United States of America's Foreign Policy in the Security of Asia-Pacific Region
β Scribed by Nassef Manabilang Adiong
- Publisher
- GRIN Verlag
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 13
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This paper will examine the determining factors through the questions posited in the course outline regarding a gradual change of focus of U.S. foreign policy from terrorism to citing fomenting predictions and future tenses that China would be a 'threat' in the Asia-Pacific region as well to the world. Utilizing 'Hedging,' one of foreign policy's options, as the tool or instrument to achieve its purpose, carry-out goals, and implement policies. In 2000, Pres. George W. Bush labeled China as the United States' leading strategic and military competitor. (Twining 2007) In his rhetoric, what changes in U.S. strategic and defense relationships in the Asia-Pacific region, if any, are needed to respond to major developments in the region, particularly China's emergence as a major power, the continuing potential for inter-state conflict, and the struggle against militant Islamists? (Vaughn 2007)
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The security architecture of the Asia/Pacific region is in a profound transformation. Such changes are not without problems, which are discussed here.
<div>The potential dichotomy between individual security and governance on a wider scale is nowhere more sharply in evidence than in the diverse political countries of the Asia-Pacific region. This timely volume examines the economic divergences within the region, the old-style communist dictatorshi
After 9/11, the U.S.-led global war on terrorism has intruded into an already complex security environment in the Malay archipelago, home to the worldβs largest population of Muslims, with the potential to catalyze or unleash further dynamics that could destabilize the region. This book argues that,
After 9/11, the U.S.-led global war on terrorism has intruded into an already complex security environment in the Malay archipelago, home to the worldβs largest population of Muslims, with the potential to catalyze or unleash further dynamics that could destabilize the region. This book argues that,