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'''U.S. foreign policy''' covers the foreign relations and diplomacy of the United States since 1775.
{{subpages}}
==American Revolution==
{{TOC|right}}
==Early National Era: 1789-1860==
{{seealso|History of U.S. foreign policy}}
==Late 19th Century==
Ultimate responsibility for '''United States foreign policy''' rests with the [[President of the United States of  America]]. For the ratification of formal treaties, he or she must obtain the advice and consent of the Senate.
==1898-1939==
==1945-1973: Cold War==
see [[Cold War]]
===Truman: 1945-53===
Truman had no knowledge or interest in foreign policy before becoming president, and depended on the State Department for foreign policy advice.<ref> By 1946 he had two valuable aides Clark Clifford and George Elsey.</ref>  Truman shifted from FDR's détente to [[containment]] as soon as [[Dean Acheson]] convinced him the Soviet Union was a long-term threat to American interests.  They viewed communism as a secular, millennial religion that informed the Kremlin's worldview and actions and made it the chief threat to American security, liberty, and world peace. They rejected the moral equivalence of democratic and Communist governments and concluded that until the regime in Moscow changed only American and Allied strength could curb the Soviets. Following Acheson's advice, Truman in 1947 announced the [[Truman Doctrine]] of containing Communist expansion by furnishing military and economic American aid to Europe and Asia, and particularly to Greece and Turkey. He followed up with the [[Marshall Plan]], which was enacted into law as the European Recovery Program (ERP) and pumped $12.4 into the European economy, forcing the breakdown of old barriers and encouraging modernization along American lines. On May 14, 1948, Truman announced recognition of the new state of [[Israel]], making the United States the first major power to do so.  


After his surprise reelection in 1948, Truman brought in [[Dean Acheson]] as Secretary of State, and promoted the Point Four program of aid to underdeveloped countries. The policy of containing Communism was operationalized by the creation, in 1949, of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization ([[NATO]]) to oversee the integration of the military forces of its member nations in Western Europe and North America. A further step was taken in 1951 with the establishment of the Mutual Security Agency to coordinate U.S. economic, technical and military aid abroad.
In the modern practice of foreign policy, formally, the senior foreign policy official below the President is the [[U.S. Secretary of State]], [[Hillary Clinton]]. In practice, the critical decisionmakers are the members of the [[National Security Council]], which includes the Secretary of State. Other major influencers are in the National Security Council staff, headed by the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, [[James Jones]]. The [[U.S. Department of Defense]], under Secretary [[Robert Gates]], obviously has a major effect, as does the [[United States intelligence community]], coordinated by [[Director of National Intelligence]] [[Dennis Blair]].


The [[Korean War]] began at the end of June 1950 when North Korea, a Communist country, invaded South Korea, which was under U.S.  protection. Without consulting Congress Truman ordered General [[Douglas MacArthur]] to use all American forces to resist the invasion. Truman then received approval from the United Nations, which the Soviets were boycotting. UN forces managed to cling to a toehold in Korea, as the North Koreans outran their supply system. A counterattack at Inchon destroyed the invasion army, and the UN forces captured most of North Korea on their way to the Yalu River, Korea's northern border with China. Truman defined the war goal as rollback of Communism and reunification of the country under UN auspices. China intervened unexpectedly, drove the UN forces all the way back to South Korea.  The fighting stabilized close to the original 38th parallel that had divided North and South. MacArthur wanted to continue the rollback strategy but Truman arrived at a new policy of containment, allowing North Korea to persist. Truman's dismissal of General Douglas MacArthur in April 1951 sparked a violent debate on U.S. Far Eastern policy, as Truman took the blame for a high-cost stalemate with 37,000 Americans killed and over 100,000 wounded.  
Foreign policy formulation and execution is structured on regional and functional areas. Over recent years, there has been an attempt to reconcile the regional definitions of the various departments and agencies, so a country is not under one bureau of the State Department but under a different [[Unified Combatant Command]] in the military. This is not completely successful; the countries of the Mediterranean littoral as well as the Levant are under one Assistant Secretary of State, but the [[United States European Command]] is responsible for the former but the [[United States Central Command]] for the latter.


