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Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy
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Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Dec 19, 2015

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Frederick Bell
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Page 1: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy

Page 2: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Isolationism to Internationalism

• Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign affairs.

• Foreign Affairs- A nation’s relationship with other countries.

• Isolationism- A purposeful refusal to become generally involved in the affairs of the rest of the world.

• Rogue State- A state or nation acting outside accepted norms or policies.

Page 3: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Foreign Policy Defined

• Foreign Policy is made up of all the stands and actions that a nation takes in every aspect of its relationships with other countries.

• Treaties, alliances, international trade, the defense budget, foreign economic and military aid, the United Nations and other international organizations, nuclear weapons testing, and disarmament agreements.

Page 4: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The State Department

• The State Department, headed by the secretary of state, is the President’s right arm in foreign affairs.

• Website

Page 5: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Secretary of State

• The duties of the secretary relate almost entirely to foreign affairs.

Page 6: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Overseas Representatives

• Some 12,000 men and women now represent the United States as members of the Foreign Service, many of them serving abroad.

• Under international law, every nation has the right of legation, which is the right to send and receive diplomatic representatives.

• Ben Franklin- France

Page 7: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Ambassadors

• An ambassador is an official representative of a sovereign state in the conduct of foreign affairs.

• List of Ambassadors• Today, the United States is represented by an

ambassador stationed at the capital of each sovereign state this nation recognizes.

Page 8: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

US Embassies Map

Page 9: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Iran Situation

• Pg. 486- Iran

• Iran Hostage Crisis 1979 (ABC News Report From 11/11/1979) - YouTube

Page 11: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Diplomatic Immunity

• Pg. 486- 1st paragraph• Ambassadors are regularly not subject to the

laws of the state from which they are in.• They cannot be arrested, sued, or taxed.• Their residences cannot be entered or

searched without their consent.

Page 12: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Passports and Visas

• A passport is a legal document issued by a state that identifies a person as a citizen of that state.

• Few countries will admit persons who do not hold valid passports.

• A visa is a permit to enter another state and must be obtained from the country one wished to enter

Page 13: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Passports and Visas

Passport Visa

Page 14: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Section 2: National Security

The Defense Department• Congress created the Defense Department in

order to unify the nation’s armed forces.• Established through the National Security Act

of 1947.• Pg. 489- Chart

Page 15: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Secretary of Defense

• The Department of Defense is headed by the secretary of defense.

• Two major responsibilities: – The President’s chief aide and advisor in making

and carrying out defense policy.– The operating head of the Defense Department.

– Chuck Hagel

Page 16: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Pentagon

Page 17: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Joint Chiefs of Staff

• Serve as principal military advisors to the secretary of defense, President, and National Security Council.– Chairman of Joint Chiefs– Vice chairman– Army chief of staff– Naval operations chief of staff– Commandant of the Marine Corps– Air force chief of staff

Page 18: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Joint Chiefs of Staff

Page 19: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Department of the Army

Page 20: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Department of the Navy

Page 21: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Department of the Air Force

Page 22: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Director of National Intelligence

• Chief Advisor to the President relating to all matters of intelligence.

• Supervises the operations of the 16 separate agencies that make up the federal intelligence community and directs the work of the National Counterterrorism Center.

• James R. Clapper

Page 23: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Director of National Intelligence

• Some of the agencies controlled by the DNI include the FBI, DEA, and CIA.

Page 24: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Department of Homeland Security

• The Department of Homeland Security is charged with the complex task of protecting the United States against terrorism.

• The Homeland Security Act of 2002 gives the department major operating responsibilities in five specific areas:– Border and transportation security– Infrastructure protection– Emergency preparedness and response– Chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear defense– Information analysis (intelligence)

Page 25: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Department of Homeland Security

• Pg. 493-494

• Reactions to the reading?

