A) realism.
B) idealism.
C) isolationism.
D) nationalism.
E) mercantilism.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) constrained
B) expanded
C) reduced
D) enlarged
E) ignored
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) expanding Congress' role in foreign policy.
B) preserving the Supreme Court's role in foreign policy.
C) maintaining the influence of the American public in foreign policy.
D) expanding the foreign policy bureaucracy under the president's control.
E) delaying American involvement in World War I.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) aggressive engagement.
B) preventive isolationism.
C) selective engagement.
D) intense institutionalists.
E) containment.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Allied Articles
B) Western Doctrine
C) Manifest Articles
D) Monroe Doctrine
E) Containment
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Multiple Choice
A) abundance.
B) superpower status.
C) anarchy.
D) internal sources of influence.
E) money.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) economic and domestic groups
B) media groups
C) international human rights groups
D) economic or business groups
E) political action committees
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) progressive.
B) pompous.
C) pacifistic.
D) pragmatic.
E) selective.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) Democracies do not go to war.
B) Democracies go to war only against other democracies.
C) Democracies are more willing to wage war against nondemocratic states.
D) Democracies go to war only against terrorists.
E) Democracies do not go to war unilaterally.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) to ensure national security and to serve as a model for other states.
B) to promote peace and to secure less fortunate regimes.
C) to serve as a model for other states and to replace military aid with technical assistance.
D) to ensure national security and support democratic government's efforts to embrace capitalism.
E) détente and containment.
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Multiple Choice
A) noninterventionism; active involvement
B) active involvement; isolationism
C) isolationism; hegemony
D) military intervention; pacifistic public attitudes
E) capitalism; isolationism
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Multiple Choice
A) foreign governments.
B) single interest groups.
C) international groups.
D) public opinion.
E) multinational organizations.
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Multiple Choice
A) about the dangers of the military industrial complex.
B) about the need to reach the Pacific Ocean.
C) against the dangers posed by the French navy.
D) against becoming entangled in foreign affairs
E) against westward expansion.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) IRA
B) FARQ
C) Al Qaeda
D) PLO
E) Hezbollah
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) collective bargaining.
B) collective security.
C) security liberalism.
D) idealistic realpolitik.
E) selective engagement.
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) foreign advisors.
B) crisis spin doctors.
C) policy determinants.
D) policy influentials.
E) interest groups.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) The United States is now the sole global superpower, a hegemon dedicated to liberal economic and democratic values.
B) U.S.foreign policy has not changed significantly from the time of the Cold War
C) U.S.foreign policy has been devoted mostly to detente and containment.
D) U.S.foreign policy has been devoted mostly to opening foreign markets to trade and encouraging prosperity.
E) The United States, Soviet Union, and China share superpower status and communism remains a threat.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) confinement.
B) containment.
C) communism.
D) détente.
E) Monroe Doctrine.
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Multiple Choice
A) lasting relations that are based on competition (capitalism) among nations.
B) enduring cooperation among nations.
C) enduring relations based on strength in military regimes that promote unity via force.
D) communist regimes.
E) anarchy.
Correct Answer
verified
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