Truman fired his ineffective defense secretary Louis Johnson, and brought back [[George Marshall]]. The top-secret [[NSC-68]] of 1950  policy paper was the grounds for escalating the Cold War, especially in terms of tripling spending on rearmament and building the hydrogen bomb. The integration of European defense was given new impetus by continued U.S. support of NATO, under the command of General Eisenhower.
Foreign policy also needs to be considered in  relation to the U.S. and world situation of the time.
==Regional==
===Africa===
U.S African policy is principally focused on the Subsaharan part of the continent. For reasons of colonial sensitivity, the [[United States Africa Command]] is considered a unified subcommand of [[United States European Command]].
===Europe and Eurasia===
===East Asia and Pacific===
[[North Korea]] is the hot spot, and the U.S. regional priority is to insist on the [[Six-Party Talks]], which also recognize China as a key broker.
===Near East===
{{main|U.S. policy towards the Middle East}}
More than in most areas in the world, policies twist and turn and involve multiple countries. Nevertheless, there are some basic principles both for the region and for countries.
====Egypt====
While the U.S. continues to provide major economic support to Egypt, there is increasing concern about succession, with President [[Hosni Mubarrak]] reported to be in poor health.
====Iran====
{{main|U.S. policy towards Iran}}
The Obama administration avoids the military threats implied by the previous administration, by the U.S. or others. While it is giving moral encouragement to the domestic protesters following the 2009 election, it is taking time, establishing a moral position, and waiting on events. It does appear to be holding back on direct engagement at any high level.


==1973 to present==
It is quite serious about pressuring Iran to stop what is seen as a nuclear weapons program, b as the best means to accomplish this goal. Instead, a consensus is growing, with allies, to use [[economic warfare]], targeted at Iran's lack of internal petroleum refining capacity, and thus, while ironically an oil producer, a gasoline importer. <ref name=UPI3009-08-03>{{citation
==See also ==
| title = Obama considers Iran gas cut-off
* [[Diplomacy, U.S., Timeline]]
| journal = United Press International
| url = http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/08/03/Report-Obama-considers-Iran-gas-cut-off/UPI-42911249301096/
| date = 3 August 2009}}</ref>
====Iraq====
{{main|U.S. policy towards Iraq}}
{{seealso|Iraq War}}
====Israel====
====Lebanon====
====Syria====


* [[9-11 Attack]]
===South and Central Asia===
* [[Afghanistan War (1978-92)]]
* [[American Revolution]], 1775-1783
* [[Berlin Wall]], 1961-89
* [[Central Intelligence Agency]]
* [[Cold War]], 1947-89
* [[Confederate States of America]]
* [[Containment]]
* [[Cuban Missile Crisis]], 1962
* [[Detente]]
* [[Diplomacy, U.S., Timeline]]
* [[Eisenhower Doctrine]], 1957
* [[Embargo of 1807]]
* [[Fourteen Points]], 1918
* [[Gulf War]], 1990-91
* [[Iraq War]], 2003+
* [[Isolationism]]
* [[Jay Treaty]], 1794
* [[Korean War]], 1950-53
* [[Lend Lease]], 1941-45
* [[List of scholarly journals in international relations]]
* [[Louisiana Purchase]], 1803
* [[Manifest Destiny]]
* [[Marshall Plan]], 1848-51
* [[McNary-Haugen Bill]], 1920s; (never passed)
* [[Mexican-American War]], 1846-48
* [[Monroe Doctrine]], 1823+
* [[NATO]], 1949+
* [[NSC-68]], 1950
* [[Quasi-War]], 1798-1800
* [[Reagan Doctrine]]
* [[Rollback]]
* [[Roosevelt Corollary]], 1904
* [[Spanish American War]], 1898
* [[Tariff, U.S. history]]
* [[U.S. Civil War]]
* [[United States State Department]]
* [[Versailles Treaty]], 1919
* [[Vietnam War]], 1965-73
* [[War of 1812]], 1812-15
** [[War of 1812, Causes]]
* [[Wilsonianism]], 1914+
* [[World War I]], 1917-18
* [[World War II]], 1941-45
* [[Zimmerman Telegram]], 1917
===See also leaders===
* [[Dean Acheson]]
* [[Jane Addams]]
* [[John Adams]]
* [[John Quincy Adams]]
* [[Charles A. Beard]]
* [[James G. Blaine]]
* [[John C. Calhoun]]
* [[Jimmy Carter]]
* [[Henry Clay]]
* [[Jesse Helms]]
* [[Herbert Hoover]]
* [[Harry Hopkins]]
* [[Edward M. House]]
* [[Thomas Jefferson]]
* [[Lyndon B. Johnson]]
* [[John F. Kennedy]]
* [[George Kennan]]
* [[Henry Kissinger]]
* [[James Monroe]]
* [[Richard Nixon]]
* [[James K. Polk]]
* [[Ronald Reagan]]
* [[Eleanor Roosevelt]]
* [[Franklin D. Roosevelt]]
* [[Theodore Roosevelt]]
* [[Josiah Strong]]
* [[Harry S. Truman]]
* [[Daniel Webster]]
* [[Wendell Willkie]]
* [[Woodrow Wilson]]


