Foreign Policy Doctrine - United States

United States

  • 1823: Monroe Doctrine
  • 1842: Tyler Doctrine
  • 1932: Stimson Doctrine
  • 1947: Truman Doctrine
  • 1957: Eisenhower Doctrine
  • 1961: Kennedy Doctrine
  • 1965: Johnson Doctrine
  • 1969: Nixon Doctrine
  • 1980: Carter Doctrine
  • 1981: Kirkpatrick Doctrine
  • 1984: Weinberger Doctrine
  • 1985: Reagan Doctrine
  • 1990: Powell Doctrine
  • 1999: Clinton Doctrine
  • 2002: Bush Doctrine
  • 2002: Rumsfeld Doctrine

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Famous quotes related to united states:

    It was evident that, both on account of the feudal system and the aristocratic government, a private man was not worth so much in Canada as in the United States; and, if your wealth in any measure consists in manliness, in originality and independence, you had better stay here. How could a peaceable, freethinking man live neighbor to the Forty-ninth Regiment? A New-Englander would naturally be a bad citizen, probably a rebel, there,—certainly if he were already a rebel at home.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    The rising power of the United States in world affairs ... requires, not a more compliant press, but a relentless barrage of facts and criticism.... Our job in this age, as I see it, is not to serve as cheerleaders for our side in the present world struggle but to help the largest possible number of people to see the realities of the changing and convulsive world in which American policy must operate.
    James Reston (b. 1909)

    I thought it altogether proper that I should take a brief furlough from official duties at Washington to mingle with you here to-day as a comrade, because every President of the United States must realize that the strength of the Government, its defence in war, the army that is to muster under its banner when our Nation is assailed, is to be found here in the masses of our people.
    Benjamin Harrison (1833–1901)

    It is a curious thing to be a woman in the Caribbean after you have been a woman in these United States.
    Zora Neale Hurston (1891–1960)

    The parallel between antifeminism and race prejudice is striking. The same underlying motives appear to be at work, namely fear, jealousy, feelings of insecurity, fear of economic competition, guilt feelings, and the like. Many of the leaders of the feminist movement in the nineteenth-century United States clearly understood the similarity of the motives at work in antifeminism and race discrimination and associated themselves with the anti slavery movement.
    Ashley Montagu (b. 1905)