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Foreign Policy Challenges Ahead


Article # : 15850 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 1 / 1989  2,542 Words
Author : David M. Abshire and Michael Moodie
David M. Abshire is president and Michael Moodie senior fellow of the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

       The foreign policy agenda of the Bush administration will have a disorienting quality about it: On the surface it will appear familiar and traditional; in fact, it will consist of new and challenging problems. Relations with the Soviet Union and with America's Atlantic and Pacific allies will remain the centerpiece of U.S. foreign policy, but the factors shaping those relations are changing dramatically.
       
        In particular, the increasing interaction between economic and security concerns will pose novel challenges to U.S. policy-makers. The task is made even more complex by the fact that major actors such as the Soviet Union and Western Europe will experience profound internal change in the next four years.
       
        President-elect Bush got off on the right foot by immediately naming his secretary of state and setting his priorities--indicating his intention of meeting with the NATO allies before the Soviets.
       
        Economics and Security
       
        In confronting the growing interaction between economics, national security, and foreign policy, the Bush administration's greatest challenge will be coming to grips with its twin federal and trade deficits. Being the world's largest debtor and constantly importing more than it exports is obviously deleterious to the nation's economic health. It is also politically harmful. Increasingly, America's friends and allies are looking at the way the United States deals with its massive deficits as a touchstone of its political leadership. An inability to get America's economic house in order will undermine its credibility with ... (1997 of 15663 Characters)
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