Word: internationalistic
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UNTIL A COUPLE of weeks ago, George Bush had been in hasty retreat from his internationalist ways. With Patrick J. Buchanan bellowing all over New Hampshire for "America First" and the democrats selling "George Bush: The Anywhere But America Tour" T-shirts, the new f-word had become "foreign affairs...
...President Bush, lifelong internationalist, who cynically gave license to this new and ugly American mood with his disgraceful trip to Japan, a begging and bullying expedition that legitimized the rush to find the source of America's troubles abroad...
...nothing new. Before he became a campaign-trail phenomenon, Buchanan was just a standard 1950s-style conservative who believed in isolationism, protectionism and white people. The ideology he was steeped in as a child -- some call it "paleoconservatism" -- was overtaken during the 1960s and '70s by a more interventionist, internationalist group contaminated by heresies like civil rights and support for Israel. These variations annoyed Buchanan, who for months before the race likened neoconservatives to "fleas who conclude they are steering the dog." When Buchanan began his quixotic presidential bid in December, notes Tony Fabrizio, who was briefly the candidate...
...unholy alliance of the left and right stands in the way. Some Democrats, turning away from the internationalist tradition of Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman, argue that the United States is too poor and too unworthy to play a major world role. Some Republicans, abandoning the tradition of enlightened foreign policy stretching from Eisenhower through Bush, call for a new isolationism. Both fail to see the iron link between the U.S. leadership and our twin goals of peace abroad and prosperity at home...
...launching the Middle East talks but also by working out an agreement with Congress on Nicaragua in 1989 and by helping stitch together last year's coalition against Saddam Hussein. Baker may not fashion foreign policy single-handedly -- certainly not in an Administration where the President is a seasoned internationalist who also consults closely with National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft and Defense Secretary Dick Cheney. But Baker is the man who, more than any other, gets White House policy to work...