This white paper presents a rigorous critique of United States foreign policy through the lens of Life-Value Onto-Axiology (LVOA) — a normative ethical framework that grounds all value in the capacity to sustain, develop, and protect life systems. Drawing from philosophical foundations, empirical case studies, and interdisciplinary insights, the paper reveals how prevailing U.S. foreign policy practices — including militarism, sanctions, regime change, and ecological negligence — consistently undermine human and ecological life-capacity across the globe.
Using LVOA’s Primary Axiom of Value — that which enables life is good, and that which disables it is not — we assess historical and ongoing policy failures across six domains: war and militarization, economic warfare, sovereignty violations, climate inaction, human rights double standards, and cultural imperialism. Each domain is examined through detailed case studies, revealing structural patterns of harm, destabilization, and long-term incoherence.
The paper then advances a comprehensive set of principles for regenerative foreign policy, including mutual life-flourishing, civil commons investment, reparative diplomacy, biocentric security, relational sovereignty, and intergenerational justice. It offers actionable policy recommendations — short, mid, and long-term — to guide the transition toward a life-coherent global engagement strategy.
In conclusion, the paper argues that only by reorienting U.S. foreign policy toward life-value coherence can the nation recover its moral credibility, fulfill its global responsibilities, and provide ethical leadership in an age of planetary interdependence. A regenerative foreign policy is not only ethically necessary — it is strategically imperative.










