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Zorluk: Çok zorThe Vietnam War and Foreign Policy

“The direct and immediate cause of our difficulties is not a lack of power, but a confusion of power, an arrogance of power which leads us to believe that we can reshape other societies in our own image. . . . The war in Vietnam is not a struggle of freedom against tyranny, but a civil conflict in which we have intervened to support a series of corrupt and unrepresentative regimes. In doing so, we have not only weakened our moral standing but also diverted critical resources from the pressing domestic needs of our own Great Society.”

— Senator J. William Fulbright, *The Arrogance of Power*, 1966

The criticism of United States foreign policy expressed in the excerpt most directly challenged which of the following assumptions of the containment doctrine?

  1. A
    The conviction that the president possessed the unilateral constitutional authority to commit military forces to foreign conflicts without explicit congressional approval.
  2. B
    The consensus that the United States should replace regional collective security alliances with a strategy of unilateral diplomatic isolation.
  3. The assumption that anti-colonial and nationalist struggles in developing nations were subordinate to a monolithic, globally coordinated communist conspiracy.Cevap
  4. D
    The belief that economic development programs were more effective than direct military intervention in preventing communist subversion in Asia.

Cevap

The assumption that anti-colonial and nationalist struggles in developing nations were subordinate to a monolithic, globally coordinated communist conspiracy.
The correct answer is the option stating that containment assumed anti-colonial and nationalist struggles were subordinate to a monolithic communist conspiracy. Fulbright's critique in the excerpt focuses on the mistake of viewing the Vietnam War as a simple 'struggle of freedom against tyranny' when it was, in reality, a localized 'civil conflict.' This directly challenged the core assumption of the containment doctrine that any communist-led insurgency in the developing world was part of a unified, Soviet- or Chinese-directed global strategy.

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1
Analyze the stimulus to identify the author's primary argument and its target.
Senator Fulbright is criticizing the Vietnam War as a 'civil conflict' rather than a global ideological war, and argues that the US is suffering from an 'arrogance of power' that neglects domestic priorities.
Establishing the core argument of the source is necessary to identify what Cold War assumption it challenges.
2
Relate the stimulus to the historical context of the containment doctrine.
Containment was globally applied during the Cold War under the assumption that all communist movements were directed by a centralized authority (Moscow or Beijing) and must be stopped to prevent a domino effect.
Understanding the standard containment assumptions allows for comparison with Fulbright's critique.
3
Evaluate the options to find the assumption that Fulbright's characterization of the war directly opposes.
Fulbright's description of the war as a local 'civil conflict' directly opposes the containment assumption that it was part of a global, monolithic communist threat.
This identifies the correct option based on the conflict between the source's claims and Cold War orthodoxy.

Anahtar Kavram

Ideological assumptions of Cold War containment and their critique during the Vietnam War.
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