In Defense of the National Interest: A Critical Examination of American Foreign Policy |
Contents
The American Experience in Foreign | 2 |
The Three Periods of American Foreign | 13 |
Wilsonianism Isolationism Internation | 28 |
Copyright | |
15 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
able Administration allies American foreign policy Asia atomic bomb attitude balance of power Bolshevism Britain century China Churchill Communism Communist concrete conflict Congress conquest crusade danger defeat defense democracy democratic diplomacy domination Eastern economic European evil existence face failure force foreign affairs France fundamental Germany ideological independence inevitable international scene isolationism Jefferson John Quincy Adams legalistic means ment mind moralistic Moscow national interest national societies negotiated settlement objectives peace period philosophy political action political and military power politics President problems public opinion pursued rearmament Red Army relations revolution Russian imperialism Second World Second World War side situation Soviet Union Spanish-American War spheres of influence strength struggle successful superiority terest thought threat tion tional traditional treaty Truman Doctrine United Nations universal moral principles utopian victory warfare weapons West Western Europe Western Germany Western Hemisphere Western world Wilson Wilsonianism Yalta agreement