Princeton RC - Infer / Imply / Suggest

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Between the beginning of World War II and the fall of the Soviet Union, United States foreign policy was governed by one overriding principle: the country must defend itself against "any perceived menace" to national security. The Soviet Union was, from the end of World War II until its demise, perceived to be just that menace.
The end of the Cold War, however, along with a belated recognition of the limitations of American resources, has brought about a new scenario. No longer able to rely upon the dictates of one overriding policy, the government suddenly finds itself faced with decisions that require either a subtle reading of American ideals or the reconciliation of seemingly contradictory objectives. For example, in the case of the civil war and apparent genocide in Bosnia, which ideal--non-intervention in national self-determination, or advocacy of human rights--should the United States pursue? To what degree does our support for the authority of the United Nations tie the nation's hands? In terms of world economics, should the United States support universal free trade, once viewed as an extremely effective weapon against the Soviets, even though the United States, with its weakened economy, may not ably compete on such a playing field? The only certainty is that the future holds difficult and potentially controversial choices for United States policy makers.

It can be inferred from the passage that United States foreign policy makers considered their pursuit of containment of the Soviet Union justified by


the possible threat posed to the safety of the United States


evidence of a Soviet weapons build up


the end of the Cold War and limits of United States resources


the approval of that policy by the United Nations Security Council


the Soviet policy of supporting oppressive, undemocratic governments
Source: — Reading Comprehension |

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by eagleeye » Sun May 27, 2012 3:28 pm
Right answer should be:
"the possible threat posed to the safety of the United States"
proof:
"United States foreign policy was governed by one overriding principle: the country must defend itself against "any perceived menace" to national security. The Soviet Union was, from the end of World War II until its demise, perceived to be just that menace. "

Let me know if this helps :)

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by karthikpandian19 » Sun May 27, 2012 11:18 pm
Can you provide the reasoning for the option C?
eagleeye wrote:Right answer should be:
"the possible threat posed to the safety of the United States"
proof:
"United States foreign policy was governed by one overriding principle: the country must defend itself against "any perceived menace" to national security. The Soviet Union was, from the end of World War II until its demise, perceived to be just that menace. "

Let me know if this helps :)
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Karthik
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by jimmyjimmy » Mon May 28, 2012 11:36 am
guys this is a doubt not regarding the above passage bt a personal doubt..
will it be helpful practicing lsat passages ?? or practicing gmat ones are fine..
m bit weak in rc's

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by karthikpandian19 » Mon May 28, 2012 12:23 pm
In my opinion it is better to stick with GMAT section which focuses on the tone, point, structure and specific question categories.
jimmyjimmy wrote:guys this is a doubt not regarding the above passage bt a personal doubt..
will it be helpful practicing lsat passages ?? or practicing gmat ones are fine..
m bit weak in rc's
Regards,
Karthik
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by eagleeye » Mon May 28, 2012 7:45 pm
karthikpandian19 wrote:Can you provide the reasoning for the option C?
eagleeye wrote:Right answer should be:
"the possible threat posed to the safety of the United States"
proof:
"United States foreign policy was governed by one overriding principle: the country must defend itself against "any perceived menace" to national security. The Soviet Union was, from the end of World War II until its demise, perceived to be just that menace. "

Let me know if this helps :)
Sure:

First off, inferred means that it should be 100% true based on the passage.


The question asks us about justification of US foreign policy in pursuit of containment of Soviet Union. In other words, how did US justify stopping Soviet Union from progress? I have already reasoned why A is the correct answer. Now for C,

"the end of the Cold War and limits of United States resources "
This is at odds with what we are looking for. The end of the Cold War and the US's recognition of its limited resources is the premise used to show that after the Cold War was over, US realized that they didn't have the threat of Soviet Union anymore. In this case, US was not pursuing the containment of Soviet Union, rather she did not know how to behave and on basis of what to behave. Since this question doesn't talk about the containment of Soviet Union, it is incorrect.

Let me know if this helps :)

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by eagleeye » Mon May 28, 2012 8:02 pm
jimmyjimmy wrote:guys this is a doubt not regarding the above passage bt a personal doubt..
will it be helpful practicing lsat passages ?? or practicing gmat ones are fine..
m bit weak in rc's
Jimmyjimmy, I have sent you a pm. Let me know if that helps :).