320
U.S. secretary of State
John Kerry addresses
a Friends of Syria
meeting in the Arab
nation of Qatar in 2013
after President Obama
announced that the
United States would
supply Syrian rebels
with U.S. arms. What
problems could we
face as a result of that
decision? (Jacquelyn
Martin/AFP/Getty
Images) Foreign Policy
On September 11, 2001, Americans were forced to change
their view of national security and of their relations with the rest of the world—literally
overnight. No longer could citizens of the United States believe that national security issues
involved only threats overseas or that the American homeland could not be attacked.
Within a few days, it became known that the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center
and on the Pentagon had been planned and carried out by a terrorist network named
al Qaeda, which was directed by the radical Islamist leader Osama bin Laden. The network
was closely linked to the Taliban government of Afghanistan, which had ruled that nation
since 1996.
14
Learning OutcOmes
The five Learning Outcomes (LOs) below are designed to help improve your
understanding of this chapter. After reading this chapter, you should be able to:
◾ LO1 Define foreign policy, and discuss moral idealism
versus political realism in foreign policy.
◾ LO2 Describe recent foreign policy challenges that
involve the use of force, including terrorism and the wars in
Afghanistan and Iraq.
◾ LO3 Discuss the use of diplomacy in addressing
such issues as nuclear proliferation, the rise of China, the
confrontation between Israel and the Palestinians, and the
economic crisis in Europe.
◾ LO4 Explain the roles of the president, executive
agencies, and Congress in making U.S. foreign policy.
◾ LO5 Cite the main themes in the history of U.S. foreign
policy.
Check your understanding of the material with the Test Yourself section at
the end of the chapter.
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