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How did the foreign policy doctrines of the two Bush Presidents differ?

a.One relied on multilateralism and the other was too idealistic.
b.One required the promotion of democracy, while the other specifically prevented it.
c.One was almost exclusively focused on building free markets, while the other was all about protection.
d.One incorporated multilateralism and ignored alliances; the other focused solely on building a strong defense.
e.One relied on multilateralism and the other was unilateral almost to a fault.



Answer :

"e.One relied on multilateralism and the other was unilateral almost to a fault" is the best option for how the foreign policy doctrines of the two Bush Presidents differed.

The correct answer is option e. "One relied on multilateralism and the other was unilateral almost to a fault". After Cold War, the first Bush administration relied on highly multilateralist policies by retrieving the US aggressions, cobbling together an unprecedented international coalition. On the other hand, President George W. Bush Jr. used highly unilateralism foreign polices, when the now known as Bush Doctrine were adopted. Under this precept, the president was able to do the one-sided action of invading Iraq since it was a potential threat for America.

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