decrease budget by relying on weapons, not manpower.
i dunno do u knw cause i dont i just need dis answer answered so ask someone else or look it up
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American foreign policy today accept the fact that the United States is a member of a world community that cannot afford to ignore the importance of getting along.
It depends on how foreign they look. If you are certain that they are definitely foreign, then why the hell not.
It depends what foreign is to you.
A person must accept his own responsibility for understanding the President and his policies. The best source is always to take a look at the policy yourself and many are posted online.
Are you foreign? You look foreign. I'm sure that man is foreign. He appears to be a foreigner. I believe that man to be of foreign origin. Oh no, he's not foreign, that's my dad.
Do your homework i dont know it and look where it got me: someone else answer this beause i dont know it
In choosing a justice, the presidents looks for someone who shares his philosophy of government and someone whom the Senate will confirm.
It has foreign eyes.
United States foreign policy after World War II focused primarily on preventing the spread of Stalinism and Soviet communism throughout Europe and the rest of the world. Truman's anticommunist attitudes led to increasing actions aimed at alienating Stalin and the Soviet Union after V-J Day. This was illustrated by a number of economic and military conflicts between East and West Germany directly after the war (look up the Berlin Airlift), and later in conflicts such as the Korean War. Central to early Cold War policy was the concept of "containment," a number of foreign-policy strategic initiatives that sought to contain communism within the parts of the world in which it was already present.
They were all progressive reformers, but their foreign policies were definitely comparable. Roosevelt's foreign policy was the "Big Stick Policy." Speak softly and carry a big stick; he used the American Navy as his stick. Taft's policy was "Dollar Diplomacy." This was a method of maintaining balance by having the United States invest business in other countries, so if one were to disrupt a country that had invested in, the US would supposedly step in. Finally, Wilson's foreign policy was the "Moral Diplomacy" where he tried to spread democracy to the world. In a way, all 3 policies had their "ups and downs." In the states itself, look up Roosevelt's Square Deal and Wilson's Triple Wall of Privilege.