Contemporary cases in U.S. foreign policy: from terrorism to trade
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Washington, D.C.
CQ Press
2008
|
Ausgabe: | 3. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XXX, 477 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780872894723 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Contents
PART I
ι
Preface
ix
Contributors
xv
Introduction
xxi
RALPH G. CARTER
INTERVENTION POLICY
The United States versus Terrorism:
Clinton, Bush, and Osama Bin Laden
1
RYAN
С
HENDRICKSON
AND FREDERICK GAGNON
The war on terrorism dates to the early
1990s
and escalated with
the
1998
bombings of the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The
Clinton administration retaliated with missile attacks on targets in
Sudan and Afghanistan thought to be affiliated with the
al
Qaeda
net¬
work. In
2000,
al
Qaeda
struck again, launching a suicide mission
against the USS Cole in Yemen. Following the attacks of September
11,
2001,
the administration of George W. Bush launched a global cam¬
paign against Osama Bin Laden and the
al
Qaeda
network.
The Return of the Imperial Presidency?
The Bush Doctrine and U.S. Intervention in Iraq
JEFFREY S.
LANTIS
AND ERIC MOSKOWITZ
25
After the fall of the Taliban and dispersal of
al
Qaeda
forces in
Afghanistan, the war on terrorism intersected with a long-standing
desire among neoconservatives to overthrow Iraqi leader Saddam Hus¬
sein. To assuage opposition to war and to drum up public support,
President George W. Bush decided to pursue a two-track policy of
international diplomacy through the United Nations while also prepar¬
ing for war. White House officials subsequently relied on their inter¬
pretation of the president s commander in chief powers, and the con¬
gressional authorization to use force, to conduct the war and the Iraq
occupation with as little input from outsiders as possible.
Ill
Coca, Human Rights, and Violence:
U.S. Foreign Policy toward Colombia
59
JENNIFER S. HOLMES
In Colombia, narco-trafficking permeates all levels of politics and so¬
ciety, complicating an ongoing struggle between the government and
insurgents. Because of human rights violations, Congress attempted to
use its power of the purse to attach conditions to Colombia aid. Yet
after the attacks of September
11,2001,
George W. Bush administra¬
tion officials declared the antigovernment insurgents terrorists and
removed barriers to the use of aid to defeat them, including adding
counterinsurgency tactics to the counternarcotics trafficking tactics al¬
ready authorized.
PART II NATIONAL SECURITY
AND DEFENSE POLICY
4
The Nuclear Standoff between the United States and Iran:
Conflict, Misunderstandings, and Diplomatic
Inflexibility
91
THOMAS PRESTON AND MICHAEL P. INFRANCO
For more than fifty years, U.S.-Iran relations have been plagued by
policy conflicts heightened by mutual misunderstandings and suspi¬
cions. This history of poor relations worsened when Iran sought to de¬
velop nuclear weapons, alarming not only the United States but also
the international community. Diplomatic efforts to resolve the concerns
that Iran s nuclear program has generated have been frustrated by sig¬
nificant political intransigence on both the U.S. and Iranian sides.
5
The United States and North Korea:
Avoiding a Worst-Case Scenario
121
PATRICK JAMES AND
ÖZGÜR ÖZDAMAR
The Reagan administration and the U.S. intelligence community
were surprised when satellite images revealed the construction of a nu¬
clear reactor in North Korea in the
1980s.
Diplomacy during the Clin¬
ton administration resulted in the
1994
Agreed Framework, which re¬
quired that North Korea halt its nuclear program in return for being
supplied with light water reactors and oil. After President George W.
Bush labeled North Korea a member of an axis of evil, relations
quickly deteriorated. In
2003
North Korean officiah acknowledged pos¬
sessing nuclear weapons, greatly escalating the consequences of any
policy mistake in dealing with the regime in Pyongyang. Only time will
tell if a
2007
negotiated agreement will prove more successful than pre¬
vious efforts.
iv
Contents
Anatomy of a Crash: Port Security
and the
2006
Dubai Ports World Controversy
151
DOUGLAS C. FOYLE
In late
2005,
a company owned by the United Arab Emirates, Dubai
Ports World, contacted the U.S. government regarding its plan to purchase
a British firm that had been operating six major U.S. ports. George W.
