![Criticism of the United States government](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi8yLzIxL1NhZGRhbV9ydW1zZmVsZC5qcGcvMTYwMHB4LVNhZGRhbV9ydW1zZmVsZC5qcGc=.jpg )
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Criticism of the United States government encompasses a wide range of sentiments about the actions and policies of the United States. Historically, domestic and international criticism of the United States has been driven by its embracement of classical economics, manifest destiny, hemispheric exclusion and exploitation of the Global South, military intervention, and alleged practice of neocolonialism, with its unipolar global position giving it a special responsibility which many feel is misused purely for self-gain, in contradiction with the beliefs and values of American people. This perpetuates negative sentiment towards the US and fuels criticism which is pervasive around the world.
Throughout more than two hundred years, multiple stages of isolationism and interventionism, it has gone through distinct phases that have been driven by internal forces and reacted to external regional and global dynamics. Generally, scholars talk about a inconsistencies and contradictions that have led to harsh critiques by both allies and others domestically and internationally. However, the consistent thread of United States government policy, as with all states is primarily driven by domestic forces. Criticism has been leveled against the competence of its leaders, perceived corruption, and its foreign policy.
Foreign policy
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The U.S. has been criticized for making statements supporting peace and respecting national sovereignty, but while carrying out military actions such as in Grenada, fomenting a civil war in Colombia to break off Panama, and invading Iraq. The U.S. has been criticized for advocating free trade but while protecting local industries with import tariffs on foreign goods such as lumber and agricultural products. The U.S. has also been criticized for advocating concern for human rights while refusing to ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child. The U.S. has publicly stated that it is opposed to torture, but has been criticized for condoning it in the School of the Americas. The U.S. has advocated a respect for national sovereignty but has supported internal guerrilla movements and paramilitary organizations, such as the Contras in Nicaragua. The U.S. has been criticized for voicing concern about narcotics production in countries such as Bolivia and Venezuela but doesn't follow through on cutting certain bilateral aid programs. However, some defenders argue that a policy of rhetoric while doing things counter to the rhetoric was necessary in the sense of realpolitik and helped secure victory against the dangers of tyranny and totalitarianism.
The U.S. has been criticized for supporting dictatorships with economic assistance and military hardware.
The U.S. has been criticized by Noam Chomsky for opposing nationalist movements in foreign countries, including social reform.[clarification needed]
President Bush has been criticized for neglecting democracy and human rights by focusing exclusively on an effort to fight terrorism. The U.S. was criticized for alleged prisoner abuse at Guantánamo Bay, Abu Ghraib in Iraq, and secret CIA prisons in eastern Europe, according to Amnesty International. In response, the U.S. government claimed incidents of abuse were isolated incidents which did not reflect U.S. policy.
Some critics charge that U.S. government aid should be higher given the high levels of gross domestic product. The U.S. pledged 0.7% of GDP at a global conference in Mexico. However, since the U.S. grants tax breaks to nonprofits, it subsidizes relief efforts abroad, although other nations also subsidize charitable activity abroad. Most foreign aid (79%) came not from government sources but from private foundations, corporations, voluntary organizations, universities, religious organizations and individuals. According to the Index of Global Philanthropy, the United States is the top donor in absolute amounts.
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The U.S. has also been criticized for failure to support the 1997 Kyoto Protocol.
There has been sharp criticism about the U.S. response to the Holocaust: That it failed to admit Jews fleeing persecution from Europe at the beginning of World War II, and that it did not act decisively enough to prevent or stop the Holocaust.
Critic Robert McMahon thinks Congress has been excluded from foreign policy decision making, and that this is detrimental. Other writers suggest a need for greater congressional participation.
Jim Webb, former Democratic senator from Virginia and former Secretary of the Navy in the Reagan administration, believes that Congress has an ever-decreasing role in U.S. foreign policy making. September 11, 2001 precipitated this change, where "powers quickly shifted quickly to the Presidency as the call went up for centralized decision making in a traumatized nation where, quick, decisive action was considered necessary. It was considered politically dangerous and even unpatriotic to question this shift, lest one be accused of impeding national safety during a time of war."
