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American Foreign & Defense Policy

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American Foreign & Defense Policy. Early Thoughts…. Sam Adams “ Even when there is a necessity of military power…a wise and prudent people will always have a watchful eye over it”. Early Thoughts…. Elbridge Gerry - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: American Foreign & Defense Policy

American Foreign & Defense Policy

Page 2: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Early Thoughts…

Sam Adams• “Even when there is a necessity of military

power…a wise and prudent people will always have a watchful eye over it”

Page 3: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Early Thoughts…

Elbridge Gerry• “standing armies in time of peace are

inconsistent with the principles of republican governments, dangerous to the liberties of a free people, and generally converted into destructive engines for establishing despotism”

Page 4: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Early Thoughts…

Alexander Hamilton• “a dangerous and expensive undertaking”

Page 5: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Early Thoughts…

James Madison• A standing military force…will not long be

safe companions to liberty. The means of defense against foreign danger have always been the instruments of tyranny at home.

Page 6: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Civil-Military Problematique

The very thing that is designed to protect a polity can become its greatest threat

Page 7: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Civil-Military Problematique

The very thing that is designed to protect a polity can become its greatest threat

Page 8: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Solutions?

Page 9: American Foreign & Defense Policy

The Reality of Foreign Policy

Early U.S. Foreign Policy was a mixture of• Realism (Pursuing American Interests) and• Idealism (Carrying Out American Ideals)

with a strong rejection of traditional Imperialism.

• Instances of Realism:• Barbary Wars (1801 – 1805; 1815)• Louisiana Purchase (1803)• War of 1812• U.S. Mexican War (1846 – 1848)

Page 10: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Interests Win #1: The Barbary Wars

• Ideal: Not having an external military presence

• Event: North African Berber States captured U.S. ships for slaves and ransom.

• Problematic: In 1800, more than 15% of the federal budget was used for tribute payments.

• Action: Improve the U.S. Navy

Page 11: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Interests Win #2: The Louisiana Purchase

• Ideal: The President should be passive

• Event: French offer to sell Louisiana to U.S.

• Practical Goals: Get Europeans out – and avoid entanglement in European conflicts• Washington’s Farewell Address• The Monroe Doctrine (1823)

• Problematic: This was a huge opportunity, too good to pass up

Page 12: American Foreign & Defense Policy

A Case for Pragmatism: The Louisiana Purchase

Action: Jefferson makes the Purchase

Page 13: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Interests Win #3: The War of 1812

• Chesapeake – Leopard Affair

• Despite clear political interests, a sense of humiliation contributed to the U.S. declaration of war against the United Kingdom.

Page 14: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Ideals Win #1: The Quest for Mexican Oil

• Interest: The United States needed petroleum

• Event: Mexico nationalizes petroleum industry in 1938, making it harder to get oil, and British wanted to invade

• Tempting: Seized oil will be cheaper

• Problematic: Seizure violates the ideal of voluntary trade

• Idealistic Action: The U.S. restrains Great Britain and negotiates oil trade with Mexico

Page 15: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Ideals Win #2: The Suez Canal Controversy

• Interest: The United States want to keep global trade going.

• Event: Egypt nationalizes the Suez Canal in 1956, potentially choking off 10% of global trade; Britain, Israel and France invade.

• Tempting: Western control would be more convenient

• Problematic: Seizure violates the ideal of Good Neighbor policy

• Idealistic Action: The U.S. restrains military action

Page 16: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Also a Conflict between Politics and the People

• Politicians like Wilson knew that the public dislikes Interventionism – making it difficult to balance interests and ideals

1916 Campaign on Peace Prepare for War

Page 17: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Joining the Rest of the World – the End of Isolationism

• Beginning with Franklin D. Roosevelt – the United States reevaluate their role in the World:

• Political Elites start to see Isolationism as problematic

• The United States have a shared responsibility for mankind

• U.S. Power as a force for good in the World

• Switch from Quincy Adams "Americans should not go abroad to slay dragons they do not understand in the name of spreading democracy“ – to Idealism

Page 18: American Foreign & Defense Policy

The American Century

• 1945 puts the Unites States into a position of unique opportunity:• First, a global power shift from

• With the defeat of Fascism, the World is split between the U.S. led West and the Communist Block under the Soviet Union (behind the “Iron Curtain”).

VS.

Page 19: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Full Engagement replaces Isolationism

• With the exception of the United States, the Industrial World laid in ruins after WWII.

• Used power to build institutions to preserve global peace:• The United Nations (UN)• The World Bank• The International Monetary Fund (IMF)• General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade

(GATT), which became the World Trade Organization (WTO)

• The Marshall Plan

• Engagement should replace War.

Page 20: American Foreign & Defense Policy

This Policy led to mixed results

Some initiatives were clearly a success:• The reconstruction of Europe• Globalization• The prevention of Nuclear War• Victory in the Cold War• “Idealistic” Wars – Humanitarian Intervention

(Middle East, Balkans,…)

Others, however, were less successful:• No Third World War, but a Third World’s War• Instability due to rapid decolonization

Page 21: American Foreign & Defense Policy

American Hegemony ruled the day

• No decision on a global scale can be made without U.S. consent.

• The U.S. are the only state that can almost immediately project power (military, political, economic) everywhere on the globe

• In short: From refusing to join the World System, the United States became its main proponent

• The U.S. are (were?) the global “Ordnungsmacht – the Order Maker

Page 22: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Being the World’s superpower comes at a price!

• Strong military buildup

Page 23: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Ultimately, on what does U.S. Power rest?

• Is it this?

Or this?

• No, the answer to this question is in everyone’s pocket.

Page 24: American Foreign & Defense Policy

The true source of American Power

Page 25: American Foreign & Defense Policy

More than just a currency!

• Backed up by the power of the U.S. economy

• Ticket to economic security (global reserve currency)

Page 26: American Foreign & Defense Policy

Made possible by the strength of the U.S. Economy

Page 27: American Foreign & Defense Policy

U.S. Power is waning

• Economic power is declining:

• From being the world’s biggest creditor, beginning with the seventies the nation became the world’s biggest debtor.

• By 2020, the U.S. will spend more on debt interest than on its military.

• By 2015, Interest payments to China alone will cover the cost of the Chinese army.

Page 28: American Foreign & Defense Policy

If Money drains, Power drains

• U.S. dependence on others reduces its ability to act as the global order maker.

• It will become harder to push for American ideals like

• Democracy• Human Rights • Capitalism

on a global scale.