Hastedt, Glenn P., 1950-

American foreign policy : past, present, future / Glenn P. Hastedt - 7th ed - Upper Saddle River, N.J. : Pearson/Prentice Hall, c2009 - xvi, 464 p. ; 23 cm

Includes bibliographical references and index

The Global Setting of American Foreign Policy Why the International System Matters The International System: Structural Constraints Decentralization Self-Help System A Stratified System The International System: Cold War Trends Diffusion of Power Issue Proliferation Actor Proliferation Regional Diversity The Contemporary International System: Dominant Features Globalization American Hegemony America and the World: Attitudes and Perceptions The Foreign Policy Agenda: Past, Present, and Future Foreign Policy Problems What Do Americans Want in Foreign Policy? Thinking About Foreign Policy Problems The National Interest Grand Strategy Presidential Foreign Policy Doctrines The Truman Doctrine The Nixon Doctrine The Carter Doctrine The Reagan Doctrine The Bush Doctrine Foreign Policy Doctrines Evaluated Terrorism as a Foreign Policy Problem Terrorism Combatting Terrorism Strategy The American National Style Isolationism versus Internationalism Sources of the American National Style Unilateralism Moral Pragmatism Legalism Consequences of the American National Style A Revival of Wilsonianism? Other Voices from the Past Learning from the Past How Do Policy Makers Learn from the Past? Events Policy Makers Learn from Types of Calculations Made about Those Events Learning from the Past: Case Studies The Cold War The Vietnam War The Iraq War The Domestic Context of American Foreign Policy The Media and American Foreign Policy The New Media and American Foreign Policy The Media, Public Opinion, and War Public Opinion Trends and Content Public Opinion and the Use of Force Impact Elections Voter Knowledge and Issue Voting Party and Candidate Differences Impact Interest Groups Types of Interest Groups Impact Political Protest Policy-Maker Response An Example: The Public Use of Intelligence and the Iraq War The Constitution and Foreign Affairs Treaty-Making Powers Senatorial Advice and Consent Executive Agreements The Role of the House in the Panama Canal Treaties Appointment Powers War Powers War Powers Resolution Civil Liberties Commerce Powers Federalism and the States The Presidency When Does the President Matter? Presidential Personality Presidential Managerial Style Presidential Bureaucracy The National Security Council The War Czar Other White House Voices The Vice President The White House Chief of Staff Presidential Decision Making Presidential Transitions Congress and Foreign Policy Congressional Structure and Foreign Policy Blunt Foreign Policy Tools Decentralization Policy Entrepreneurship Staff Aides The Influence of Party and Region Outsourcing Foreign Policy Congress and the President Constants The Changing Relationship The Foreign Affairs Bureaucracy The State Department Structure and Growth The State Department's Value System Impact on Foreign Policy The Defense Department Structure and Growth The Defense Department's Value System Impact on Foreign Policy CIA and the Intelligence Community Structure and Growth The Intelligence Community's Value System Impact on Foreign Policy The Domestic Bureaucracies Treasury, Commerce, and Agriculture Homeland Security Policy Makers' Response Models of Policy Making: Overview The Rational Actor Model The Bureaucratic Politics Model The Small-Group Decision-Making Model Elite Theory and Pluralism Summary: Integrating Models and Additional Possibilities Decision Making: Case Studies The Cuban Missile Crisis The Crisis: An Overview Three Views of the Cuban Missile Crisis Pre-9/11 Intelligence Policy on Terrorism The Intelligence Cycle Intelligence on Terrorism Before 9/11 Three Views of an Intelligence Failure Negotiating the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) The