Modern Foreign Relations Policies of the United States (A Mighty Endeavour)

The United States of America, as the world's premier superpower for nearly one and a half centuries as of 2087, has changed its foreign relations multiple times over the years and its general evolution has shifted over time. This article discusses these relations.

The US has defence treaties with twenty-three nations to varying degrees, such as the United Kingdom, Scotland, Canada, Japan, Taiwan, Kosovo, Turkey, and more. It is the country with the third most military-based treaties in the world, behind Russia (26) and Maghreb (28). Militarily, the United States conducts annual military exercises with Bahrain, Israel, Japan, Taiwan, the UK, Germany and others. It is in the Pan-Oceanic Alliance, which stipulates that the US will come to the aid of any nations in the POA and vice-versa.

As part of the Pan-American Economic Organisation, the US is also part of the Havana Zone, which gives its citizens unrestricted access to all other nations in the PAEO. It enjoys friendly relations with much of northern South America, with Venezuela, Colombia and Panama all considering the US a fundamental ally.

In Asia, the US is considered as a political, economic and military adversary to the People's Republic of China and as such has been actively participating in efforts to weaken the PRC's grip on China, with Tibet, Hong Kong and Taiwan all considered major US allies. At the same time, however, it has seen less-than ideal relations with Russia, a major geopolitical rival to the US, as well as high tensions between it and Greater Arabia.

Turn of the Century
At the beginning of the 21st Century, the US was part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation as well as the