====Afghanistan and Pakistan====
{{main|U.S. policy towards Afghanistan}}
{{main|U.S. policy towards Pakistan}}
In many respects, it sees this as one problem; the political geography of the area also supports the argument that the [[Durand Line]] border between the two may have been convenient for the British, but does not reflect the boundaries of the [[Pashtun people]].
===Western Hemisphere Affairs===


==Bibliography==
==Functional==
* Ambrose, Stephen E. ''Rise to Globalism,'' (1988), since 1945
A number of these areas will definitely involve more agencies than the Department of State.
* Bailey, Thomas A.  ''Diplomatic History of the American People'' (1940), standard older textbook
* International Organization Affairs (IO)
* Beisner, Robert L. ed, ''American Foreign Relations since 1600: A Guide to the Literature'' (2003), 2 vol. 16,300 annotated entries evaluate every major book and scholarly article.
===Security===
* Bemis, Samuel Flagg. ''A Diplomatic History of the United States'' (1952) old standard textbook
*[[Counterterrorism]]
* Bemis, Samuel Flagg,  and Grace Gardner Griffin. ''Guide to the Diplomatic History of the United States 1775-1921'' (1935) bibliographies
* [[Peace operations]]
* Brune, Lester H. ''Chronological History of U.S. Foreign Relations'' (2003), 1400 pages
* [[Arms Control]]
* Burns, Richard Dean, ed. ''Guide to American Foreign Relations since 1700'' (1983) highly detailed annotated bibliography
* International Security and Nonproliferation (ISN)
* DeConde, Alexander, Richard Dean Burns, Fredrik Logevall, and Louise B. Ketz, eds. ''Encyclopedia of American Foreign Policy'' 3 vol (2001), 2200 pages; 120 long articles by specialists.
===Economic===
* DeConde, Alexander. ''A History of American Foreign Policy'' (1963) [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=65362550 online edition]
* Foreign assistance
* Dobson, Alan P., and Steve Marsh. ''U.S. Foreign Policy since 1945.'' 160pp (2001) [http://www.questia.com/read/102241692?title=U.S.%20Foreign%20Policy%20since%201945 online edition]
* Economic, Energy and Agricultural Affairs(E)
* Findling, John E. ed. ''Dictionary of American Diplomatic History'' 2nd ed. 1989. 700pp; 1200 short articles.
* Economic, Energy and Business Affairs (EEB)
* Flanders, Stephen A, and Carl N. Flanders. ''Dictionary of American Foreign Affairs'' (1993) 835 pp, short articles
*[[National Marine Fisheries Service]]
* Hogan, Michael J. ed. ''Paths to Power: The Historiography of American Foreign Relations to 1941'' (2000) essays on main topics
===Democracy promotion and information===
* Hogan, Michael J. and Thomas G. Paterson, eds. ''Explaining the History of American Foreign Relations'' (1991) essays on historiography
* Democracy and Global Affairs (G)
* Jentleson, B.W. and Thomas G. Paterson, eds. ''Encyclopaedia of U.S. Foreign Relations,'' (4 vols., 1997)
* Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs (R)
* Lafeber, Walter. '' The American Age: United States Foreign Policy at Home and Abroad, 1750 to Present'' (2nd ed 1994) textbook; 884pp [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=98818311 online edition]
* International Information Programs (IIP)
* Paterson, Thomas G. et al. ''American Foreign Relations'' (4th ed. 1995), recent textbook
*[[Propaganda]]; [[Voice of America]]; [[Broadcasting Board of Governors]], psychological operations staff, National Clandestine Service, [[Central Intelligence Agency]]
* Scott, James A. ''After the End: Making U.S. Foreign Policy in the Post-Cold War World.'' (1998) 434pp [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&docId=29132551 online edition]
===Cultural===
==Online resources==
* Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA)
* [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0030-8684(200311)72%3A4%3C495%3ABATCCT%3E2.0.CO%3B2-I ''Foreign Relations of the United States'' (FRUS), 1861-1960, 372 volumes complete text. This  series is the official documentary historical record of U.S. foreign policy decisions]
===Law enforcement, including drug trade===
* International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL)
* [[Drug Enforcement Administration]]
* [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]]
* War Crimes Issues (S/WCI)
* Office of Special Investigations, [[U.S. Department of Justice]]
===Human Rights===
* Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM)
* Global Women's Issues (S/GWI)
===Science===
* Global AIDS Coordinator, Office of (S/GAC)
* Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs (OES)
* [[National Science Foundation]]
* [[National Institutes of Health]]
* [[Centers for Disease Control]]
* [[National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration]]
==Doctrines==
{{r|Monroe Doctrine}}
{{r|Containment policy}}
{{r|American exceptionalism}}
===Nuclear deterrence===
===Counterinsurgency===
{{seealso|Vietnam, war, and the United States of America}}
While the U.S. had dealt with insurgencies well before World War II, the situation increased significantly in the Cold War. The 1940 U.S. Marine Corps ''Manual for Small Wars'' remains a reference based on experience in Latin America and elsewhere.


