ABSTRACT

The issues raised by the Iraq War are symptomatic of larger phenomena that will continue to preoccupy American foreign policy makers well into the twenty-first century. The war on terror, the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, humanitarian intervention, and a litany of other concerns on the foreign policy agenda pose complex dilemmas for which there are no simple answers. Through lucid, lively analysis, as well as multiple illustrations and case studies, US Foreign Policy in the Twenty-First Century explores the difficult choices that confront the United States today in a complicated and often dangerous post-Cold War environment. Author J. Martin Rochester engages students in an intelligent examination of American foreign policy past, present, and future, involving them in critical thinking about how foreign policy is made, what factors affect foreign policy decisions and behavior, and how one might go about not only describing and explaining foreign policy but also evaluating it and prescribing solutions.

chapter 1|177 pages

Gulliver’s Travails

America and the World

chapter 2|163 pages

Thinking About Foreign Policy

Analyzing the Iraq War and Other Decisions

chapter 3|133 pages

US Foreign Policy from George W. to George W.

Patterns and Determinants

chapter 4|99 pages

US Foreign Policy in the Twenty-First Century

The Contemporary Debate

chapter 5|69 pages

Current US Foreign Policy Dilemmas

Cases

chapter 6|42 pages

US Foreign Policy and the Future