Since that time, Webb thinks Congress has become largely irrelevant in shaping and executing of U.S. foreign policy. He cites the Strategic Framework Agreement (SFA), the U.S.-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Agreement, and the 2011 military intervention in Libya as examples of growing legislative irrelevance. Regarding the SFA, "Congress was not consulted in any meaningful way. Once the document was finalized, Congress was not given the opportunity to debate the merits of the agreement, which was specifically designed to shape the structure of our long-term relations in Iraq" (11). "Congress did not debate or vote on this agreement, which set U.S. policy toward an unstable regime in an unstable region of the world." The Iraqi Parliament, by contrast, voted on the measure twice. The U.S.-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Agreement is described by the Obama administration has a "legally binding executive agreement" that outlines the future of U.S.-Afghan relations and designated Afghanistan a major non-NATO ally. "It is difficult to understand how any international agreement negotiated, signed, and authored only by our executive branch of government can be construed as legally binding in our constitutional system," Webb argues.
Finally, Webb identifies the U.S. intervention in Libya as a troubling historical precedent. "The issue in play in Libya was not simply whether the president should ask Congress for a declaration of war. Nor was it wholly about whether Obama violated the edicts of the War Powers Act, which in this writer's view he clearly did. The issue that remains to be resolved is whether a president can unilaterally begin, and continue, a military campaign for reasons that he alone defines as meeting the demanding standards of a vital national interest worth of risking American lives and expending billions of dollars of taxpayer money." When the military campaign lasted months, President Barack Obama did not seek approval of Congress to continue military activity.
International law
The US government has revoked or reduced the judicial immunity of some foreign government, which is somewhat unusual in international law. In most cases, the US government's conduct cannot be equated with international law, as the International Court of Justice has ruled.
In general, it can be said that "judicial immunity of governments" means that no government has the right to try or prosecute the independent and ruling government of another country in its courts. "The judicial immunity of the governments" in international law refers to the rules and principles of law, according to which the foreign government will be safe from the exercise of the authority of another government.
In recent years, US courts have focused on implicit waiver of judicial immunity of other governments due to the United States' government insistence. In many foreign policy cases, the US government has prioritized its own interests by undermining the judicial immunity of other governments and abusing the provisions of international law. The US State Immunity Act is in conflict with international law, although in many cases the parties to the dispute have sought to challenge the law with their defenses under the US State Immunity Act, the courts have always upheld the validity of the law, while many of these objections look right and legal. Some jurists have explicitly stated that US foreign government judicial immunity regulations can hardly be adapted to the provisions of international law. The International Court of Justice has in several cases declared the US foreign government judicial immunity regulations outside the legal limits.
Government structure
Executive branch
Presidential incompetency
One difficulty of the American government is that the lack of oversight for presidents offers no safeguards for presidential incompetency. For example, Barack Obama has been increasingly criticized for his expansive views on executive powers and mismanaging of several situations, including the Syrian Civil War. In addition, George W. Bush, who was criticized as entering the Iraq War too hastily, had no reproach for his advocacy of the war.
George H. W. Bush was criticized for stopping the first Iraq War too soon without finishing the task of capturing Saddam Hussein. Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger criticized Jimmy Carter for numerous foreign policy mistakes, including a decision to admit the ailing Shah of Iran into the United States for medical treatment, as well as a bungled military mission to try to rescue the hostages in Tehran.
Virtually every president in modern history has been criticized for incompetency in some fashion. However, there are little to no mechanisms in place to provide accountability. Since the only way to remove an incompetent president is with the rather difficult policy of impeachment, it is possible for a marginally competent or incompetent president to stay in office for four to eight years and cause great mischief.
Over-burdened presidency
Presidents have not only foreign policy responsibilities, but sizable domestic duties too. In addition, the presidency is the head of a political party. As a result, it is tough for one person to manage disparate tasks, in one view. Many believe that this overburdened duty of presidents allows for incompetency in government.