In Vietnam, which combined both insurgency and proxy war, the U.S. struggled to find an effective counterinsurgency strategy, eventually refocused on conventional military action, and left the country, which was overthrown by a conventional invasion.


====notes====
Counterinsurgency (COIN) is alive and well in Afghanistan and Iraq, and there is a distinct split among soldier-statesmen as to the correct balance among [[counterterrorism]], "conventional" military forces, and [[counterinsurgency]] to include [[peace operations#nation-building|nation-building]].  Among the best-known counterinsurgents are General [[David Petraeus]].  Petraeus' doctoral dissertation dealt with U.S. policy toward Vietnam, <ref name=PetPhD>{{citation
<references/>
| url = http://www.brianbeutler.com/postvietnameramilitary.pdf
| title = The American Military and the Lessons of Vietnam: A study of military influence and the use of force in the post-Vietnam era
| publisher = doctoral dissertation, Princeton University
| year = 1987
}}</ref> a far more active role, than traditional for generals, in developing the Army doctrinal manual on counterinsurgency. <ref name = FM3-24>{{citation  | publisher = US Department of the Army 
| author = [[John Nagl]], David Petraeus, [[James Amos]], [[Sarah Sewall]]
  | title = [[Field Manual 3-24:  Counterinsurgency]]
  | date = December 2006
  | url = http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm3-24.pdf}}</ref>


[[Category:History Workgroup]]
Sometimes informally called the "COINdanistas", this is an influential school of thought that blends political, social and military strategies. The [[Center for a New American Security]], a strategic think tank, has many of its principals in the Obama Administration. Petraeus, now the U.S. commander for the Middle East, has used advisers including  David Kilcullen and [[H.R. McMaster]],  known for open criticism of policies, even while advising. <ref name=WP2007-02-05>{{citation
[[Category:Politics Workgroup]]
| title = Officers With PhDs Advising War Effort
[[Category:CZ Live]]
| first = [[Thomas Ricks]]
| journal = Washington Post  | date = February 5, 2007
| url = http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/04/AR2007020401196.html}}</ref>
 
[[Andrew Bacevich]] is a critic of what he regards as an overemphasis on [[counterinsurgency]] in the U.S. military, which he sees as a revisionist belief that the [[Vietnam War]] could have been won with the right long-term approach, which he terms that of the "Crusaders" for the new view. He sees a more appropriate lesson as the "Conservative" one from the [[Weinberger-Powell Doctrine]]. <ref name=Atlantic2008-10>{{citation
| date = October 2008 | journal = Atlantic
| title = The Petraeus Doctrine: Iraq-style counterinsurgency is fast becoming the U.S. Army’s organizing principle. Is our military preparing to fight the next war, or the last one?
| author = [[Andrew Bacevich]]
| url = http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200810/petraeus-doctrine}}</ref> He favors a "defensive strategy" of "containment." <ref name=Nation>{{citation
|url = http://www.thenation.com/blogs/notion/350252/obama_s_limits_an_interview_with_andrew_bacevich
| title = Obama's Limits: An Interview With Andrew Bacevich | journal = [[The Nation (magazine)]]
| author = Jon Wiener | date = 28 August 2008}}</ref> Colonel [[Gian Gentile]] is concerned with a decline in conventional military forces, although Gentile recognizes the conventional enemy is not the mass of the Soviet Union.
==References==
{{reflist|2}}

Revision as of 08:34, 21 March 2024

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See also: History of U.S. foreign policy

Ultimate responsibility for United States foreign policy rests with the President of the United States of America. For the ratification of formal treaties, he or she must obtain the advice and consent of the Senate.

In the modern practice of foreign policy, formally, the senior foreign policy official below the President is the U.S. Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton. In practice, the critical decisionmakers are the members of the National Security Council, which includes the Secretary of State. Other major influencers are in the National Security Council staff, headed by the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs, James Jones. The U.S. Department of Defense, under Secretary Robert Gates, obviously has a major effect, as does the United States intelligence community, coordinated by Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair.

