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David Skidmore - Reversing course: Carters foreign policy, domestic politics, and the failure of reform

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An examination of the several reasons for the failure of foreign policy reform during the controversial administration of President Jimmy Carter. In Reversing Course, David Skidmore argues that President Carters initial foreign policy agenda required a scaling back of U.S. commitments abroad, reflecting a decline in resources, as well as influence, in a world developing in ways necessarily reducing U.S. hegemony. By probing beneath the obvious and carefully sifting the abundant but poorly understood evidence, Skidmore finds at the root of Carters failed effort an irresistible pressure to reverse a liberal foreign-policy agenda in order to address the effect at home of well-organized conservative criticism. For Skidmore, Carters course reversed toward a traditional containment strategy vis-a-vis the Soviet Union not because of Soviet intransigence or faulty idealism but because Cold War politics sold better in the polls. While offering significant theoretical arguments, Skidmore carefully anchors his thesis in the day-to-day political give and take among those personalities and events that provoked headlines and commentaries long before they were the stuff of history. Among the telling factors and events analyzed in this book are the Vance/Brzezinski conflict, the support and opposition of Howard Baker, the SALT II Treaty, the Panama Canal Treaties, and the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, to mention only a few. Although Skidmore draws conclusions that apply to the Reagan, Bush, and Clinton administrations as well, his focus is not on personality but on theory and underlying structures. He provides a demonstration that this structural approach can be helpful not only in unraveling the mysteries of policy change under Carter but also in specifying the underlying sources of policy vacillation over much of the past two decades. .

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title Reversing Course Carters Foreign Policy Domestic Politics and - photo 1

title:Reversing Course : Carter's Foreign Policy, Domestic Politics, and the Failure of Reform
author:Skidmore, David.
publisher:Vanderbilt University Press
isbn10 | asin:0826512739
print isbn13:9780826512734
ebook isbn13:9780585033129
language:English
subjectUnited States--Foreign relations--1977-1981, United States--Politics and government--1977-1981, Carter, Jimmy,--1924-
publication date:1996
lcc:E872.S556 1996eb
ddc:327.73/009/047
subject:United States--Foreign relations--1977-1981, United States--Politics and government--1977-1981, Carter, Jimmy,--1924-
Reversing Course
Carter's Foreign Policy,
Domestic Politics,
and the Failure of Reform
David Skidmore
VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY PRESS
Nashville and London
Copyright 1996 by Vanderbilt University Press
Nashville, Tennessee 37235
All Rights Reserved
First Edition 1996
96 97 98 99 00 5 4 3 2 1
This publication is made from recycled paper and meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials
The publisher wishes to thank the following copyright holders for permission to include portions of the following publications in this work:
David Skidmore, "Explaining State Responses to International Change: The Structural Sources of Foreign Policy Rigidity and Change," in Foreign Policy Restructuring: How Governments Respond to Global Change, edited by Jerel A. Rosati, Joe D. Hagan, and Martin W. Sampson III (Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press, 1994).
David Skidmore, "Carter and the Failure of Foreign Policy Reform," Political Science Quarterly 108, no. 4 (winter 19931904).
David Skidmore, "Foreign Policy Interest Groups and Presidential Power: Jimmy Carter and the Battle of Ratification of the Panama Canal Treaties," in Jimmy Carter: Foreign Policy and Post-Presidential Years, edited by Herbert D. Rosenbaum and Alexej Ugrinsky (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1993).
David Skidmore, "The Politics of National Security Policy: Interest Groups, Coalitions and the SALT II Debate," in The Limits of State Autonomy: Societal Groups and Foreign Policy Formulation, edited by David Skidmore and Valerie M. Hudson (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1993).
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Skidmore, David, 1959
Reversing course : Carter's foreign policy, domestic politics, and the failure of reform / David Skidmore.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p.) and index.
ISBN 0-8265-1273-9 (alk. paper)
1. United StatesForeign relations19771981. 2. United StatesPolitics and government19771981. 3. Carter, Jimmy, 1924- .
I. Title.
E872.S556 Picture 21996
327.73'009'047dc20Picture 3Picture 4Picture 5Picture 695-45293
Picture 7Picture 8Picture 9Picture 10Picture 11Picture 12Picture 13CIP
Manufactured in the United States of America
for my parents, who taught me
independence of mind
Contents
Acknowledgments
ix
Introduction
The Politics of Decline
xi
1.
Explaining State Responses to International Change
3
2.
Interpreting the Carter Administration's Foreign Policies
26
3.
The Sources of Policy Change
52
4.
The Search for Policy Legitimacy
84
5.
Interest Group Politics and National Security Policy
104
6.
American Foreign Policy under Reagan, Bush, and Clinton
149
7.
A Structural Approach to Foreign Policy Analysis
174
Notes
182
Bibliography
215
Index
229

Page ix
Acknowledgments
In its deal form, scholarship is a collective enterprise. Over the years, I have been fortunate to benefit from association with many friends and colleagues who are committed to closing the gap between this ideal and the day-to-day practices of academic life. This book would never have come to fruition without their assistance and support.
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