Presidents may lack experience
Since the constitution requires no prior experience in diplomacy, government, or military service, it is possible to elect presidents with scant foreign policy experience. Clearly the record of past presidents confirms this, and that presidents who have had extensive diplomatic, military, and foreign policy experience have been the exception, not the rule. In recent years, presidents had relatively more experience in such tasks as peanut farming, acting and governing governorships than in international affairs. It has been debated whether voters are sufficiently skillful to assess the foreign policy potential of presidential candidates, since foreign policy experience is only one of a long list of attributes in which voters tend to select candidates. President Obama has been widely criticized as too inexperienced for the job, having only served in government for three years before his presidential election. However, party leadership and donors were adamant in their advocacy due his broad appeal, leading to a nominee with little experience.
In addition, an increasing difficulty for providing well-versed presidents is that the American people in recent years are, in increasing numbers, more distrustful of their government and longterm, career politicians. As such, inexperienced candidates often perform better.
Excessive authority of the presidency
In contrast to criticisms that presidential attention is divided into competing tasks, some critics charge that presidents have too much power, and that there is the potential for tyranny or authoritarianism. Many presidents have circumvented the national security decision-making process, including Trump, Obama, George W. Bush, Clinton, and Reagan, as well as others historically. Many critics see a danger in too much executive authority.
Law enforcement and racism
Political hypocrisy
See also
- U.S. policy toward authoritarian governments
- Perceptions of the United States sanctions
- Anti-Americanism
- American exceptionalism
- American imperialism
- Criticism of the United States Constitution
- Criticism of Social Security
- Criticism of the Iraq War
- Democratic backsliding in the United States
- Dollar hegemony
- Foreign policy of the United States
- Human rights in the United States
- Human Rights Record of the United States
- Inverted totalitarianism
- Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War
- United States and state terrorism
- United States and state-sponsored terrorism
- United States foreign policy in the Middle East
- United States military aid
- United States support for Israel in the 2023 Israel–Hamas war
Criticism of United States government agencies
- Criticism of the Border Patrol
- Criticism of the Customs and Border Protection
- Criticism of the Department of Health and Human Services
- Criticism of the Department of Homeland Security
- Criticism of the Department of Housing and Urban Development
- Criticism of the Drug Enforcement Administration
- Criticism of the Federal Air Marshal Service
- Criticism of the Federal Aviation Administration
- Criticism of the Federal Emergency Management Agency
- Criticism of the Federal Reserve
- Criticism of the Food and Drug Administration
- Criticism of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement
- Criticism of the IRS
- Criticism of the Patent and Trademark Office
- Criticism of the Transportation Security Agency
References
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سال ۳۱ پاییز و زمستان ۱۳۹۳ شماره ۵۱، صفحات ۶۷ تا ۹۶
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سال ۳۱ پاییز و زمستان ۱۳۹۳ شماره ۵۱، صفحات ۶۷ تا ۹۶
- حبیبی مجنده, محمد; حسینی آزاد, سید علی; رحیم خویی, الناز (2014). "نقد عملکرد ایالات متحده آمریکا در نقض مصونیت قضایی دولت ها در آیینه حقوق بین الملل و رأی 2012 دیوان بین المللی دادگستری" [Criticism of the United States's performance in violating the judicial immunity of states in the mirror of international law and the 2012 ruling of the International Court of Justice]. حقوقی بین المللی (in Persian). 51: 78.
سال ۳۱ پاییز و زمستان ۱۳۹۳ شماره ۵۱، صفحات ۶۷ تا ۹۶
- حبیبی مجنده, محمد; حسینی آزاد, سید علی; رحیم خویی, الناز (2014). "نقد عملکرد ایالات متحده آمریکا در نقض مصونیت قضایی دولت ها در آیینه حقوق بین الملل و رأی 2012 دیوان بین المللی دادگستری" [Criticism of the United States's performance in violating the judicial immunity of states in the mirror of international law and the 2012 ruling of the International Court of Justice]. حقوقی بین المللی (in Persian). 51: 80 and 84.
سال ۳۱ پاییز و زمستان ۱۳۹۳ شماره ۵۱، صفحات ۶۷ تا ۹۶
- حبیبی مجنده, محمد; حسینی آزاد, سید علی; رحیم خویی, الناز (2014). "نقد عملکرد ایالات متحده آمریکا در نقض مصونیت قضایی دولت ها در آیینه حقوق بین الملل و رأی 2012 دیوان بین المللی دادگستری" [Criticism of the United States's performance in violating the judicial immunity of states in the mirror of international law and the 2012 ruling of the International Court of Justice]. حقوقی بین المللی (in Persian). 51: 85.
