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President Kennedy's Foreign Policy During The Cold War

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The Cold War lasted not only multiple decades but also multiple U.S. Presidencies which resulted in a shift on foreign policy choices from administration to administration. Some of the foreign policy can be directly related to the Soviet advances during the Cold War, while others later in the fall of the Iron Curtain could be attributed to the post-global Cold War ideologies. From President Kennedy on through President George W. Bush, U.S. foreign policy has taken strategic stances in the Third World as well as international trade and economic assistance all in the name of fighting against the Soviets in multiple fronts in non-direct combat. In From Cold War to New World Order : The Foreign Policy of George Bush the authors take a direst stance …show more content…

In this act we can see first how a foreign policy can indirectly fight the Soviet advances when Westad describes that the act “was explicitly intended to use to aid the fight in the Cold War.” In this act the President concluded that stopping the Soviets ability to “continually aid” other nations economically was a severe blow to the advancement of communism and that without the Soviet support the communist pressure would be alleviated (Westad, 2007). So the channeling of many began and countries such as Israel receiving $81 billion to date became important allies to Washington, D.C. (Westad, …show more content…

The Johnson administrations foreign policy took a sharp contrast to what the previous presidents were doing in the Cold War front. Although Johnson’s administration would be known for taking the fight to the communist backed North Vietnamese in the mid-1960’s it was his foreign policy in Latin America that molded his foreign policy stance. Westad describes that the through the Alliance for Progress the Johnson Administration took an Anti-communist stance in Latin America. In a foreign policy shift from the communist Asian front the Johnson Administration feared of an increase Soviet and Cuban influence in Latin America, the 1961–1969 Alliance for Progress was in principle a Marshall Plan for Latin America (History.state.gov,

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