Page 26: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Section 3: American Foreign Policy Overview

Foreign Policy Through WWI• From its beginning, and for 150 years,

American foreign policy was largely built on a policy of isolationism.

• Throughout that period, the United States refused to become generally involved in the affairs of the rest of the world

Page 27: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Monroe Doctrine

• Video

Page 28: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

A World Power

Page 29: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Good Neighbor Policy

Page 30: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Open Door in China

Page 31: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

World at War

• Germany’s submarine campaign against American shipping in the North Atlantic forced the United States out of its isolationist cocoon.

• Germany and the Central Powers were defeated.

• Most Americans believed that the issues Europe were of no concern to the United States.

Page 32: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

World War II

• The United States commitment to isolationism was end by World War II.

• Pearl Harbor Attack- December 7th, 1941• Allied Powers (US, Britain, Russia, China) vs.

the Axis Powers (Germany, Japan, Italy)• As a result of WWII, the United States was

transformed into the mightiest military power in the world.

Page 33: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Two New Principles

• As a result of WWII, the United States position on foreign policy shifted from isolationism to internationalism.

• Foreign Policy Objective: Protect the security and well being of the United States.

Page 34: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Collective Security

• Following WWII, the United States and most of the rest of a war-weary world looked to the principle of collective security to keep international peace.

• The United Nations (UN) was formed in 1945 to promote international cooperation and so “to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war.”

Page 35: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Deterrence

• The principle of deterrence has been a part of American foreign policy since WWII.

• Deterrence is the strategy of maintaining military might at so great a level that that very strength will deter- discourage, prevent- an attack on this country by any hostile power.

Page 36: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Resisting Soviet Aggression

• The cold war was a period of more than 40 years during which relations between the two superpowers were at least tense and, more often than not, distinctly hostile.

• Pg. 498

Page 37: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Truman Doctrine

• The United States began to counter the aggressive actions of the Soviet Union in the early months of 1947.

• Pg. 499• From 1947 through the 1980’s, the United

States followed the policy of containment.• US Belief- If communism could be kept within

its existing boundaries, it would collapse under the weight of its own external weaknesses.

Page 38: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Korean War

• Video

Page 41: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Section 4: Foreign Aid and Alliances

• Foreign aid- The economic and military aid given to other countries.

• 1% of the federal budget currently.• Most foreign aid money must be used to buy

American goods and services. Benefits business and labor industries within the United States.

Page 42: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Security Alliances

• Since WWII, the United States has constructed a network of regional security alliances built on mutual defense treaties.

• Regional security alliances- Treaties in which the United States and other countries involved have agreed to take collective action to meet aggression in a particular part of the world.

Page 43: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

NATO

• The North Atlantic Treaty, signed in 1949, established NATO.

• Initially formed to promote the collective defense of Western Europe, particularly against the threat of Soviet Aggression.

• 506- Map• NATO

Page 44: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The United Nations

• US movement towards internationalism after WWII.

• San Francisco Spring, 1945• “Peace-loving states”• 508- Primary Source• 508- UN by the Numbers• UN Homepage• Video

Page 45: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The General Assembly

Page 46: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Security Council

Page 47: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Economic and Social Council

Page 48: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

Trusteeship Council

Page 49: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

International Court of Justice

Page 50: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Secretariat

Page 51: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

The Work of the UN

• Purpose: To make the world a better place.• Primary function: Peace- keeping• The UN’s specialized agencies spend some

several billion dollars a year for economic and social programs to help some of the world’s poorest nations.

Page 52: Chapter 17: Foreign and National Policy. Isolationism to Internationalism Domestic Affairs- All matters not directly connected to the realm of foreign.

United Nations- Health and the Environment

• A joint program of UNICEF and WHO has immunized 80 percent of the world’s children against six killer diseases, and it is estimated that this program saves more than 2 million children a year.

• United Nations environmental conventions have helped reduce acid rain, lessened marine pollution, and phased out the production of gases that destroy the ozone layer.