سال ۳۱ پاییز و زمستان ۱۳۹۳ شماره ۵۱، صفحات ۶۷ تا ۹۶
- حبیبی مجنده, محمد; حسینی آزاد, سید علی; رحیم خویی, الناز (2014). "نقد عملکرد ایالات متحده آمریکا در نقض مصونیت قضایی دولت ها در آیینه حقوق بین الملل و رأی 2012 دیوان بین المللی دادگستری" [Criticism of the United States's performance in violating the judicial immunity of states in the mirror of international law and the 2012 ruling of the International Court of Justice]. حقوقی بین المللی (in Persian). 51: 86.
سال ۳۱ پاییز و زمستان ۱۳۹۳ شماره ۵۱، صفحات ۶۷ تا ۹۶
- حبیبی مجنده, محمد; حسینی آزاد, سید علی; رحیم خویی, الناز (2014). "نقد عملکرد ایالات متحده آمریکا در نقض مصونیت قضایی دولت ها در آیینه حقوق بین الملل و رأی 2012 دیوان بین المللی دادگستری" [Criticism of the United States's performance in violating the judicial immunity of states in the mirror of international law and the 2012 ruling of the International Court of Justice]. حقوقی بین المللی (in Persian). 51: 85–88.
سال ۳۱ پاییز و زمستان ۱۳۹۳ شماره ۵۱، صفحات ۶۷ تا ۹۶
- ICJ Judgment, op cit, para. 62.
- Murdock, Deroy (10 July 2015). "You Can't Keep Up with Obama's Incompetence, Corruption, and Hyperactivity". National Review.
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Further reading
- Bacevich, Andrew J. The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism. New York: Metropolitan Books, 2008.
- Blum, William. America's Deadliest Export: Democracy : the Truth About US Foreign Policy and Everything Else. Halifax, N.S.: Fernwood Pub, 2013.
- Chomsky, Noam, and David Barsamian. Imperial Ambitions: Conversations on the Post-9/11 World. New York: Metropolitan Books, 2005.
- Cramer, Jane K., and A. Trevor Thrall. Why Did the United States Invade Iraq? Hoboken: Taylor & Francis, 2011.
- Davidson, Lawrence. Foreign Policy, Inc.: Privatizing America's National Interest. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 2009.
- Eland, Ivan. The Empire Has No Clothes: U.S. Foreign Policy Exposed. Oakland, Calif: Independent Institute, 2004. ISBN 0-945999-98-4
- Esparza, Marcia; Henry R. Huttenbach; Daniel Feierstein, eds. State Violence and Genocide in Latin America: The Cold War Years (Critical Terrorism Studies). Routledge, 2011. ISBN 0415664578
- Foner, Philip Sheldon. The Spanish-Cuban-American War and the Birth of American Imperialism, 1895–1902. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1972.
- Gould, Carol. Don't Tread on Me: Anti-Americanism Abroad. New York: Encounter Books, 2009.
- Grandin, Greg. The Last Colonial Massacre: Latin America in the Cold War. University Of Chicago Press, 2011. ISBN 9780226306902
- Immerman, Richard H. Empire for Liberty: A History of American Imperialism from Benjamin Franklin to Paul Wolfowitz. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2010.
- Lichtblau, Eric. The Nazis Next Door: How America Became a Safe Haven for Hitler's Men. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014. ISBN 0547669194
- Marsden, Lee. For God's Sake: The Christian Right and US Foreign Policy. London: Zed Books, 2008.
- Maier, Charles S. Among Empires: American Ascendancy and Its Predecessors. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006.
- Mearsheimer, John J., and Stephen M. Walt. The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy. New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007.
- Zinn, Howard. A People's History of the United States: 1492–Present. New York: HarperCollins, 2003.