Bargaining Phase The Ratification Phase Diplomacy Selecting a Policy Instrument Bilateral Diplomacy Incentives Versus Sanctions Bilateralism Versus Multilateralism Summit Diplomacy East-West Superpower Summits Economic Summits Conference Diplomacy GATT and WTO Environmental Conferences UN Diplomacy Public Diplomacy The Political Use of Force Post-Cold War Coercive Diplomacy Nuclear Diplomacy Arms Transfers Covert Action Techniques of Covert Action Post-Cold War Covert Action The Covert War Against Osama bin Laden Renditions Controlling Covert Action Era of Trust Era of Skepticism Era of Uneasy Partnership Congress as Impatient Overseer Economic Instruments Strategic Outlooks Trade Strategies Monetary Strategies Economic Sanctions Inventory of Options Rules of Economic Conflict Smart Sanctions Foreign Aid Types of Foreign Aid Cold War Foreign Aid Post-Cold War Foreign Aid Post-9/11 Foreign Aid Military Power Development of U.S. and Soviet Nuclear Arsenals What Does It All Mean? A Historical Survey of U.S. Nuclear Strategy Post-Cold War Nuclear Strategy The U.S. Strategic Nuclear Arsenal U.S. Nuclear Strategy Bridging the Nuclear-Conventional Divide Deterrence Preemption Asymmetric Conflicts Strategies for the Use of Conventional Military Force War Fighting Humanitarian/Peacekeeping Operations Terrorism/Counterinsurgency Conflicts Arms Control and Missile Defense Judging Success and Failure Superpower Arms Control and Disarmament 1946 to 1957 1958 to 1972 1973 to 1988 1989 to 2001 2001 to Present Defense The Strategic Defense Initiative Missile Defense Systems Counterproliferation The Post-Cold War Agenda Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction Proliferation of Conventional Weapons Combining Approaches Alternative Futures Choices Alternative Futures The United States as an Ordinary State Reformed America The United States as a Global Manager Pragmatic America Neocontainment Triumphant America American Crusader America the Balancer Disengaged America Chapter 1 1 -- 1 -- 2 -- 2 -- 3 -- 3 -- 4 -- 4 -- 5 -- 7 -- 8 -- 9 -- 10 -- 11 -- 14 -- Chapter 2 19 -- 19 -- 20 -- 21 -- 23 -- 25 -- 28 -- 28 -- 29 -- 30 -- 32 -- 34 -- 35 -- 39 -- 41 -- 44 -- 48 -- Chapter 3 56 -- 58 -- 60 -- 62 -- 64 -- 67 -- 68 -- 71 -- 73 -- Chapter 4 77 -- 77 -- 79 -- 81 -- 83 -- 83 -- 92 -- 100 -- Chapter 5 114 -- 115 -- 118 -- 120 -- 123 -- 124 -- 126 -- 129 -- 130 -- 131 -- 132 -- 133 -- 134 -- 135 -- 144 -- 146 -- 147 -- 148 -- Chapter 6 156 -- 157 -- 157 -- 161 -- 163 -- 164 -- 167 -- 168 -- 170 -- 173 -- 176 -- Chapter 7 184 -- 186 -- 187 -- 190 -- 192 -- 192 -- 196 -- 196 -- 196 -- 197 -- 199 -- 199 -- Chapter 8 205 -- 205 -- 205 -- 216 -- 217 -- 219 -- 219 -- 220 -- 224 -- 224 -- 225 -- Chapter 9 230 -- 231 -- 231 -- 233 -- 238 -- 239 -- 239 -- 241 -- 246 -- 247 -- 247 -- 252 -- 255 -- 256 -- 256 -- 257 -- 259 -- Chapter 10 265 -- 266 -- 267 -- 269 -- 273 -- 276 -- Chapter 11 281 -- 281 -- 281 -- 284 -- 287 -- 287 -- 288 -- 293 -- 295 -- 295 -- 298 -- Chapter 12 303 -- 303 -- 305 -- 307 -- 307 -- 308 -- 309 -- 310 -- 311 -- 311 -- 315 -- 317 -- 318 -- 320 -- 320 -- 321 -- 322 -- Chapter 13 330 -- 331 -- 339 -- 339 -- 340 -- 341 -- 342 -- 344 -- 346 -- 348 -- Chapter 14 354 -- 355 -- 355 -- 360 -- 361 -- 363 -- 367 -- 368 -- 369 -- 371 -- 373 -- 374 -- 375 -- Chapter 15 381 -- 382 -- 384 -- 387 -- 391 -- 391 -- 392 -- 394 -- 394 -- 396 -- 397 -- 397 -- 399 -- 401 -- 403 -- Chapter 16 408 -- 408 -- 409 -- 410 -- 411 -- 412 -- 414 -- 416 -- 418 -- 418 -- 419 -- 421 -- 422 -- 422 -- 424 -- 425 -- Chapter 17 430 -- 430 -- 432 -- 432 -- 433 -- 435 -- 436 -- 438 -- 439 -- 440 -- 442 -- 443

9780136037507 (pbk.) 013603750x (pbk.)

2008002781


United States--Foreign relations
United States--Foreign relations--1945-1989
United States--Foreign relations--1989-
United States--Foreign relations administration

E183.7 / .H27 2009

327.73