Mitt Romney and other Republican  presidential hopefuls (with the exception of Ron Paul) are touting  tough-guy global strategies that sound like George W. Bush, circa 2002.  But recent public opinion polls suggest that Americans are leery of new  neocon adventures, Lawrence S. Wittner reports.
Are American politicians out of sync with the public when it comes to  foreign policy? There is considerable reason to believe so.
Throughout the scramble for the Republican presidential nomination,  the major candidates have certainly been rabidly nationalistic. In a  major foreign policy address on Oct. 7, 2011, Mitt Romney proclaimed  that “the twenty-first century can and must be an American Century.”
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney
 
Championing a vast military buildup, he argued that, to secure this  “American Century,” the United States should have “the strongest  military in the world.” By contrast, he assailed the “shameful” role of  the United Nations and other international institutions and declared  that he did not see any reason to obey them — or the international law  they represented — when it did not suit the U.S. government.
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