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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page review of the article by author Bruce Stokes. This paper examines Stoke' views on the Muslim world's attitudes towards the U.S. and suggests what can be done to change those views.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPislUS.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
As current world events testify, Muslim opinion of the U.S. is poor to say the least. Muslims perceive our country as a heavy
handed oppressor whose only interest in Islam is to destroy it. According to author Bruce Stokes this attitude is not limited to extremist terrorist groups but extends into the
Muslim world as a whole. Their growing hatred is not focused solely on U.S. actions abroad but on our ideology and our customs as a whole (Stokes, 2005).
Extremist Muslims, of course, are not the only ones to criticize the contemporary U.S. role in the world. Many scholars have
jumped on the bandwagon of criticizing the U.S. for our actions and our foci. This critics contend that the injustices that we wield on the world stage are tied
to the historical underpinnings of our country themselves, an underpinning that is illuminated in more than one important text on American foreign policy. Michael Hunts "Ideology and U.S. Foreign
Policy", for example, is a thorough examination of the complex motivations that underpin foreign policy and helps us understand why we act as we do and why many in the
world resent those actions. Hunt illuminates a certain continuity in American foreign policy, indeed American thinking, which has existed throughout the
history of this country. This continuity is linked to the American vision of our values and philosophies, even mission, as a country as they relate to the American people
and people around the world. It is also linked, however to the historic hierarchy of races within the country and outside as well as an underlying hostility toward social
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