Over the years, the foreign policy decisions of weak economies have been sometimes directed to them by their rich and powerful donors or development partners. For instance, Ghana’s socialist policies and her strong ties with the eastern bloc states like Cuba, Romania, Yugoslavia, Libya and the erstwhile Soviet Union in the early 1980s, had to shift swiftly towards the western capitalists for financial assistance to develop her shambolic economy at the time, as the communists could not assist her to rebuild[1].