Fred Kaplan, Slate
Conventional wisdom holds that U.S. presidential elections do not hinge on foreign policy. On this point, conventional wisdom is almost certainly correct. But it shouldn't be, for two reasons. First, foreign policy is the one realm in which presidents can do pretty much what they want. (Congress may rant at some action but rarely halts it.) Second, in this election in particular, Mitt Romney's statements on foreign policy range from vague to ill-informed to downright dangerous.Does Romney believe the things that he's said about arms control, Russia, the Middle East, the defense...
Conventional wisdom holds that U.S. presidential elections do not hinge on foreign policy. On this point, conventional wisdom is almost certainly correct. But it shouldn't be, for two reasons. First, foreign policy is the one realm in which presidents can do pretty much what they want. (Congress may rant at some action but rarely halts it.) Second, in this election in particular, Mitt Romney's statements on foreign policy range from vague to ill-informed to downright dangerous.Does Romney believe the things that he's said about arms control, Russia, the Middle East, the defense...
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