This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions June 2024 It has been suggested that this article be merged into Federal government of the United States Discuss Proposed since November 2024 Criticism of the United States government encompasses a wide range of sentiments about the actions and policies of the United States Historically domestic and international criticism of the United States has been driven by its embracement of classical economics manifest destiny hemispheric exclusion and exploitation of the Global South military intervention and alleged practice of neocolonialism with its unipolar global position giving it a special responsibility which many feel is misused purely for self gain in contradiction with the beliefs and values of American people This perpetuates negative sentiment towards the US and fuels criticism which is pervasive around the world Throughout more than two hundred years multiple stages of isolationism and interventionism it has gone through distinct phases that have been driven by internal forces and reacted to external regional and global dynamics Generally scholars talk about a inconsistencies and contradictions that have led to harsh critiques by both allies and others domestically and internationally However the consistent thread of United States government policy as with all states is primarily driven by domestic forces Criticism has been leveled against the competence of its leaders perceived corruption and its foreign policy Foreign policyIraqi president Saddam Hussein greets Donald Rumsfeld a special envoy of President Ronald Reagan in Baghdad on December 20 1983 Rumsfeld came to discuss an aid program The U S has been criticized for making statements supporting peace and respecting national sovereignty but while carrying out military actions such as in Grenada fomenting a civil war in Colombia to break off Panama and invading Iraq The U S has been criticized for advocating free trade but while protecting local industries with import tariffs on foreign goods such as lumber and agricultural products The U S has also been criticized for advocating concern for human rights while refusing to ratify the Convention on the Rights of the Child The U S has publicly stated that it is opposed to torture but has been criticized for condoning it in the School of the Americas The U S has advocated a respect for national sovereignty but has supported internal guerrilla movements and paramilitary organizations such as the Contras in Nicaragua The U S has been criticized for voicing concern about narcotics production in countries such as Bolivia and Venezuela but doesn t follow through on cutting certain bilateral aid programs However some defenders argue that a policy of rhetoric while doing things counter to the rhetoric was necessary in the sense of realpolitik and helped secure victory against the dangers of tyranny and totalitarianism The U S has been criticized for supporting dictatorships with economic assistance and military hardware The U S has been criticized by Noam Chomsky for opposing nationalist movements in foreign countries including social reform clarification needed President Bush has been criticized for neglecting democracy and human rights by focusing exclusively on an effort to fight terrorism The U S was criticized for alleged prisoner abuse at Guantanamo Bay Abu Ghraib in Iraq and secret CIA prisons in eastern Europe according to Amnesty International In response the U S government claimed incidents of abuse were isolated incidents which did not reflect U S policy Some critics charge that U S government aid should be higher given the high levels of gross domestic product The U S pledged 0 7 of GDP at a global conference in Mexico However since the U S grants tax breaks to nonprofits it subsidizes relief efforts abroad although other nations also subsidize charitable activity abroad Most foreign aid 79 came not from government sources but from private foundations corporations voluntary organizations universities religious organizations and individuals According to the Index of Global Philanthropy the United States is the top donor in absolute amounts Kyoto Japan in 2008 The Kyoto Protocol treaty was an effort by many nations to tackle environmental problems but the U S was criticized for failing to support this effort in 1997 The U S has also been criticized for failure to support the 1997 Kyoto Protocol There has been sharp criticism about the U S response to the Holocaust That it failed to admit Jews fleeing persecution from Europe at the beginning of World War II and that it did not act decisively enough to prevent or stop the Holocaust Critic Robert McMahon thinks Congress has been excluded from foreign policy decision making and that this is detrimental Other writers suggest a need for greater congressional participation Jim Webb former Democratic senator from Virginia and former Secretary of the Navy in the Reagan administration believes that Congress has an ever decreasing role in U S foreign policy making September 11 2001 precipitated this change where powers quickly shifted quickly