Bush administration officials convened as the multidepartmental Com¬
mittee on Foreign Investment in the United States and approved the sale
without advising either Congress or the president and apparently with¬
out considering how controversial turning over port operations to an
Arabia-based firm would be in the era after September
11.
Despite the
president s subsequent defense of the sale as good for the United States,
sufficient pressure was brought to bear to force the company to announce
that it would sell the U.S. port operations to a U.S. buyer.
NSA Eavesdropping:
Unchecked or Limited Presidential Power?
185
LOUIS FISHER
In December
2005,
news reports revealed that after the September
11
attacks, the George W. Bush administration authorized the National
Security Agency to eavesdrop on international telephone calls involving
U.S. citizens or residents. Although the
1978
Foreign Intelligence Sur¬
veillance Act
(FISA)
had created a court specifically to issue secret war¬
rants for such telephone intercepts, the administration chose not to seek
warrants for its Terrorist Surveillance Program. In
2006,
a federal
judge in Michigan ruled that the program violated both the Constitu¬
tion and federal statutes. The Republican-controlled House and Senate
proved unable to agree on the terms of an authorization of warrantless
eavesdropping before the
2006
general election. Facing a Democratic-
controlled Congress in
2007,
administration officials indicated that they
would seek such warrants from the
FISA
court in the future.
Immigration Policy: U.S.-Mexican
Relations Confront U.S. Political Realities
217
MARC R.
ROSENBLUM
When new presidents George W. Bush and Vicente Fox entered
office, significant progress seemed likely on long-standing concerns
about Mexican immigration into the United States. Not only did the
September
11
terrorist attach put off such policy discussions for years,
but the war on terror made an already complex issue more compli¬
cated. Now border security involved potential terrorists, not just illegal
immigrants. Huge public rallies in favor of immigration reform in
2006
reenergized the issue in the United States, but crosscutting pressures
fragmented both political parties in Congress, making legislative reso¬
lution of the issue extraordinarily difficult.
Contents
v
PART III TRADE POLICY
9
U.S. Steel Import Tariffs:
The Politics of Global Markets
249
ROBERT A. BLECKER
At the behest of special interests and in an attempt to gain political
support in key states, the George W. Bush administration raised tariffs
on imported steel in March
2002,
putting the United States on a colli¬
sion course with the European Union, Japan, and other steel produc¬
ers. The World Trade Organization declared the tariffs illegal twice in
2003.
A month after the second ruling, the administration lifted the
tariffs, denying that it had bowed to international pressures and claim¬
ing instead that the tariffs had run their course. With global steel
demand surging after
2004,
even without the tariff protections U.S.
steel manufacturers became profitable again, to the point that they
became the targets of foreign-based mergers and acquisitions. The
largest steel producer in the United States is now the U.S. subsidiary of
a European conglomerate that includes six formerly separate U.S. steel-
producing corporations.
10
The Helms-Burton Act: Congress and Cuba Policy
281
PATRICK J. HANEY AND WALT VANDERBUSH
Driven by partisan politics
andan
influential interest group, the Re¬
publican Congress sought to expand and codify the U.S. trade embargo
against Cuba in
1995.
A single deadly act by the Cuban government
led President Bill Clinton to support the congressional initiative, but to
the consternation of some members of Congress, he ultimately was able
to circumvent some of the other restrictions on U.S. trade and contacts
with Cuba. Opposition to parts of the law resulted in a split within the
Republican Party. This break in Republican ranL· led to the relaxation
of some restrictions on trade with Cuba, and restrictions on travel by
Americans to the island nation have been questioned. Given the im¬
portance of Florida in U.S. presidential elections and Fidel Castro s
stature as a lightning rod, U.S.-Cuba policy seems unlikely to dimin¬
ish in political importance anytime soon.
11
U.S.-China Trade Relations:
Privatizing Foreign Policy
305
STEVEN W. HOOK AND
FRANKLIN BARR
LEBO
Thirty years after the United States and China established economic
relations, the two continued to exchange complaints about the other s
trade practices. The Clinton administration s efforts to establish per¬
manent normal trade
retenons
between China and the United States
and to support China s entry into the World Trade Organization pitted
business-oriented groups against kbor, environmental, and human
rights organizations. China s image as a strategicpartner during the
vi
Contents
Clinton
years changed to that of a strategic competitor during the
administration of George W. Bush. The Bush administration has filed
three formal complaints with the WTO about Chinese trade practices.
