state, the president represents the
    U.S. to the world.

5
The Cabinet
  • As U.S. power in the world has grown and as
    economic factors have become increasingly
    important, the Departments of Commerce,
    Agriculture, Treasury, and Energy have become
    more involved in foreign policy decisions.
  • The Department of State is responsible for
    diplomatic relations with nearly 200 independent
    nations, as well as with the United Nations.
  • The Secretary of State has traditionally played a
    key role, and many presidents have relied on his
    or her defense.

6
The Cabinet
  • The Department of Defense establishes and carries
    out defense policy and protects our national
    security.
  • The secretary of defense advises the president on
    U.S. military and defense policy and supervises
    military activities.
  • The Joint Chiefs of Staff include the chief of
    staff of the Army, Air Force, and naval
    operations, as well as the commandant of the
    Marine Corps.
  • The joint chiefs serve as the key military
    advisors to the president, the secretary of
    defense, and the National Security Council.

7
Other Agencies
  • Two key agencies are the National Security
    Council and the Central Intelligence Agency.
  • The formal members of the NSC include the
    president, vice president, secretary of state,
    and secretary of defense.
  • The CIA provides the president and his or her
    advisors with up-to-date information about the
    political, military, and economic activities of
    foreign governments.

8
Congresss Powers
  • Congress alone has the power to declare war and
    appropriate funds to build weapons systems, equip
    the armed forces and provide for foreign aid.
  • The Senate has the power to approve or reject
    treaties and to appoint ambassadors.
  • The Armed Services Committee and the Committee on
    Foreign Affairs in the House and the Armed
    Services Committee and the Foreign Relations
    Committee in the Senate.

9
A Short History of American Foreign Policy
10
Isolationism
  • The founders believed that avoiding political
    involvement was the best way to protect American
    interest.
  • George Washington urged Americans to steer clear
    of permanent alliances with any portion of the
    foreign world.
  • The Monroe Doctrine stated that the U.S. would
    not tolerate foreign intervention and promised to
    stay out of European affairs.

11
The Beginning of Interventionism
  • Interventionism, direct involvement in foreign
    affairs, began with the Spanish-American War of
    1898.
  • The growth of the U.S. as an industrial economy
    confirmed the nations position as a world power.
  • In the early 1900s, President Theodore Roosevelt
    proposed that the United States could invade
    Latin American countries when it was necessary to
    guarantee political or economic stability.

12
The World Wars
  • When WWI broke out in 1914, President Wilson
    initially proclaimed a policy of neutrality. The
    U.S. entered the war in 1917 after U.S. ships in
    international waters were attacked by German
    submarines.
  • The U.S. returned to a policy of isolationism
    until the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941.
  • One of the most significant foreign policy
    actions during WWII was the dropping of atomic
    bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and
    Nagasaki in August 1945.

13
The Cold War
  • After WWII ended, the alliance between the U.S.
    and the Soviet Union began to deteriorate.
  • The Soviet Union opposed Americas political and
    economic systems.
  • Many Americans considered Soviet attempts to
    spread Communist systems to other countries a
    major threat to democracy.
  • The iron curtain symbolized the political
    boundaries between the democratic countries in
    Western Europe and the Soviet-controlled
    Communist countries in Eastern Europe.

14
The Cold War The Marshall Plan
  • In 1947, the Truman administration instituted a
    policy of economic assistance to war-torn Europe
    called the Marshall Plan.
  • This and other actions marked the beginning of a
    policy of containment a policy designed to
    contain the spread of communism by offering U.S.
    economic and military aid to threatened nations.
  • In 1949, the U.S., Canada, and 10 European
    nations formed a military alliance the North
    Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).
  • Though the Cold War was mainly a war of words and
    belief systems, the wars in Korea (1950-1953) and
    Vietnam (1964-1975) grew out of the efforts to
    contain Communism.

15
The Cold War The Arms Race Deterrence
  • The Soviet Union and the United States began
    competing for more and better weapons with
    greater destruction power a struggle known as
    the arms race.
  • Supported by a policy of deterrence rendering
    ourselves and our allies so strong militarily
    that our strength would deter any attack.
  • Out of deterrence came the theory of mutually
    assured destruction (MAD) if the forces of both
    nations were equally capable of destroying each
    other, neither would take a chance on war.

