#U.S. foreign policy goals

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How Will U.S. Policy Address Rights?
July 29, 2020 4 min. read

On July 16, the State Department released the Draft Report of the Commission on Unalienable Rights.  The report, as Walter Russell Mead notes, is “a thoughtful and carefully reasoned document that may serve as an important landmark.”  Given the Commission’s charge, though, it should be titled “A Comprehensive Review of U.S. Human Rights Policy,” as […]

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Politics and Plans for State
July 16, 2019 4 min. read

Secretary of State Pompeo’s July 8 announcement of a new Commission on Unalienable Rights, alongside Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s Plan to Rebuild the State Department, illustrate the domination of foreign policy discourse by politics.  The political process chooses ultimate policymakers, so politics has a proper and large role.  However, foreign policy is what a nation does as a […]

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Op-Ed: The U.S. Should Join the ICC – for Humanity’s Sake
November 30, 2018 6 min. read

The 4th of July is sacred in the civic culture of Americans. On that day of 1776, their forefathers formally terminated allegiance to King George III. Prominent among their grievances against him was that he ‘made Judges dependent on his Will alone’ – by pulling the strings of term and pay. It is this judicial […]

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At West Point, Obama Completed His “Pivot” Away from U.S. Unilateralism
June 3, 2014 4 min. read

President Barack Obama’s West Point commencement address last week was not an announcement of a new direction in American foreign policy — it was a defense of the policy path already chosen. The most significant takeaway from the speech — if not its biggest headline — was the president’s commitment to international institutions. Obama reminded his audience […]

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Engaging China: Joint Study of A Common Cultural Issue?
May 13, 2014 5 min. read

Recent events highlight the potential for conflict between China and the U.S., and the larger picture of U.S.-China relations remains fundamentally perplexing.  Is our relationship one of economic partners complicated by politics, or of adversaries that happen to share economic ties?  As our “frenemy,” is China more a geopolitical foe or economic partner, a co-manager […]

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Is Economic and Trade Policy a Strategic Tool?
March 20, 2014 5 min. read

    Vladimir Putin’s encroachments on Ukraine have drawn Western investment and trade sanctions in response.   U.S. sanctions are levied against certain Russian individuals, and serve reasonable diplomatic notice of our opposition.  However, we should not look to trade and other economic sanctions as a long term answer to Putin’s aggression. First, it is clear […]

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Ukraine Crisis Raises the Question of Defense Capabilities
March 7, 2014 5 min. read

  The U.S. cannot address today’s Russian military threat against Ukraine without addressing what military resources we have to back our diplomacy and to deter hostile moves backed by force.  Currently, no U.S. discourse guides policy makers toward an answer. The public expects a strong defense when we are afraid or when we are outraged […]

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Walling off the internet: how should the U.S. respond?
February 18, 2014 4 min. read

Angela Merkel wants to wall off European data from the NSA.  If ever there was evidence of dysfunction in the free world, this is it.  The technical foolhardiness of the idea, which the Financial Times noted in its report, makes the initiative more likely to launch a war of words than truly divide the internet.  […]

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U.S. Trade Policy Should Give First Priority to WTO Agreements
January 27, 2014 5 min. read

  Trade ministers for World Trade Organization (WTO) member nations reached agreement in Bali December 7, setting standards for customs, and addressing food and agricultural issues, among other matters.  The  measures in themselves are limited, but the Bali deal revives the WTO as a channel to approach trade policy. U.S. policy should reassess other approaches […]

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