Foreign policy formulation and execution is structured on regional and functional areas. Over recent years, there has been an attempt to reconcile the regional definitions of the various departments and agencies, so a country is not under one bureau of the State Department but under a different Unified Combatant Command in the military. This is not completely successful; the countries of the Mediterranean littoral as well as the Levant are under one Assistant Secretary of State, but the United States European Command is responsible for the former but the United States Central Command for the latter.

Foreign policy also needs to be considered in relation to the U.S. and world situation of the time.

Regional

Africa

U.S African policy is principally focused on the Subsaharan part of the continent. For reasons of colonial sensitivity, the United States Africa Command is considered a unified subcommand of United States European Command.

Europe and Eurasia

East Asia and Pacific

North Korea is the hot spot, and the U.S. regional priority is to insist on the Six-Party Talks, which also recognize China as a key broker.

Near East

For more information, see: U.S. policy towards the Middle East.

More than in most areas in the world, policies twist and turn and involve multiple countries. Nevertheless, there are some basic principles both for the region and for countries.

Egypt

While the U.S. continues to provide major economic support to Egypt, there is increasing concern about succession, with President Hosni Mubarrak reported to be in poor health.

Iran

For more information, see: U.S. policy towards Iran.

The Obama administration avoids the military threats implied by the previous administration, by the U.S. or others. While it is giving moral encouragement to the domestic protesters following the 2009 election, it is taking time, establishing a moral position, and waiting on events. It does appear to be holding back on direct engagement at any high level.

It is quite serious about pressuring Iran to stop what is seen as a nuclear weapons program, b as the best means to accomplish this goal. Instead, a consensus is growing, with allies, to use economic warfare, targeted at Iran's lack of internal petroleum refining capacity, and thus, while ironically an oil producer, a gasoline importer. [1]

Iraq

For more information, see: U.S. policy towards Iraq.
See also: Iraq War

Israel

Lebanon

Syria

South and Central Asia

Afghanistan and Pakistan

For more information, see: U.S. policy towards Afghanistan.
For more information, see: U.S. policy towards Pakistan.

In many respects, it sees this as one problem; the political geography of the area also supports the argument that the Durand Line border between the two may have been convenient for the British, but does not reflect the boundaries of the Pashtun people.

Western Hemisphere Affairs

Functional

A number of these areas will definitely involve more agencies than the Department of State.

  • International Organization Affairs (IO)

Security

Economic

Democracy promotion and information

Cultural

  • Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA)

Law enforcement, including drug trade

Human Rights

  • Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM)
  • Global Women's Issues (S/GWI)

Science

Doctrines

Nuclear deterrence

Counterinsurgency

See also: Vietnam, war, and the United States of America

While the U.S. had dealt with insurgencies well before World War II, the situation increased significantly in the Cold War. The 1940 U.S. Marine Corps Manual for Small Wars remains a reference based on experience in Latin America and elsewhere.

In Vietnam, which combined both insurgency and proxy war, the U.S. struggled to find an effective counterinsurgency strategy, eventually refocused on conventional military action, and left the country, which was overthrown by a conventional invasion.

Counterinsurgency (COIN) is alive and well in Afghanistan and Iraq, and there is a distinct split among soldier-statesmen as to the correct balance among counterterrorism, "conventional" military forces, and counterinsurgency to include nation-building. Among the best-known counterinsurgents are General David Petraeus. Petraeus' doctoral dissertation dealt with U.S. policy toward Vietnam, [2] a far more active role, than traditional for generals, in developing the Army doctrinal manual on counterinsurgency. [3]

Sometimes informally called the "COINdanistas", this is an influential school of thought that blends political, social and military strategies. The Center for a New American Security, a strategic think tank, has many of its principals in the Obama Administration. Petraeus, now the U.S. commander for the Middle East, has used advisers including David Kilcullen and H.R. McMaster, known for open criticism of policies, even while advising. [4]

Andrew Bacevich is a critic of what he regards as an overemphasis on counterinsurgency in the U.S. military, which he sees as a revisionist belief that the Vietnam War could have been won with the right long-term approach, which he terms that of the "Crusaders" for the new view. He sees a more appropriate lesson as the "Conservative" one from the Weinberger-Powell Doctrine. [5] He favors a "defensive strategy" of "containment." [6] Colonel Gian Gentile is concerned with a decline in conventional military forces, although Gentile recognizes the conventional enemy is not the mass of the Soviet Union.

References