16
The Cold War The Cuban Missile Crisis
  • The Cuban missile crisis In 1962, the United
    States learned that the Soviet Union had placed
    nuclear weapons on the island of Cuba, 90 miles
    from Florida.
  • The crisis was diffused diplomatically the
    Soviet Union agreed to remove the missiles, and
    the United States agreed to remove some of its
    missiles from near the Soviet border in Turkey.

17
The Cold War Détente and Arms Control
  • In 1972, both sides signed the Strategic Arms
    Limitation Treaty (SALT I) which marked the
    beginning of a period of détente a relaxation
    of tensions.
  • In the late 1980s, Mikhail Gorbachev initiated
    reforms to democratize the Soviet political
    system and decentralize the economy.
  • In 1989, the Berlin Wall was torn down, and by
    the end of 1991, the Union of Soviet Socialist
    Republics (USSR) no longer existed.

18
Post-Cold War Foreign Policy
  • When the Cold War ended, U.S. foreign
    policymakers were forced to rethink the nations
    foreign policy goals.
  • Policymakers have struggled to determine the
    degree of intervention that is appropriate and
    prudent for the U.S. military.
  • Since September 11, 2001, our goal has been to
    capture and punish the terrorists who planned and
    perpetuated the events of that day and to prevent
    future attacks against America.

19
The War on Terrorism
20
Varieties of Terrorism
  • Terrorist acts generally fall into one of three
    broad categories
  • Local or regional terrorism extremists
    motivated by the desire to obtain freedom from a
    nation or government.
  • State-sponsored terrorism terrorist attacks
    planned and sponsored by governments.
  • Foreign terrorist networks nonstate terrorist
    networks, such as al Qaeda. It operates in
    cells so that often one cell of the
    organization does not know what the others are
    planning.

21
The U.S. Response to 9/11 The War in Afghanistan
  • In late 2001, the U.S. military launched an
    attack against al Qaeda camps in Afghanistan and
    the ruling Taliban regime.
  • Once the Taliban had been ousted, the United
    States helped to establish a government in
    Afghanistan that did not support terrorism.
  • Instead of continuing the hunt for al Qaeda
    members, the Bush administration increasingly
    looked to Iraq as a threat to U.S. security.

22
The Focus on Iraq
  • In January 2002, President Bush described Iraq as
    a regime that sponsored terrorism and sought to
    develop weapons of mass destruction.
  • A preemptive war occurs when a nation goes to war
    against another because it believes that an
    attack from that nation is imminent.
  • When President Bush did go to war against Iraq,
    it was a preventive war to prevent the
    possibility that Iraq could attack the U.S. in
    the future.

23
The Second Gulf War
  • March 20, 2003 U.S. and British forces entered
    Iraq.
  • Most of the world opposed the attack.
  • Saddam Hussein was captured in December 2003. He
    was convicted of crimes against humanity and
    executed in 2006.
  • Many Iraqis opposed the occupation. Opposition
    was strongest among members of the Sunni branch
    of Islam.

24
Focus on Iraq The Insurgency
  • Between May 2003 and March 2004, casualty rates
    for American soldiers averaged more than 50 per
    month.
  • In January 2005, Iraqis went to the polls to vote
    in the first free elections in half a century. A
    coalition of Shiite Muslims won the most seats.
  • The Bush administration increased troop levels in
    2007 with the hope that, given more time, Iraqis
    could work out their differences and establish a
    united government.
  • In February 2009, President Obama announced that
    U.S. combat forces would leave Iraq by the end of
    August 2010.

25
Again, Afghanistan
  • In 2003, NATO took responsibility for coalition
    military operations in the central and northern
    parts of Afghanistan.
  • In 2009, Taliban forces began to take complete
    control of districts in the Tribal Areas on the
    far side of the Afghan-Pakistani border. The
    Pakistani military began to engage the Taliban
    forces.
  • In February 2009, President Obama ordered 17,000
    additional troops into the country. U.S.
    secretary of defense warned that the war could be
    lost if more troops were not sent.

