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Struggle for the Turf

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2011

Henry Trofimenko
Affiliation:
Institute of U.S. and Canadian Studies of the U.S.S.R.
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Extract

For anyone whose job is to study the United States, the memoirs of its statesmen provide more than merely entertaining reading. They not only give you a closer insight into the “kitchen” of statesmanship and political decision making; they also provide an opportunity to check the assumptions and paradigms that were constructed earlier to analyze the policy of any particular administration. The memoirs confirm that in spite of hundreds of books and thousands of articles in the U.S. press that discuss specific policies, as well as daily debates in Congress and its committees, press conferences, and official statements, the policy process is not as open as it might seem at first glance. Rather, American foreign policy is made within a very restricted circle of the “initiated”—official and unofficial presidential advisers, including selected members of the Cabinet.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Trustees of Princeton University 1985

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References

1 U.S., Congress, Senate, Military Implications of the Proposed SALT II Treaty Relating to the National Defense, Report No. 96–1054, 96th Cong., 2d sess. (Washington, DC: G.P.O., 1980), 3.Google Scholar

2 U.S. Public Law 92–448, Legislation on Foreign Relations, March 1974 (Washington, DC: G.P.O., 1974), 1173–74.Google Scholar