ID | 106267 |
Title Proper | Continuity and change in the Obama administration's national security strategy |
Language | ENG |
Author | Hemmer, Christopher |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article examines the Obama Administration's recently released National Security Strategy (May 2010) and compares it with its predecessors. While consistent with its predecessors in its definition of American interests, its stress on U.S. global leadership, and the importance of American values in its foreign policy, it differs from the strategy released by the George W. Bush Administration by offering a more complex view of the international threat environment, favoring multilateralism, stressing America's example over its military might, and in acknowledging the limits of American resources. The fundamental flaw of the current National Security Strategy, a flaw it shares with all its predecessors, is that it ignores concessions, tradeoffs, and hard choices inherent in American foreign policy. |
`In' analytical Note | Comparative Strategy Vol. 30, No. 3; Jul-Aug 2011: p.268-277 |
Journal Source | Comparative Strategy Vol. 30, No. 3; Jul-Aug 2011: p.268-277 |
Key Words | National Security Strategy ; United States ; Obama Administration ; International Threat Environment ; American Foreign Policy |