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OBAMA'S FOREIGN POLICY (5) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   100250


Countering Sino-Pak axis / Singh, Pushpendra   Journal Article
Singh, Pushpendra Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Key Words ASEAN  PLA  United States  Taliban  China  India 
ISI  Uzbekistan  Ladakh  Benazir Bhutto  26/11  Obama's Foreign Policy 
Naxal  Sikkim Question  Siliguri Corridor  Pak Military  Headly  External Security Challenges 
Dawood Ibrahim 
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2
ID:   116089


Indo-US global partnership in 21st century / Patnaik, Sanghamitra   Journal Article
Patnaik, Sanghamitra Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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3
ID:   118077


Lessons learned (and not) / Rothkopf, David   Journal Article
Rothkopf, David Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
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4
ID:   132991


Nation modest of ambition: are the California geeks running America now / Webb, Justin   Journal Article
Webb, Justin Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract It is oddity of President Obama's foreign policy that it is both unpopular and popular. On the face of it is both unpopular on the face of it, the polls reflect widespread disillusion. An NBC/Wall Street Journal survey conducted in June suggested that just 37 per cent of Americans approved of Obama's handling of foreign policy - an all time low for him. These findings prompt republications to talk of weakness and drift.
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5
ID:   092993


Obama's foreign policy: bridging the expectations-capability gap / Farer, Tom   Journal Article
Farer, Tom Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract Barack Obama's first year should appear disappointing only to persons blind to the constraints imposed by the Bush legacy, the still reeling world economy, an intimidating agenda of domestic problems, a polarised domestic politics, and at least temporarily intractable opponents of the President's undoubted ambitions to tame the Middle East and promote cooperation among the leading states without jettisoning a commitment to liberal values. By ordering an end to torture and moving to close Guantanamo, he has signalled the restoration of moral restraint on the exercise of American power and implicitly expressed belief in the efficacy of soft power assets. Additionally, he has attempted to create political space for change by pushing the conventional limits of American presidential discourse. A decent start, but the hard part lies ahead.
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