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United States Foreign Policy: The Legacy and the Challenge
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 September 2018
Extract
Henry Kissinger, who has turned out a better negotiator than prophet, said in 1960: The United States cannot afford another decline like that which has characterized the past decade and a half. Fifteen years more of a deterioration in our position such as we have experienced since World War II would find us reduced to Fortress America in a world in which we had become largely irrelevant.
Despite the accelerated decline of America's position in the world in the intervening years, the United States remains the world's most powerful and influential nation. (Even those who measure power in terms of military strength appear more concerned about an upward trend in-Soviet military strength and a relative decline in America's strength and its willingness to use it than about current U.S. inferiority.) The position of the United States has eroded because of its own follies and the growing strength of other countries; the latter development would have occurred irrespective of U.S. actions.
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- Copyright © Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs 1977
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