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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper that considers predominant foreign policy over the last 50 years. following a brief overview of the foci of Americans and international relations, the writer presents hypotheses that might describe the theories based on specific writers - Chomsky, Layder, Shibutani and Wallace and Wolf. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGfgnpol.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
PGfgnpol.rtf U.S. FOREIGN POLICY 1950 - 2000 , November, 2001 properly! Since the Cold
War ended, the United States has often been referred to as the only superpower left. With such a reputation comes responsibilities, such as being the worlds policeman, if the U.S.
lives up to the reputation. This is a policy that Americans themselves are deeply divided. Not all Americans want their country to assume this kind of role, which becomes all
too apparent when the U.S. intervenes in some sort of emergency in another part of the world. Trachtenberg stated that "Emergencies of this kind summon up, in a powerful way,
several different strands of the American national character and history: The desire to serve the world as a force of enlightenment and righteousness. The World Wars, the Cold War, and
the other wars after it have reflected some sort of emotional conviction that America is destined to serve as a global savior. The conviction that the American sense of
human rights, as incorporated in the first ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution, is destined for acceptance by the entire human species. Despite the general policy against and adverse feelings
towards aggressive displays of military power, like those demonstrated in Hitlers Germany, Americans feel righteous indignation when a foreign regime displays obnoxious and aggressive military tendencies. When that type of
behavior becomes a habit in some foreign country, Americans typically feel there must be something they can to. The sense of utopian perfectibility. Americans often marvel at the fact
that there are people in other nations who dont see themselves as on a "march to perfection." Meanwhile, many foreigners find the United States an exhausting place to live because
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