Advocates of bipartisanship in foreign policy argue that
A) foreign policy issues must be discussed in political campaigns precisely because those issues are so important.
B) politics stops at the water's edge.
C) positions on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee should be evenly distributed among Democrats and Republicans.
D) the secretary of state and the president's national security adviser must be from a political party other than the president's.
E) no politician should be involved in political matters.
Question 2
Which of the following presidents suffered from credibility gaps in his attempts to protect secret intelligence operations by telling official lies?
A) Eisenhower
B) Kennedy
C) Johnson
D) all of the above
E) none of the above