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American Isolationism, Past and Present

PAST EVENT VIDEO
Panel
This members-only conversation with author and Georgetown Professor Charles Kupchan examines whether a middle ground between foreign policy that does too little or does too much is possible.
Speakers
Charles Kupchan
Event Date

About this event

The United States is in the middle of an urgent and heated debate over the future of its engagement with the world. From America’s founding era until World War II, the nation’s leaders generally shunned strategic commitments abroad. Thereafter, Americans embraced global leadership and activism. The pendulum now seems to be swinging back; costly military engagements in the Middle East, economic uncertainty and a backlash against globalization, and domestic political polarization have weakened the nation’s appetite for internationalism. What impact will the comeback of isolationist sentiment have on US strategy? Charles Kupchan examines the history and longevity of isolationism in the United States to shed light on how the incoming Biden administration can bring the nation’s statecraft back into line with its means and purposes by finding the middle ground between a foreign policy that does too little and one that does too much.

Copies of Charles Kupchan’s book, Isolationism: A History of America’s Efforts to Shield itself from the World, are available to purchase through our local book partner, The Book Cellar.

About the Speakers
Professor of International Affairs, Georgetown University
Alongside teaching at Georgetown University, Charles A. Kupchan is a Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. Previously, he served as Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for European Affairs on the National Security Council in the Obama White House. He was also Director for European Affairs on the National Security Council during the first Clinton administration.
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Crown Center Content This content is produced by the Lester Crown Center, which aims to shape debates and inform decisions on important US foreign policy and national security issues.