to the Presidency as the call went up for centralized decision making in a traumatized nation where quick decisive action was considered necessary It was considered politically dangerous and even unpatriotic to question this shift lest one be accused of impeding national safety during a time of war Since that time Webb thinks Congress has become largely irrelevant in shaping and executing of U S foreign policy He cites the Strategic Framework Agreement SFA the U S Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Agreement and the 2011 military intervention in Libya as examples of growing legislative irrelevance Regarding the SFA Congress was not consulted in any meaningful way Once the document was finalized Congress was not given the opportunity to debate the merits of the agreement which was specifically designed to shape the structure of our long term relations in Iraq 11 Congress did not debate or vote on this agreement which set U S policy toward an unstable regime in an unstable region of the world The Iraqi Parliament by contrast voted on the measure twice The U S Afghanistan Strategic Partnership Agreement is described by the Obama administration has a legally binding executive agreement that outlines the future of U S Afghan relations and designated Afghanistan a major non NATO ally It is difficult to understand how any international agreement negotiated signed and authored only by our executive branch of government can be construed as legally binding in our constitutional system Webb argues Finally Webb identifies the U S intervention in Libya as a troubling historical precedent The issue in play in Libya was not simply whether the president should ask Congress for a declaration of war Nor was it wholly about whether Obama violated the edicts of the War Powers Act which in this writer s view he clearly did The issue that remains to be resolved is whether a president can unilaterally begin and continue a military campaign for reasons that he alone defines as meeting the demanding standards of a vital national interest worth of risking American lives and expending billions of dollars of taxpayer money When the military campaign lasted months President Barack Obama did not seek approval of Congress to continue military activity International law The US government has revoked or reduced the judicial immunity of some foreign government which is somewhat unusual in international law In most cases the US government s conduct cannot be equated with international law as the International Court of Justice has ruled In general it can be said that judicial immunity of governments means that no government has the right to try or prosecute the independent and ruling government of another country in its courts The judicial immunity of the governments in international law refers to the rules and principles of law according to which the foreign government will be safe from the exercise of the authority of another government In recent years US courts have focused on implicit waiver of judicial immunity of other governments due to the United States government insistence In many foreign policy cases the US government has prioritized its own interests by undermining the judicial immunity of other governments and abusing the provisions of international law The US State Immunity Act is in conflict with international law although in many cases the parties to the dispute have sought to challenge the law with their defenses under the US State Immunity Act the courts have always upheld the validity of the law while many of these objections look right and legal Some jurists have explicitly stated that US foreign government judicial immunity regulations can hardly be adapted to the provisions of international law The International Court of Justice has in several cases declared the US foreign government judicial immunity regulations outside the legal limits Government structureExecutive branch Presidential incompetency One difficulty of the American government is that the lack of oversight for presidents offers no safeguards for presidential incompetency For example Barack Obama has been increasingly criticized for his expansive views on executive powers and mismanaging of several situations including the Syrian Civil War In addition George W Bush who was criticized as entering the Iraq War too hastily had no reproach for his advocacy of the war George H W Bush was criticized for stopping the first Iraq War too soon without finishing the task of capturing Saddam Hussein Former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger criticized Jimmy Carter for numerous foreign policy mistakes including a decision to admit the ailing Shah of Iran into the United States for medical treatment as well as a bungled military mission to try to rescue the hostages in Tehran Virtually every president in modern history has been criticized for incompetency in some fashion However there are little to no mechanisms in place to provide accountability Since the only way to remove an incompetent president is with the rather difficult policy of impeachment it is possible for a marginally