The costly unilateralism of the younger Bush presidency led to a decade of war in the Middle East and the derailment of American foreign policy at large.
Graham Greene, as I understand it, was quite outspoken in his criticism of American foreign policy.
American foreign policy, for all its shortcomings, has underpinned political stability around the world.
My impression is that American policy speaks not of antagonism but rather partnership.
All along, American policy has been, 'We don't establish a Kurdistan.'
I always felt that the Cubans were being pushed into the Soviet Bloc by American policy.
U.S. trade policy has been a disaster for American workers.
Foreign policy is an explicitly amoral enterprise.
Trump's foreign policy is not so much immoral as it is amoral.
Under Clinton, the defiance of world order has become so extreme as to be of concern even to hawkish policy analysts.
Animosity is not a policy.
Both Presidents George Bush and Barack Obama pursued policies of regime change after 9/11 - with Bush removing al-Qaida's safe haven in Afghanistan and the sadistic anti-American dictator Saddam Hussein in Iraq - but Obama took it a step further and disregarded regional stability as a guiding factor for U.S. policy.
A policy is a temporary creed liable to be changed, but while it holds good it has got to be pursued with apostolic zeal.
We have not let injustice to be done to anyone. We have been following the policy of 'justice to all, appeasement of none.'
The Supreme Court is not elected, and it is therefore not a proper arbiter of social policy.
China has a more assertive, proactive foreign policy as its interests are growing around the world.
There's no accepted global policy on what to do about asteroid impacts.
I don't think that experience is a very useful or convincing attribute for a sensible foreign policy. Henry Kissinger had a lot of experience.
Austerity is devastating these communities. The working poor, public sector workers, the disabled, and the vulnerable are the hardest hit by this bankrupt and ideologically driven policy.
The policy of the house of Austria, which aimed at destroying the independence of Hungary as a state, has been pursued unaltered for three hundred years.