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AP U.S. History Diagnostic 22 176 Views
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AP U.S. History Diagnostic 22. Which established foreign policy was the National Security Council Report used to solidify?
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:02
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by the National Security Council,
- 00:07
the country's leading supplier of security guards.
- 00:11
And take a look at this excerpt.
- 00:12
[ mumbles ]
Full Transcript
- 00:19
All right, and the question:
- 00:21
Which established foreign policy was the National Security Council Report used to solidify?
- 00:27
And here are your potential answers.
- 00:28
[ mumbles ] All right.
- 00:33
Okay, all right. What clues can we glean
- 00:35
from this National Security Council Report? Hmm?
- 00:38
It says that the act of force is "a last resort
- 00:42
for a free society." Right there.
- 00:44
And should be only be allowed
- 00:45
"when another society seeks to impose its will" on others.
- 00:50
Different "will."
- 00:51
So we need to figure out which established
- 00:53
foreign policy in the answers benefitted
- 00:56
from this new forceful rationale.
- 00:58
Was the National Security Council Report used
- 01:01
to solidify A - intervention in Vietnam?
- 01:04
Well, that seems like it could work, but take a look at the question again.
- 01:07
We're looking for an established
- 01:10
foreign policy, and this report came out in 1950.
- 01:12
We didn't "intervene"
- 01:14
in Vietnam with ground troops until 1965.
- 01:17
So that eliminates A.
- 01:19
Was this report used to back up B -
- 01:21
key points of the Monroe Doctrine?
- 01:24
[ chuckles ] The Monroe Doctrine was about European
- 01:26
intervention in North and South America
- 01:29
during the 1800s.
- 01:31
Long time ago.
- 01:32
The National Security Council Report was based on the Truman Doctrine,
- 01:36
which was a U.S. policy designed to stop
- 01:38
Soviet expansion during the Cold War.
- 01:41
Monroe you didn't. It's not B, either.
- 01:44
Could the National Security Council Report have been used to support C -
- 01:48
isolation following World War II?
- 01:50
Well, quite the opposite, actually.
- 01:52
The emphasis on intervention over diplomacy pushed the U.S.
- 01:56
far away from the isolationist
- 01:58
policies it had held after World War I.
- 02:01
So that forces out C, as well.
- 02:03
Which means that this report was used to solidify D -
- 02:06
Cold War containment of communism.
- 02:09
The policy of containment designed to prevent the spread
- 02:11
of Communism was a big priority at the start of the Cold War.
- 02:14
By detailing specific situations and cases where
- 02:17
force could be used, the National Security Council Report
- 02:20
solidified the idea of containment in a practical sense.
- 02:23
So D is the correct answer.
- 02:25
When it was first published in 1950, the NSC Report was
- 02:28
classified top secret,
- 02:30
and it wasn't made public until 1975.
- 02:33
Even the best-sealed containers have an expiration date.
- 02:36
Yeah. Remember that "best if used by" thing?
- 02:39
Well, maybe this wasn't that.
- 02:40
[ crash ]
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