Where Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump stand on foreign policy
Foreign Policy 4x3
Foreign Policy 4x3

(Scott Olson/Getty; Justin Sullivan/Getty Images; Skye Gould/Business Insider)

On Tuesday, November 8, Americans will go to the polls and elect the next president.

Both parties, Republican and Democrat, will make their cases to voters in the coming weeks.

Some of the most daunting tasks facing the next president come in the realm of foreign policy. America's relationship to the rest of the world has changed drastically over the last decade.

The next president will have to negotiate with a rising China, a newly resurgent Russia, a defiant North Korea, and a drawn out civil war in Syria, among other issues.

We looked into where Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump stand on some of the most pressing foreign-policy questions facing the US today. They have some stark differences.

Foreign Policy Graphic
Foreign Policy Graphic

(Skye Gould/Business Insider)

The Iran Deal

trump clinton split
trump clinton split

(Brennan Linsley and Chris Carlson / AP Photo)

The nuclear pact between the US and Iran offers Iran about $100 billion in relief from international sanctions in exchange for halting its nuclear program for the next 10 years.

The pact represents a cornerstone of President Barack Obama's foreign-policy legacy as he prepares to leave office. But it has been viciously attacked by conservative hardliners both in the US and Iran.

Hillary Clinton supports the Iran deal. As secretary of state, Clinton helped to impose sanctions on Iran that in part lead to the deal. Clinton holds that the Iran deal offered a diplomatic solution to an issue that could have become a war.

Clinton talked about the Iran deal in San Diego, California, earlier this year:

"When President Obama took office, Iran was racing toward a nuclear bomb. Some called for military action. But that could have ignited a broader war that could have mired our troops in another Middle Eastern conflict.

"President Obama chose a different path. And I got to work leading the effort to impose crippling global sanctions. We brought Iran to the table. We began talks. And eventually, we reached an agreement that should block every path for Iran to get a nuclear weapon.

"Now we must enforce that deal vigorously."

Donald Trump has promised to rip up the Iran deal on day one of his presidency and said that it's "one of the worst deals I've ever seen negotiated" in "[my] entire life."

Trump discussed of the Iran deal in his speech at the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, Ohio:

"Iran, the world’s largest state sponsor of terrorism, is now flush with $150 billion in cash released by the United States — plus another $400 million in ransom. Worst of all, the nuclear deal puts Iran, the number one state sponsor of radical Islamic terrorism, on a path to nuclear weapons