A 2005 survey found that American opinion leaders
a. were divided over whether establishing a stable democracy in Iraq would succeed.
b. were united in the view that the United States should remain the only military superpower.
c. differ over the utility of public diplomacy to change America's image in the Middle East.
d. were generally divided over whether China is a serious problem for the United States.
e. Both options A and C are true.
The results of the 2002 Chicago Council surveys of American leaders or elite groups found all of the following except
a. that elites from outside the government generally believed that the United States needed the support of allies to take actions.
b. that elites, within and outside the government, are split on the approval of the Kyoto Treaty.
c. that elites, within and outside the government, are in agreement on the topic of the International Criminal Court.
d. most American elites favored the United States' siding with neither Israel nor the Palestinians in the Middle East conflict with some division in the Senate and in religious groups.
e. All of the above are true.
What two factors remain the principal correlates in accounting for foreign policy attitudes according to Holsti?
a. Ideology and party identification
b. Education and age
c. Ideology and region
d. Age and gender
e. Party identification and education
According to the analysis of foreign policy elites, which are the two largest categories?
a. Hardliners and internationalists
b. Internationalists and realists
c. Isolationists and accommodationists
d. Accommodationists and internationalists
e. Realists and isolationists
Which of the following administration is incorrectly paired with a foreign policy approach?
a. Jimmy Carter and idealism
b. Ronald Reagan and containment
c. Bill Clinton and neoconservatism
d. George H. W. Bush and modified realism
e. Barack Obama and liberal internationalism