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A Foundation for the Future: US Public Opinion and Foreign Policy in Northeast Asia
( Brad Glosserman ) 한국국방연구원 2003 The Korean Journal of Defense Analysis Vol.15 No.1
Going by appearances, foreign policy is a pretty foreign subject to most Americans. We`re told that the public is ignorant about the world beyond its borders, and largely indifferent to distant problems. US politicians generally give foreign policy questions a low priority; during elections they seem to ignore them outright. The practice of US foreign policy confirms other stereotypes. The United States, the world`s sole remaining superpower, appears increasingly unwilling to except the constraints imposed by multilateral institutions and international law. In recent years, the United States has displayed an alarming tendency toward unilateralism. It has refused to ratify the Kyoto Protocol on global warming, the international land mine treaty and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. This paper examines the values that underpin US foreign policy and the bonds that tie us to those two nations. It surveys American public opinion generally-both before and after the terrorist attacks on September 11-and then looks at American views of the US alliances with Japan and Korea. It concludes by exploring the key issues in those two relationships and offers suggestions about ways to ensure that they continue to be relevant and resilient in the years ahead.
The Concept of “China as a Responsible Stakeholder”: Seen from Washington, Beijing and Seoul
황재호,Brad Glosserman 통일연구원 2010 International journal of korean unification studie Vol.19 No.2
In 2005, the then U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick proposed the concept of China as a “responsible stakeholder (RS).” There has been considerable discussion and debate over the meaning of the concept and its applicability to China. The germination stage of the concept was marked by an amicable bilateral environment fostered by a sense of expectation by the U.S. toward China, and a corresponding Chinese desire to meet those very expectations. However, such favorable sentiments toward the RS concept waned somewhat due to the adoption of a more realistic viewpoint and differences in interests of both parties. As this contentious debate between the U.S. and China has progressed, other countries have retired to the role of spectators. The fear of being caught up in an undesirable situation by ‘taking sides’ was predominant among the countries peripheral to the issue. In particular, the example of South Korea, which lies close to China’s borders, can be given as evidence of such limited and restrained behavior.