Does America Need a Foreign Policy?: Toward a Diplomacy for the 21st CenturySimon and Schuster, 2001 - 318 עמודים An assessment of how the United States dominant position may be effectively reconciled with the urgent need, in the 21st century, to achieve a new world order. Kissinger examines America's present and future relations with Russia, China, Europe, the Middle East, and other areas in the world. He covers areas such as globilization, military intervention, free trade and the eroding of the planet's natural environment. |
תוכן
Empire or Leader? | 17 |
The World of Democracies I | 36 |
Structure in Atlantic Relations | 80 |
The World of Equilibrium | 110 |
Worlds in Transition | 164 |
from Here? America and the Gulf Iraq Iran | 207 |
SEVEN Peace and Justice | 234 |
The New Interventionism Humanitarian | 251 |
CONCLUSION | 283 |
NOTES | 289 |
297 | |
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
achieve Africa agreement Alliance allies American foreign policy Arab Arafat Argentina Asia Asian Atlantic balance of power become Beijing Bosnia Brazil century challenge China Chinese Clinton administration Cold Cold War Colombia Communist concept conflict cooperation countries crises crisis decades democracy democratic developing diplomacy diplomatic doctrine domestic politics dominant economic emerged ethnic Europe European Force European Union free trade geopolitical George H. W. Bush Germany global groups guerrilla Gulf human rights humanitarian India institutions integration intervention Iran Iraq Israel Israeli issue Japan Japanese Kosovo Latin America leaders major ment Mercosur military missile defense NAFTA national interest NATO negotiations neighbors North nuclear weapons Palestinian parties peace population President pressures Prime Minister principles Pyongyang region relations relationship role Russia Saddam seeking South Korea Soviet Union strategic Taiwan territory threat tion tional traditional turn United Nations universal jurisdiction Vietnam Western Hemisphere Wilsonian