All AP US Government Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #1 : Foreign Relations
The League of Nations was the brainchild of which American President?
Jimmy Carter
Herbert Hoover
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Woodrow Wilson
Calvin Coolidge
Woodrow Wilson
The League of Nations was part of Woodrow Wilson’s Fourteen Points, which he released on the eve of the end of World War One. The idea was to form an international body that would oversee international affairs and try to prevent another global conflict from breaking out. It failed in part due to a lack of support in the United States: it failed even to pass Congress, much to Wilson’s dismay.
Example Question #2 : Policy Relations
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was created in the early years of __________
World War Two.
The Cold War.
The Spanish-American War.
World War One.
The Vietnam War.
The Cold War.
NATO was created in 1949 as an alliance of the United States, Canada, Western Europe, and Turkey to meet the perceived threat of the Soviet Union and the rise of communism. It was primarily a military alliance. Its opposition was the Warsaw Pact, which was formed shortly afterwards between Russia and the communist nations of the Eastern Bloc.
Example Question #3 : Policy Relations
The term appeasement is best defined as __________.
the maintenance of a large military presence so as to discourage an attack on the United States
the use of Federal funds to improve the infrastructure in only a small number of individual states
the act of making concessions to a political rival in order to prevent something even worse from happening
the gridlock that occurs in Congress when one party controls Congress and the other controls the Presidency
the releasement of funds from the Federal government to the states with a prescribed and narrow purpose
the act of making concessions to a political rival in order to prevent something even worse from happening
Appeasement is the term given to making concessions to a political or military rival in order to prevent said rival from doing something even worse. It has long been a controversial form of making policy and is most notable in US History for America’s reaction to the Japanese occupation of Manchuria in 1931.
Example Question #4 : Policy Relations
The first treaty concerning the reduction of nuclear weapons held by the United States and the Soviet Union was signed during the presidency of __________.
Bill Clinton
Ronald Reagan
John F. Kennedy
George H. W. Bush
Richard Nixon
Richard Nixon
Throughout the initial decades of the Cold War, the United States and the Soviet Union continued to acquire more and more nuclear weapons until each nation possessed the capacity to destroy the planet many times over. In an attempt to mitigate this massive threat to humanity, the two superpowers signed a treaty in 1972 designed to reduce the stockpile of nuclear weapons possessed by both nations. This took place during the presidency of Richard Nixon.
Example Question #4 : Foreign Relations
In his farewell address George Washington warned against which of the following?
None of these answers are correct
Political Factions and Judiciary Power
Deficit Spending and Judiciary Power
Foreign Entanglements and Judiciary Power
Foreign Entanglements and Political Factions
Foreign Entanglements and Political Factions
George Washington was particularly concerned about entering long-term alliances with foreign nations, fearing it would draw America into unnecessary conflicts. His fear of political factions warring over the government was a common fear among the founders, best expressed by Madison's Federalist No. 10.
Example Question #5 : Foreign Relations
Before intervening in each World War, the US pursued which method of foreign policy?
Hot-Cold Tactics
Detente
Isolationism
Interventionism
Gunboat diplomacy
Isolationism
The idea of getting involved in foreign conflicts was incredibly unpopular in America, and the isolationist politicians in Congress tried to keep America out of both of the World Wars as long as possible before the United States eventually entered both of the wars late.
Example Question #1 : Foreign Relations
Gunboat diplomacy is also referred to as what?
Touch-and-Go Diplomacy
Military-Aggression Diplomacy
Lightning Diplomacy
All of the other answers are correct
Big Stick Diplomacy
Big Stick Diplomacy
"Big Stick" Diplomacy refers to Teddy Roosevelt, the American president most commonly associated with aggressive shows of strength. Roosevelt argued that a good leader should speak softly, and carry a big stick. The big stick referring to the coercive strength needed to backup threats and diplomatic appearances.
Example Question #2 : Foreign Relations
The Roosevelt Corollary to the Monroe Doctrine makes what argument?
None of these options are correct.
That European nations traveling to the Americas are enemies of the US
That the United States needs to play a hands-on, intervening role in the Western Hemisphere
That Latin American nations under US protection need to pay royalties
That the US sphere of influence now expands past the Western Hemisphere to the Philippines
That the United States needs to play a hands-on, intervening role in the Western Hemisphere
The Roosevelt Corollary was made in the interest of intervention. While the original Monroe Doctrine was made solely to warn European nations away from the Western Hemisphere, the Roosevelt Corollary was made to name the United States as the policemen of the Americas.
Example Question #6 : Foreign Relations
The Roosevelt Corollary was a reaction to which foreign event?
The Drago Doctrine
The Spanish Flu epidemic
None of these answers are correct
The Brazilian Debt Crisis
World War I
The Drago Doctrine
The Drago Doctrine was announced by Argentina in response to European nations' aggressive debt-collecting actions during the 1902 Venezuela Debt Crisis. It declared that European nations were not allowed to coerce Latin American nations into paying their debts. Roosevelt rejected this Doctrine, and added the Roosevelt Corollary instead, allowing American intervention in countries that couldn't properly conduct their own affairs.
Example Question #41 : Public Policy
Gunboat diplomacy refers to what method of approaching foreign relations?
Increasing diplomatic gravitas by moving diplomats to as many embassies as possible
Manipulating soft power into obtaining policy objectives
Dissolving the other branches of the military in favor of an increased naval presence
None of these answers are correct.
Using shows of military strength to obtain policy objectives
Using shows of military strength to obtain policy objectives
Gunboat diplomacy is most commonly associated with Theodore Roosevelt's aggressive foreign policy. Today, gunboat diplomacy is often used via naval and air deployments to troublesome areas (such as the Strait of Hormuz) to showcase the strength of the American military.