With the arrival of a new American president in 2009, the power and constitutional authority of the commander in chief to engage in military action remains as relevant as ever. Barack Obama inherited a war in Iraq, has worked with the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to initiate a 17,000 American combat troop surge in Afghanistan in March 2009 and another increase of 30,000 personnel later that year, more than doubling the total American presence. He also permitted American Navy Seals to use force against Somali pirates in the first months of his presidency. In addition, nuclear development and proliferation concerns in Iran and North Korea remain ongoing diplomatic challenges for this administration, as well as the expanding civil confli...
How powerful is the President of the United States in the arena of foreign policy? This question has...
American foreign policy has drastically changed since September 11, 2001. In the decade before that...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
With the arrival of a new American president in 2009, the power and constitutional authority of the ...
During President Barack Obama’s first term in office, the United States expanded its military presen...
In September, a great deal of the debate over the potential for U.S. intervention in Syria centered ...
In the face of terrorist threats and the emergence of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Pres...
Unlike many previous presidential elections, in 2004 foreign policy issues are at the forefront of t...
Senator Obama campaigned on a concept of “Good War – Bad War”, which meant that he supported the Afg...
Just War Theorists have neglected that a lack of “just military preparedness” on the side of a count...
U.S. military intervention has long been among the most visible and dramatic manifestations of Ameri...
Unlike many previous presidential elections, in 2004 foreign policy issues are at the forefront of t...
In its first 3 years, the Obama administration fully embraced the intervention in Afghanistan it inh...
The struggle between the President and the Congress over the power to control the use of military fo...
This article reviews American policy toward Syria since the onset of its civil war there. It concent...
How powerful is the President of the United States in the arena of foreign policy? This question has...
American foreign policy has drastically changed since September 11, 2001. In the decade before that...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...
With the arrival of a new American president in 2009, the power and constitutional authority of the ...
During President Barack Obama’s first term in office, the United States expanded its military presen...
In September, a great deal of the debate over the potential for U.S. intervention in Syria centered ...
In the face of terrorist threats and the emergence of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, Pres...
Unlike many previous presidential elections, in 2004 foreign policy issues are at the forefront of t...
Senator Obama campaigned on a concept of “Good War – Bad War”, which meant that he supported the Afg...
Just War Theorists have neglected that a lack of “just military preparedness” on the side of a count...
U.S. military intervention has long been among the most visible and dramatic manifestations of Ameri...
Unlike many previous presidential elections, in 2004 foreign policy issues are at the forefront of t...
In its first 3 years, the Obama administration fully embraced the intervention in Afghanistan it inh...
The struggle between the President and the Congress over the power to control the use of military fo...
This article reviews American policy toward Syria since the onset of its civil war there. It concent...
How powerful is the President of the United States in the arena of foreign policy? This question has...
American foreign policy has drastically changed since September 11, 2001. In the decade before that...
The division of war powers between Congress and the President has never been free of ambiguity or te...