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isolationist
America's ealry foreign policy tended toward isolationism.
Were American foreign policy decisions in the 1920's justified?
A sympathizer for the French Revolution, he was a supporter of foreign relations; open
the industrial revolution for most industrialized nations brought a time period of foreign policy that was expansionist. this meat many countries sought to expand territory in search for resources to fuel the revolution such as coal and iron
isolationist
Because we were a new country and we did not want to interfere. Also, our policy on foreign affairs at the time was neutral.
to stay neutral
A basic position in American foreign policy has been that America must defend its foreign interest related to trade and security; the main foreign policy position opposing this American policy is militarism.
The basic goal of American foreign policy is and always has been to safeguard the nation's security.
the media influences American foreign policy by using propaganda
Foreign policy action by John Quincy Adams that reflected nationalism: In 1781, at age 14, in the middle of the American Revolution, in Europe on this mission with his father, he went to Russia as a private secretary & French interpreter for the U.S. minister to the Russian court, who was over there to try to convince the Tsarina to take America's side, or to stay neutral.
The basic goal of American foreign policy is and always has been to safeguard the nation's security.
Isolationism
the answer is A. Federalism
Carl R. Vann has written: 'American policy and the Cuban Revolution' -- subject(s): Foreign relations
the president and his chief advisers are the principal architects of U.S. foreign Policy.