Thus despite China s assurances that it would change its controversial
trade practices to gain WTO entry, problems of U.S. access to Chinese
markets continue.
12
The World Trade Organization and Tax Subsidies for
Exports: Equal Competition or Corporate Welfare?
335
WENDY J. SCHILLER AND RALPH G. CARTER
For thirty years, Congress tried to level the playing field between
U.S. corporations and their European competitors. With the
1995
cre¬
ation of the World Trade Organization, European states finally had an
entity that could authorize penalties against the United States for what
the Europeans saw as unfair trade subsidies to U.S. corporations. Con¬
gressional efforts to avoid these WTO-sanctioned penalties were com¬
plicated by fundamental differences in what reformers wanted to ac¬
complish, and by U.S. corporate heavyweights lining up on both sides
of the dispute. To have the penalties lifted, Congress eventually had to
terminate these controversial corporate tax policies.
PART IV MULTILATERAL POLICY
13
The Kyoto Protocol and Beyond:
The Politics of Climate Change
357
RODGER A. PAYNE AND SEAN PAYNE
International efforts to address global warming ran headlong into
U.S. objections during the Clinton administration. Controversies
ranged from whether there was a scientific basis for attributing global
climate change to human activity to questions about the fairness and
effectiveness of the means chosen to tackle the problem. Addressing
global warming continues to pit environmentalists and advocates of
apolitical science against those advocating continued U.S. economic
growth and voluntary measures to stanch the emission of greenhouse
gases. The reluctance of the George W. Bush administration to move in
the direction of mainstream international opinion on this issue has
motivated some U.S. states, cities, and corporate actors to adopt their
own emissions reduction programs to move in the direction of, if not to
comply with, the Kyoto Protocol s provisions.
14
The International Criminal Court:
105
Nations Join, but Not the United States
391
DONALD W. JACKSON AND RALPH G. CARTER
The Clinton administration was an early supporter of a permanent
court to try
individuais
accused of war crimes, crimes against humanity,
Contents
vii
and genocide. When control over the court s agenda was not assigned
to the UN Security Council, the U.S. position changed from support to
active opposition. The International Criminal Court now exists and
has issued its first indictments. The U.S. repudiation of the court stands
as a continuing example of the unilateralism that critics say character¬
izes U.S. foreign policy. In light of the broad international support for
the court, continuing U.S. opposition to it raises questions about U.S.
commitment to the rule of international law.
15
The Rights of Detainees:
Determining the Limits of Law
417
LINDA CORNETT AND MARK GIBNEY
What legal rights do detainees in the war on terrorism have? Does
the executive branch have the authority to hold terror suspects without
providing them access to the courts? The status of detainees pits those
who stress wartime national security requirements against civil liber¬
tarians who claim that such detention violates the U.S. commitment
to the rule of international law and the Constitution. Although the
U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that detainees have some legal rights,
Congress has sought to limit the
courts
ability to interfere with the
president s actions regarding the detention of terrorism suspects.
Conclusion
447
RALPH G. CARTER
Index
457
Viu
Contents
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spellingShingle | Contemporary cases in U.S. foreign policy from terrorism to trade Außenpolitik Außenpolitik (DE-588)4003846-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4003846-4 (DE-588)4078704-7 (DE-588)4522595-3 |
title | Contemporary cases in U.S. foreign policy from terrorism to trade |
title_auth | Contemporary cases in U.S. foreign policy from terrorism to trade |
title_exact_search | Contemporary cases in U.S. foreign policy from terrorism to trade |
title_full | Contemporary cases in U.S. foreign policy from terrorism to trade Ralph G. Carter, ed. |
title_fullStr | Contemporary cases in U.S. foreign policy from terrorism to trade Ralph G. Carter, ed. |
title_full_unstemmed | Contemporary cases in U.S. foreign policy from terrorism to trade Ralph G. Carter, ed. |
title_short | Contemporary cases in U.S. foreign policy |
title_sort | contemporary cases in u s foreign policy from terrorism to trade |
title_sub | from terrorism to trade |
topic | Außenpolitik Außenpolitik (DE-588)4003846-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Außenpolitik USA United States Foreign relations 1989- Case studies Fallstudiensammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=018954708&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT carterralphg contemporarycasesinusforeignpolicyfromterrorismtotrade |