President Obama’s announcement late last month that U.S. forces would begin bombing the forces of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria marked a decisive shift towards intervention for his administration. Irina Somerton argues that Obama’s indecisiveness and reluctance to pursue a more muscular Foreign Policy needs to be seen in the context of America’s deep-rooted Isolationism. She writes that this Isolationism, which began over four centuries ago, during 177 years in which the future USA was a group of British colonies, was reinforced after independence by George Washington’s warnings against “Foreign Entanglements”
1US foreign policy has been studied with the instrument of the models, that represent how a diplomac...
America today faces a number of complex foreign policy challenges, with few obvious routes towards t...
Even though U.S. Middle East policies have long followed relatively predictable patterns (Quandt 200...
In the spring of 1917, Woodrow Wilson was struggling with the question of whether the United States ...
The conflict in Syria is likely to be one of President Obama’s most important foreign policy legacie...
This article aims to pursue a brief but enlightening comparative study of U.S. discourse and practic...
The United States, with its historical background of exceptionalism, rose to power in the twentieth ...
Drawing from Dancy's notion of ethical particularism, we explore why foreign policy doctrines are co...
U.S. foreign policy since the end of the Cold War, and in many regards since end of World War II has...
America’s touted “Pivot to Asia” marks a rebalance of US foreign policy, but it’s hardly the first t...
The Obama leadership has seemingly gone further than previous administrations in recognizing that gl...
It is a common narrative among politicians and political experts that Trump’s foreign policy is turn...
This article explores the social construction of American grand strategy as nexus of identity and na...
The election of Barack Obama in 2008 marked a change in US foreign policy from intervention towards ...
Paul Schroeder presents a historical argument for the declining possibility of wars between the worl...
1US foreign policy has been studied with the instrument of the models, that represent how a diplomac...
America today faces a number of complex foreign policy challenges, with few obvious routes towards t...
Even though U.S. Middle East policies have long followed relatively predictable patterns (Quandt 200...
In the spring of 1917, Woodrow Wilson was struggling with the question of whether the United States ...
The conflict in Syria is likely to be one of President Obama’s most important foreign policy legacie...
This article aims to pursue a brief but enlightening comparative study of U.S. discourse and practic...
The United States, with its historical background of exceptionalism, rose to power in the twentieth ...
Drawing from Dancy's notion of ethical particularism, we explore why foreign policy doctrines are co...
U.S. foreign policy since the end of the Cold War, and in many regards since end of World War II has...
America’s touted “Pivot to Asia” marks a rebalance of US foreign policy, but it’s hardly the first t...
The Obama leadership has seemingly gone further than previous administrations in recognizing that gl...
It is a common narrative among politicians and political experts that Trump’s foreign policy is turn...
This article explores the social construction of American grand strategy as nexus of identity and na...
The election of Barack Obama in 2008 marked a change in US foreign policy from intervention towards ...
Paul Schroeder presents a historical argument for the declining possibility of wars between the worl...
1US foreign policy has been studied with the instrument of the models, that represent how a diplomac...
America today faces a number of complex foreign policy challenges, with few obvious routes towards t...
Even though U.S. Middle East policies have long followed relatively predictable patterns (Quandt 200...