Entrenchment of a Bi-Polar Foreign Policy
December 20, 2012
Concerns about the international spread of communism and the growing power of the
Soviet Union dominated most foreign policy decisions during the administration
of President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower
U.S. foreign policymakers observed with concern as the Soviets tightened their
hold on Eastern Europe. In Africa and Asia nationalist movements challenged
colonial governments. U.S. officials suspected that communists dominated these
movements and received support directly from the Soviet Union. In order to
counterbalance the Soviet threat, President Eisenhower supported a doctrine of
massive retaliation, which called for the development of technology necessary to
match and even surpass Soviet nuclear capability. Recognizing that nuclear war
was a last resort, U.S. officials supported engaging in conventional limited
wars. In an effort to prepare for potential military conflicts, President
Eisenhower exercised unprecedented executive authority in deploying the U.S.
military abroad, without specific authorization from the U.S. Congress. These
Cold War policies served to increase the foreign policymaking power of the
presidency and to expand U.S. international obligations.
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