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Role of the President, the Executive Branch, Congress, and Civilian Control of the Military 1.

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Presentation on theme: "Role of the President, the Executive Branch, Congress, and Civilian Control of the Military 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 Role of the President, the Executive Branch, Congress, and Civilian Control of the Military 1

2 2 Overview Civilian Control of the Military Constitutional Powers of the President and the Executive Branch Congressional Powers and Responsibilities

3 3 Democracy Government by the people: Supreme power vested in the people exercised either directly, or indirectly through a system of delegated authority in which people choose their representatives in free elections.

4 4 Traits Acceptance for minorities Freedom of expression/of the press Respect for the dignity of the individual Bottom Line: Gov’t does not give people their rights—it is instituted to protect rights which already exist!

5 5 “The end for which a soldier is recruited, clothed, armed, and trained, the whole object of his sleeping, eating, drinking and marching, is simply that he should fight at the right place and the right time.” Carl von Clausewitz, 1831

6 We must look to the people for war’s logic – Articulation of purpose – Definition of war – Limits of war How do Democracies and Militaries Interact? 6

7 7 Accountability Military officers have to be responsible for using the tool (military) in the way the government/people wish.

8 8 Society must trust us! Officers are commissioned to wield violence on society’s behalf—never on their own behalf! – subordinate nature – inherent in constitution – balancing liberty and security

9 9 Constitutional Powers (President & Executive Branch Foreign Policy Powers – Chief Executive – Chief Negotiator and Diplomat – Authority to Appoint & Remove Officials

10 10 Foreign Policy Powers Chief Executive – First sentence in Article II: “The Executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States” – “He shall take care that the laws be faithfully executed” Commander-In-Chief Does the President have final authority to commit troops abroad?

11 Chief Negotiator and Diplomat – Executive Agreements Formal Obligations between US and foreign governments Do Not require Senate approval Example: Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) Authority to appoint and remove officials Presidential Constitutional Powers 11

12 Historical Precedents – Represent US abroad – Negotiate international agreements – Recognize other states – Initiate conduct of foreign policy 12 Growth of Executive Dominance

13 Supreme Court Decisions – Generally supported Presidents in foreign policy – Curtiss-Wright case (1936) Congressional Deference & Delegation – Delegates foreign policy prerogatives to President Growth of Executive Dominance 13

14 14 Public Press Radio/ Television Interest Group Interested Individuals Congress Government Account Office Congressional Budget Office Senate Committees Armed Services House Committees Armed Services Foreign Relations International Relations Budget Rules Energy and National Resources Science and Technology Appropriations Governmental Affairs Governmental Operations Defense OSD, JCS, Army Navy, Air Force, DIA National Security Agency Commerce Justice FBI State CIA Treasury Interior Executive Departments and Agencies Arms Control Agency DOE Advisors President Close Office of Science and Technology Policy Executive Departments White House Office Domestic Council NSC OMB Council of Econ Advisors Executive Institutions and Policy Influences

15 Growth of Executive Institutions – Foreign policy machinery grew considerably since WWII – National Security Act of 1947 Created NSC, CIA, and DOD Gave President an intelligence advisor (CIA) and military advisor (CJCS), and national defense advisor (Sec of Def) Growth of Executive Dominance 15

16 Assess and collect taxes Regulate commerce (interstate and foreign) Coin money Establish post offices and post roads Establish inferior courts 16 Congressional Constitutional Powers

17 17 to declare war to raise and maintain an army and navy “To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions‘” “To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States, or in any Department or Officer thereof.” Congressional Constitutional Powers

18 18 Senate was given advise and consent power – Responsible for ratifying treaties – Approves the President's nominees for such high-level federal positions as cabinet officers and ambassadors Congressional Constitutional Roles and Duties

19 19 The House was given the authority to originate all revenue bills and tradition has extended this power of origination to spending bills as well – Sets the framework for the important questions of collecting taxes and raising money for the U.S. Treasury and then distributing it through legislative appropriations Congressional Constitutional Roles and Duties

20 Passed in 1973 Can only deploy troops under: – declaration of war – statuary authorization – national emergency Report to Congress within 48 hours – Report status periodically to Congress War Powers Resolution Act 20

21 Limit of 60 days without declaration of war (with a 30 day extension for troop withdrawal) – Keeps United States from getting into war without clear resolution – Reassert the war powers under Article I of Constitution 21 War Powers Resolution Act

22 22 Summary Civilian Control of the Military Constitutional Powers of the President and the Executive Branch Congressional Powers and Responsibilities

23 QUESTIONS?

24 Role of the President, the Executive Branch, Congress, and Civilian Control of the Military 24


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