The American public has a high tolerance level for
foreign policy error.
Not exact matches
Both Kennan and Morgenthau interpreted
errors in American
foreign policy with insights specifically derived from Niebuhr.
Later, in his book Radical Imperative: From Social Ethics to Theology, Bennett confessed his mistakes, and came to see that his view of American
foreign policy in the 1940s and 1950s, a view that took American
policies as manifestations and realizations of the kingdom of God, was gravely in
error.
In order to monitor global climate change on a decade - to - decade basis in support of national and
foreign policy decisions, it will be necessary to better quantify and to substantially reduce the measurement
errors inherent in estimates of global - mean temperature, as well as to develop an improved understanding of the processes that contribute to short term variability of global - mean temperature.