competent or incompetent president to stay in office for four to eight years and cause great mischief Over burdened presidency Presidents have not only foreign policy responsibilities but sizable domestic duties too In addition the presidency is the head of a political party As a result it is tough for one person to manage disparate tasks in one view Many believe that this overburdened duty of presidents allows for incompetency in government Presidents may lack experience Since the constitution requires no prior experience in diplomacy government or military service it is possible to elect presidents with scant foreign policy experience Clearly the record of past presidents confirms this and that presidents who have had extensive diplomatic military and foreign policy experience have been the exception not the rule In recent years presidents had relatively more experience in such tasks as peanut farming acting and governing governorships than in international affairs It has been debated whether voters are sufficiently skillful to assess the foreign policy potential of presidential candidates since foreign policy experience is only one of a long list of attributes in which voters tend to select candidates President Obama has been widely criticized as too inexperienced for the job having only served in government for three years before his presidential election However party leadership and donors were adamant in their advocacy due his broad appeal leading to a nominee with little experience In addition an increasing difficulty for providing well versed presidents is that the American people in recent years are in increasing numbers more distrustful of their government and longterm career politicians As such inexperienced candidates often perform better Excessive authority of the presidency In contrast to criticisms that presidential attention is divided into competing tasks some critics charge that presidents have too much power and that there is the potential for tyranny or authoritarianism Many presidents have circumvented the national security decision making process including Trump Obama George W Bush Clinton and Reagan as well as others historically Many critics see a danger in too much executive authority Law enforcement and racismPolitical hypocrisySee alsoUnited States portalPolitics portalU S policy toward authoritarian governments Perceptions of the United States sanctions Anti Americanism American exceptionalism American imperialism Criticism of the United States Constitution Criticism of Social Security Criticism of the Iraq War Democratic backsliding in the United States Dollar hegemony Foreign policy of the United States Human rights in the United States Human Rights Record of the United States Inverted totalitarianism Opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War United States and state terrorism United States and state sponsored terrorism United States foreign policy in the Middle East United States military aid United States support for Israel in the 2023 Israel Hamas war Criticism of United States government agencies Criticism of the Border Patrol Criticism of the Customs and Border Protection Criticism of the Department of Health and Human Services Criticism of the Department of Homeland Security Criticism of the Department of Housing and Urban Development Criticism of the Drug Enforcement Administration Criticism of the Federal Air Marshal Service Criticism of the Federal Aviation Administration Criticism of the Federal Emergency Management Agency Criticism of the Federal Reserve Criticism of the Food and Drug Administration Criticism of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement Criticism of the IRS Criticism of the Patent and Trademark Office Criticism of the Transportation Security AgencyReferencesRiotta Chris 23 June 2017 Global business leaders describe Trump as reckless incompetent and erratic Newsweek Murdock Deroy 10 July 2015 You Can t Keep up with Obama s Incompetence Corruption and Hyperactivity National Review U S Senator blasting congressional incompetence 2 July 2019 2018 Corruption Perception Index Transparency International 29 January 2019 Archived from the original on 27 April 2019 Retrieved 17 August 2019 Walt Stephen M 19 March 2019 America s Corruption is a National Security Threat NOW on PBS PBS PBS Battle Joyce ed 25 February 2003 Shaking Hands with Saddam Hussein The National Security Archive George Washington University Retrieved 25 March 2023 Canada attacks U S on wood tariffs BBC 2005 10 25 Retrieved 24 March 2008 Satter Raphael 2007 05 24 Report hits U S on human rights The Boston 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دولت ها در آیینه حقوق بین الملل و رأی 2012 دیوان بین المللی دادگستری Criticism of the United States s performance in violating the judicial immunity of states in the mirror of international law and the 2012 ruling of the International Court of Justice حقوقی بین المللی in Persian 51 86 سال ۳۱ پاییز و زمستان ۱۳۹۳ شماره ۵۱ صفحات ۶۷ تا ۹۶ حبیبی مجنده محمد حسینی آزاد سید علی رحیم خویی الناز 2014 نقد عملکرد ایالات متحده آمریکا در نقض مصونیت قضایی دولت ها