26
The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
27
The Arab-Israeli Wars
  • Following the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, a large
    number of Palestinians Arab residents of the
    Holy Land, known as Palestine until 1948, were
    forced into exile.
  • The failure of the Arab states in the 1967 war
    led to additional refugees and the rise of the
    Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) a
    nonstate body committed to armed struggle against
    Israel.
  • Egypt and Israel signed a peace treaty in 1979
    that marked the end to an era of wars between
    Israel and other states.

28
The Israeli-Palestinian Dispute
  • Many Palestinian families lost their homes after
    the 1948 war, and after the 1967 war, the West
    Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza Strip fell
    under Israeli control.
  • Vicious attacks by Palestinians which frequently
    resulted in the deaths of civilians made
    negotiations difficult.
  • An international consensus on terms for settling
    the conflict included granting the lands seized
    by Israel in the 1967 war to Palestinians who
    could organize their own independent nation-state
    there.
  • Also, Palestinians would have to recognize
    Israels right to exist and take steps to
    guarantee Israels safety.

29
Negotiations Begin
  • Talks between Israel, Arab nations, and non-PLO
    Palestinians commenced at Madrid in 1991.
  • In 1993, Israel and the PLO met officially for
    the first time in Oslo, Norway resulting in the
    Oslo Accords, which were signed in Washington.
  • A major result was the establishment of a
    Palestinian Authority, under Israeli control, on
    the West Bank and Gaza Strip.

30
Negotiations Collapse
  • Further talks in 2000 at Camp David in Maryland
    collapsed. Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon
    carried out a plan to withdraw from the Gaza
    Strip in 2005 and also build an enormous security
    fence between Israel and the West Bank.
  • In 2007, Gaza was taken over by Hamas, a radical
    Islamist party that refuses to recognize Israel.
  • In December 2008, Hamas launched missile attacks
    on Israel after the imposition of an Israeli
    blockade.

31
Weapons Proliferation in an Unstable World
32
North Koreas Nuclear Program
  • North Korea signed the Treaty on the
    Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons in 1985 and
    submitted to weapons inspections by the
    International Atomic Energy Agency in 1992.
  • In 2002, U.S. intelligence discovered that North
    Korea had been receiving equipment from Pakistan
    for a highly enriched uranium production
    facility.
  • Later that year, North Korea openly lifted a
    freeze on its nuclear weapons program and
    expelled the IAEA inspectors.

33
North Koreas Nuclear Program
  • In 2003, North Korea agreed to talks with the
    U.S., China, Japan, Russia, and South Korea.
  • In 2006, North Korea conducted its first nuclear
    test.
  • In 2007, North Korea agreed to dismantle its
    nuclear facilities and allow UN inspectors to the
    country. In return, the other nations agreed to
    provide 400 billion in various aid, and the U.S.
    would begin to discuss normalization of relations
    with North Korea.

34
Iran An Emerging Nuclear Threat?
  • Iran has made considerable progress in many
    aspects of its nuclear program, although Iranian
    leaders have publicly claimed that they are
    seeking only to develop nuclear energy plants.
  • Iran has implemented an extensive terrorism
    campaign in hopes of undermining U.S. influence
    in the middle east.
  • The UN has imposed sanctions, and the United
    States has threatened to impose its own to
    isolate Iran from the community of nations.
  • Talks with Iran concerning its nuclear program
    resumed at Geneva on October 1, 2009. Iran agreed
    to allow international inspectors access to its
    facilities.

35
China The Next Superpower?
36
China
  • During the Clinton administration, rapid growth
    of the Chinese economy and increasingly close
    trade ties between the United States and China
    helped bring about a policy of diplomatic
    outreach.
  • Many Americans protested when the U.S. government
    extended normal trade relations (NTR) status to
    China on a year-to-year basis.

37
China
  • Chinas gross domestic product (GDP) could
    surpass that of the United States by 2039.
  • The U.S. already runs a multi-billion dollar
    trade deficit with China and could be vulnerable
    if Chinese economic growth continues at its
    present pace.
  • The Chinese did not support the American invasion
    of Iraq in 2003.
  • China has expressed desire to take control of
    Taiwan, historically supported by the U.S. as
    free and separate.

38
POLITICS ON THE WEB
  • www.whitehouse.gov
  • www.bartleby.com/124
  • www.Millercenter.org/academic/americanpresident
  • www.4ltrpress.cengage.com/govt
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