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| Exaggerating dangers to promote a policy |
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| Studying humans by empirical evidence, often quantified |
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| Career civil servants organized into various departments and bureaus |
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| A limit on decision making |
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| The 1962 showdown over Soviet rockets in Cuba |
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| A federal budget that spends more than it takes in |
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| Favors peace, a non-interventionist |
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| Required federal expenditures, such as Social Security and Medicare to large classes of U.S. citizens |
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| The way a government deals with the outside world |
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| Basing foreign policy on moral, ethical, legal, or world order principles |
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| U.S. willingness to use military force overseas |
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| Committee of top generals and admirals |
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| Foreign policies with much allied help and consultation |
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| National Security Council |
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| The president’s foreign policy coordinating body |
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| Ex-liberal favoring use of force overseas |
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| The unwillingness to use military force overseas |
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| Defense Department main building |
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| Dramatic incident that temporarily boosts public support |
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| Basing foreign policy on national interest |
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| Foreign policies without allied help or consultation |
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| The 1973 congressional time limit on president’s use of troops in hostilities |
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