در آیینه حقوق بین الملل و رأی 2012 دیوان بین المللی دادگستری Criticism of the United States s performance in violating the judicial immunity of states in the mirror of international law and the 2012 ruling of the International Court of Justice حقوقی بین المللی in Persian 51 85 88 سال ۳۱ پاییز و زمستان ۱۳۹۳ شماره ۵۱ صفحات ۶۷ تا ۹۶ ICJ Judgment op cit para 62 Murdock Deroy 10 July 2015 You Can t Keep Up with Obama s Incompetence Corruption and Hyperactivity National Review Fareed Zakaria March 14 2009 Why Washington Worries Obama has made striking moves to fix U S foreign policy and that has set off a chorus of criticism Newsweek Retrieved 2009 12 18 Amy Chua October 22 2009 Where Is U S Foreign Policy Headed The New York Times Sunday Book Review Retrieved 2009 12 21 James M Lindsay book reviewer March 25 2007 The Superpower Blues Zbigniew Brzezinski says we have one last shot at getting the post 9 11 world right book review of Second Chance by Zbigniew Brzezinski The Washington Post Retrieved 2009 12 21 Raphael G Satter Associated Press 2008 09 15 Report John Le Carre says he nearly defected to Russia USA Today Retrieved 2009 12 22 Paul Magnusson book reviewer 2002 12 30 Is Democracy Dangerous Book review of World On Fire How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability By Amy Chua BusinessWeek Archived from the original on January 8 2003 Retrieved 2009 12 21 Roger Cohen April 5 2006 Freedom May Rock Boat but It Can t Be Selective The New York Times Retrieved 2009 12 21 Nation Kissinger What Next for the U S Time May 12 1980 Archived from the original on November 25 2010 Retrieved 2009 12 21 Constitution Day Essay 2008 Professor Sanford Levinson examines the dictatorial power of the Presidency University of Texas School of Law September 17 2008 Archived from the original on 14 February 2011 Sanford Levinson October 16 2006 Our Broken Constitution University of Texas School of Law News amp Events Archived from the original on 2009 10 05 Retrieved 2009 10 10 Zbigniew Brzezinski 2001 10 20 From Hope to Audacity Appraising Obama s Foreign Policy I Foreign Affairs Retrieved 2010 01 11 The big question about Barack Obama USA Today Retrieved March 23 2016 Amateurs in the Oval Office The Atlantic 8 October 2015 Retrieved March 23 2016 Nelson Dana D 2008 Bad for Democracy How the Presidency Undermines the Power of the People Minneapolis Minnesota University of Minnesota Press p 248 ISBN 978 0 8166 5677 6 Sirota David August 22 2008 The Conquest of Presidentialism The Huffington Post Retrieved 2009 09 20 David Sirota August 22 2008 Why cult of presidency is bad for democracy San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 2009 09 20 David Sirota January 18 2009 U S moving toward czarism away from democracy San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 2009 09 21 Sanford Levinson February 5 2009 Wartime Presidents and the Constitution From Lincoln to Obama speech by Sanford Levinson at Wayne Morse Center Wayne Morse Center for Law and Politics Retrieved 2009 10 10 dead link Anand Giridharadas September 25 2009 Edging Out Congress and the Public New York Times Retrieved 2009 10 10 Further readingBacevich Andrew J The Limits of Power The End of American Exceptionalism New York Metropolitan Books 2008 Blum William America s Deadliest Export Democracy the Truth About US Foreign Policy and Everything Else Halifax N S Fernwood Pub 2013 Chomsky Noam and David Barsamian Imperial Ambitions Conversations on the Post 9 11 World New York Metropolitan Books 2005 Cramer Jane K and A Trevor Thrall Why Did the United States Invade Iraq Hoboken Taylor amp Francis 2011 Davidson Lawrence Foreign Policy Inc Privatizing America s National Interest Lexington University Press of Kentucky 2009 Eland Ivan The Empire Has No Clothes U S Foreign Policy Exposed Oakland Calif Independent Institute 2004 ISBN 0 945999 98 4 Esparza Marcia Henry R Huttenbach Daniel Feierstein eds State Violence and Genocide in Latin America The Cold War Years Critical Terrorism Studies Routledge 2011 ISBN 0415664578 Foner Philip Sheldon The Spanish Cuban American War and the Birth of American Imperialism 1895 1902 New York Monthly Review Press 1972 Gould Carol Don t Tread on Me Anti Americanism Abroad New York Encounter Books 2009 Grandin Greg The Last Colonial Massacre Latin America in the Cold War University Of Chicago Press 2011 ISBN 9780226306902 Immerman Richard H Empire for Liberty A History of American Imperialism from Benjamin Franklin to Paul Wolfowitz Princeton Princeton University Press 2010 Lichtblau Eric The Nazis Next Door How America Became a Safe Haven for Hitler s Men Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2014 ISBN 0547669194 Marsden Lee For God s Sake The Christian Right and US Foreign Policy London Zed Books 2008 Maier Charles S Among Empires American Ascendancy and Its Predecessors Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2006 Mearsheimer John J and Stephen M Walt The Israel Lobby and US Foreign Policy New York NY Farrar Straus and Giroux 2007 Zinn Howard A People s History of the United States 1492 Present New York HarperCollins 2003