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The President’s Inbox

How to Build an American Foreign Policy, With Michael Mandelbaum

The President’s Inbox

Council on Foreign Relations

Politics, News:politics, News

4.4734 Ratings

🗓️ 29 April 2026

⏱️ 33 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This episode unpacks three enduring pillars that have defined U.S. foreign policy from the nation’s founding to today: ideology, economic statecraft, and democratic accountability.   Host: James M. Lindsay, Mary and David Boies Distinguished Senior Fellow in U.S. Foreign Policy, CFR   Guest: Michael Mandelbaum, Professor Emeritus of American Foreign Policy at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies; Author, The American Way of Foreign Policy: Ideology, Economics, Democracy   We Discuss: Whether the United States can be said to have a coherent foreign policy "personality". How geographic and geopolitical advantages have historically enabled a more ideological U.S. foreign policy than most countries can afford. Whether ideology in U.S. foreign policy represents genuine conviction or merely a veneer for self-interest.  What the post-Cold War era reveals as the "golden age of foreign policy of ideas”. What drives the persistent American tendency toward economic statecraft, sanctions, and “mirror imaging”. How public opinion, interest groups, political parties, and elections influence foreign policy decisionmaking. Whether President Trump's foreign policy fits within—or represents a departure from—the three enduring American traditions in U.S. foreign policy.   Mentioned on the Episode:   The American Way of Foreign Policy: Ideology, Economics, Democracy by Michael Mandelbaum (Oxford University Press, 2025)   Embargo Act of 1807   George W. Bush, Second Inaugural Address, January 20, 2005   Vice President JD Vance, Remarks at the Munich Security Conference, February 14, 2025   Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Remarks at the Munich Security Conference, February 14, 2026   For an episode transcript and show notes, visit The President’s Inbox at: https://www.cfr.org/podcasts/presidents-inbox/how-to-build-an-american-foreign-policy   Opinions expressed on The President’s Inbox are solely those of the host or guests, not of CFR, which takes no institutional positions on matters of policy.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Economic considerations are always present in foreign policy of every country,

0:05.0

but ideological considerations have been much more important in American foreign policy than in the foreign policies of other countries.

0:13.0

The United States has confronted many foreign policy challenges since its founding.

0:19.0

Different presidents from different parties have made

0:21.7

different choices in how to engage the world. All Americans long for a safer world in which

0:26.7

individual rights are respected and precious values flourish. We're also imposing strict sanctions

0:32.1

on the dictatorships of Nicaragua and Venezuela. For all that diversity, are there common threads that run through U.S. history that define

0:40.3

a distinctive American approach to foreign policy? If so, what might those threads be? Why do they persist?

0:48.3

And what do they tell us about how U.S. foreign policy is likely to evolve in a new era of geopolitical competition.

0:55.4

From the Council on Foreign Relations, welcome to the president's inbox. I'm Jim Lindsay.

1:01.0

Today I'm joined by Malcolm Mandelbaum, Professor Emeritus of American Foreign Policy

1:05.9

at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and author of the new book, The American

1:12.8

Way of Foreign Policy, Ideology, Economics, and Democracy.

1:19.1

Michael, thank you very much for joining me, and congratulations on the publication of your

1:24.9

book.

1:25.3

I'm glad that you're following the first rule of authorship,

1:29.1

which is to always be selling. There's no room for modesty. All's fair and love and

1:36.2

book selling. Okay, Michael, let's sort of jump right into it then. I assume from the title,

1:42.9

the American way of foreign policy that you're arguing is that the

1:47.2

United States does in fact have a distinctive approach to foreign policy. What is it?

1:54.1

That is indeed the premise of the book. There are three distinctive features that have been present in American foreign policy

2:05.2

from the 18th century to the present.

...

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