Isolationism Reconfigured: American Foreign Policy for a New CenturyPrinceton University Press, 1996. 8. 5. - 352페이지 This iconoclastic and fundamental work, Eric Nordlinger's last, advocates a new variant of isolationism, a "national strategy" confining U.S. military actions largely to North America and to neighboring sea-and air- lanes but encouraging international activism and engagement in nonsecurity realms. In Nordlinger's view, disengaging from security commitments on distant shores would liberate the United States to use its resources and decision-making powers to act more effectively abroad in matters of economic policy and human rights. A national strategy would then become a powerful new method of encouraging international ideals of democracy, and isolationism would be freed of its previous associations with appeasement, weakness, economic protectionism, and self-serving nationalism. |
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... attack upon the United States to the defense of civil liberties against our own government's intrusiveness—it is hard to imagine what the design and study of “national security” policies would look like. As used here, the modern ...
... attacked by their internationalist contemporaries, their arguments dismissively criticized by subsequent historians ... attack the European colonies in Southeast Asia. Germany dominated all of Eastern and Western Europe except for the ...
... attack and susceptible to mass turbulence from within. The Soviet Union was in firm control of Eastern Europe, its military forces were orders of magnitude larger than those of Western Europe, and dozens of Red Army divisions were ...
... attack as potentially “the greatest threat to world peace since 1945.” It should also be particularly hard to make the case for a national strategy during the 1980s. Total success followed in the wake of adversarial and conciliatory ...
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