Do Morals Matter?: Presidents and Foreign Policy from FDR to Trump

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Americans constantly make moral judgments about presidents and foreign policy. Unfortunately, many of these assessments are poorly thought through. A president is either praised for the moral clarity of his statements or judged solely on the results of their actions. In Do Morals Matter?, Joseph S. Nye, Jr., one of the world's leading scholars of international relations, provides a concise yet penetrating analysis of the role of ethics in US foreign policy during the American era after 1945. Nye works through each presidency from FDR to Trump and scores their foreign policy on three ethical dimensions of their intentions, the means they used, and the consequences of their decisions. Alongside this, he also evaluates their leadership qualities, elaborating on which approaches work and which ones do not. Regardless of a president's policy preference, Nye shows that each one was not fully constrained by the structure of the system and actually had choices. He further notes the important ethical consequences of non-actions, such as Truman's willingness to accept stalemate in Korea rather than use nuclear weapons. Since we so often apply moral reasoning to foreign policy, Nye suggests how to do it better. Most importantly, presidents need to factor in both the political context and the availability of resources when deciding how to implement an ethical policy—especially in a future international system that presents not only great power competition from China and Russia, but a host of transnational threats: the illegal drug trade, infectious diseases, terrorism, cybercrime, and climate change.

Author(s): Joseph S. Jr. Nye
Edition: Original retail
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2 Dec 2019

Language: English
Commentary: "In Do Morals Matter? Joseph S. Nye argues persuasively that in foreign policy, good intentions must be accompanied by the use of appropriate means that generate beneficial consequences. His astute analysis of American presidents since World War II demonstrates that ’contextual intelligence’ is crucial for moral principles to yield good results." -- Robert O. Keohane, Princeton University
Pages: 268
Tags: National & International Security

Preface
Acknowledgments

1 Introduction: American Moralism
American Exceptionalism
Wilsonian Liberalism
The Liberal International Order After 1945

2 What Is a Moral Foreign Policy?
How We Make Moral Judgments
Double Standards and Dirty Hands
Mental Maps of the World and Moral Foreign Policy
The Best Moral Choice in the Context: Scorecards

3 The Founders
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Harry S. Truman
Dwight D. Eisenhower

4 The Vietnam Era
John F. Kennedy
Lyndon Baines Johnson
Richard M. Nixon

5 Post-Vietnam Retrenchment
Gerald R. Ford
James Earl Carter

6 The End of the Cold War
Ronald Reagan
George H. W. Bush

7 The Unipolar Moment
William Jefferson Clinton
George Walker Bush

8 Twenty-First-Century Power Shifts
Barack Hussein Obama
Donald John Trump

9 Foreign Policy and Future Choices
Assessing Ethical Foreign Policy Since World War II
Contextual Intelligence and Moral Choices
The Ups and Downs of American Moral Traditions
Challenges for a Future Moral Foreign Policy
Conclusions

Notes
Index