Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byIsaac Cooper Modified over 9 years ago
1
CH. 14-3 DIPLOMATIC AND MILITARY POWERS ADVANCED AMERICAN GOVERNMENT
2
THE POWER TO MAKE TREATIES TREATY—formal agreement between two or more sovereign states The Secretary of State represents the President during most negotiations Senate must give “advice and consent” with a 2/3 vote. Treaty is ratified when documents are exchanged between the various parties involved. Congress may pass a law to repeal a treaty A 2/3 vote means that a relatively small group of senators could kill a treaty
3
EXECUTIVE AGREEMENTS EXECUTIVE AGREEMENT—a pact between the President and the head of a foreign state, or between their subordinates Example: Destroyers-for-bases deal of 1940 USA gave Great Britain 50 “over-age” U.S. Destroyers that Britain needed The United States received 99-year leases to a string of air and naval bases extending from Newfoundland to the Caribbean
4
THE POWER OF RECOGNITION RECOGNITION--The President receives the diplomatic representative of another sovereign state This act acknowledges the legal existence of that state. The USA does not have to agree with the policies or conduct of the other state (ex.—China) The President can show displeasure with another country by asking for that country’s ambassador to leave the country The person removed is now called “persona non grata” Or “an unwelcome person”
5
COMMANDER IN CHIEF Leader of all American armed forces President’s powers as commander in chief are almost without limit President has the finally authority and responsibility on all military decisions MAKING UNDECLARED WAR Does the Constitution give the President the power to make war without a declaration from Congress? Some people say “No” but history says otherwise
6
1798—John Adams had the Navy fight and win battles against the French Early 1800s—Thomas Jefferson and James Madison used the military against Barbary Coast pirates Others include Korea, Panama, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan CONGRESSIONAL RESOLUTIONS No declared war since WWII Congress has authorized the President to use force under certain conditions
7
1957-58—Marines sent to Lebanon to stop a Soviet-backed coup 1962—Cuban Missile Crisis—Soviets began installing nuclear missiles in Cuba 1962—Sanctioned military action dealing with erection of the Berlin Wall 1964—Defeat communist aggression in Southeast Asia (American forces finally withdrawn in 1973) 1991—Military campaign to drive Iraqi forces out of Kuwait (Operation Desert Storm—approx. 6 weeks) 2001—War in Afghanistan begins 2002—War in Iraq begins
8
OTHER USES OF MILITARY POWER Invasion of Grenada in 1983 to stop a coup 1989—Invasion of Panama to oust the dictator and protect American interests Use of force in the Balkans: 1995—Bosnia; 1999—Kosovo in response to civil war and ethnic cleansing THE WAR POWERS RESOLUTION Enacted in 1973 Initially vetoed by President Nixon
9
Congress overrode the veto with a 2/3 vote 1) President must report to Congress within 48 hours of committing troops to combat with details about the operation 2) Commitment of troops can last no more than 60 days unless Congress agrees to a longer period. The deadline may be extended for 30 days to allow for the safe withdrawal of troops 3) Congress may end the combat mission at any time by passing a concurrent resolution The constitutionality of the War Powers Act remains in dispute THE END
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.