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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5-page paper discusses the United States, Bulgaria and the foreign relations between these two thorugh questions covering instruments of foreign policy. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTbulgar.rtf
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resources. Before continuing, we need to stress here that examples of foreign policy instruments include alliances, cultural exchanges, developmental assistance,
economic assistance and relations, trade, education, military assistance, security assistance and technical assistance. As well see later on in this paper,
the main policy of Bulgaria for the majority of the 20th century was Soviet Union policy. But beginning in 1989, as the fall of the Soviet Union commenced, relations between
the U.S. and countries in Eastern Europe changed -- and much of the U.S. foreign policy of the period (and that of Western Europes) involved political, technical and financial assistance
as Bulgaria and other countries moved from communism toward democracy (U.S. Embassy). The U.S. foreign policy objectives were, at the time, and continue to be, bilateral cooperation, technological assistance and
financial assistance. As well see in this paper, the main instruments of foreign policy equation, when it comes to Bulgaria, are
military assistance, security assistance and economic assistance/free market integration. Identify and relate specific "instruments of foreign policy" used to influence Bulgaria. One
such "influence" when it comes to Bulgaria, likely as not, is the Protocol for Accession of Bulgaria into NATO (U.S. Embassy). Part of this, likely as not, involved Bulgarian support
of U.S. objectives in Iraq, and the fact that Bulgaria was, according to then U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell the countrys "support and partnership in expanding democracy and freedom
around the world" (U.S. Embassy). One specific instrument, here, was the U.S. encouragement, in 2003, to help Bulgaria destroy its short-range SS-23
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