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Title: American foreign policy making process : executive, congress , intelligence


1
American foreign policy making process
executive, congress , intelligence
  • Week 7

2
Challenge of foreign policy (FP) to state
formation
  • FP-making process has evolved through time as the
    republics rise from isolated small power to that
    of a global hegemon.
  • FP formulation has been a disjuncture between 1)
    rural/rule-based polity concerned with internal
    expansion 2) modern/utilitarian approach to
    engage with complex world politics.

3
Interstate relations and the US Constitution
  • In 1787, various elites attempt to wholesale
    revision of the Articles of Confederation (the
    1st constitution) providing a loose central
    governance.
  • The Founding Fathers challenge to reverse the
    centrifugal forces of states rights and
    assembly-driven government.

4
The Articles of Confederation (1777-1789)
5
3 main concerns of the Constitutions architects
  • 1) The states civic immaturity to maintain
    internal order or ensure the rights and freedoms
    of their citizens.
  • 2) Their sovereighty and behaviour (i.e.pratices
    to protect their own economic activities)
    impending the development of commerce.
  • 3) Danger to themselves in the realm of internal
    power politics.

6
Scene at the Signing of the Constitution of the
United States
7
The original copy of the Constitution
8
Constitutional Debates and FP
  • Centered upon the relationship between states and
    their geopolitical positioning in relation to
    other powers.
  • Difficult task of designing a constitution to
    reduce various tensions among states and achieve
    consent.
  • Requirement for a complex system of powers,
    reciprocal restraints, and negotiated settlement.

9
FP as a primary agency of governmental adaptation
  • Initial concern to establish a federal level of
    governance without a sense of FP
    responsibilities.
  • Over the course of the republic, however, the FP
    became increasingly recognized as an exceptional
    issue area in the governing responsibilities.
  • The requirements of FP as powerful motive in the
    adaptive capacity of the federal government.
  • The presidency ( or the executive branch)has
    acted as the chief agency and main beneficiary of
    governmental evolution in response to fp needs.

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11
Presidental Leadership
  • The presidents varying ability to direct the
    policy agenda, shape policy choices, and manage
    and direct activities of the many players,
    agencies, departments, and institutions of the
    government.

12
Presidential Leadership
  • American President is widely regarded at home
    and abroad as the most powerful individual in
    the world. Why ?
  • 1) Commander-in-chief of the worlds most
    powerful military forces and the leader of the
    worlds most advanced economy.
  • 2) Political ideas associated with the US
    provides the President additional influence.
  • 3) The advantages of the presidential form of
    government allowing the president to respond
    quickly and pragmatically to emergent ( external)
    challenges.

13
In the areas of defense and foreign affairs,
the nation must speak with one voice, and only
the president is capable of providing that
voice. President Ronald Regan,1984 I would
welcome the support of the Congress for military
action in Haiti and I would hope that I will
have that. Like my predecessors, I have not
agreed that I was constitutionally mandated to
get it. President Bill Clinton,1994
14
Conceptualization of the foreign policy-making
process (R.Hilsman,1967)
15
Conceptualization of the foreign policy-making
process (R.Hilsman,1967)
  • The Innermost circle The president, his/her
    immediate personal national security advisers,
    important political appointees (i.e.the secretary
    of state and defense, the director of the CIA,
    and various under/assistant secretaries)
  • The Second Circle The various departments and
    agencies of the executive branch to provide the
    information.
  • The outermost (public ) circle Congress , the
    interest groups, public opinion, and the mass
    media.

16
Implication of Hilmans model
  • Important decisions involving the fate of the
    nation are made within the innermost circle the
    role and influence of various players involved in
    policy-making declines with their distance from
    the center.

17
The US Constitution and Presidential Leadership
  • Shaping the presidents role in fp by empowering
    the president to lead, but it also creates
    constraints and challenges to that leadership.
  • Does not assign the foreign policy power to any
    branch, but forces them to share responsibility.
  • Providing the political branches an invitational
    struggle.

18
Constitutional FP power of the President (Art.II
Section 2)
  • The President shall be Commander in Chief of the
    Army and Navy of the US, and of the Militia of
    the several States, when called into the actual
    Service of the United StatesHe shall have Power,
    by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate,
    to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the
    Senators present concur and he shall nominate,
    and by and with the Advice and Consent of the
    Senate, shall appoint Ambassadors, other public
    Ministers and Consuls.

19
The Presidents constitutional foreign policy
power
  • The General Executive Powers
  • Commander in chief
  • Chief negotiator
  • Chief diplomat

20
The President or the executive branch can make
foreign policy through
  • 1) -- responses to foreign events2) --
    proposals for legislation3) -- negotiation of
    international agreements4) -- policy
    statements5) -- policy implementation6) --
    independent action.

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Constitutional Limits on the Presidents FP Power
( evident in Art.I)
  • Congress is entrusted with the general
    legislative power, empowering it to make laws and
    appropriate funds.
  • Force the president to share its war power with
    the congressional injunctions ( i.e.declare war,
    raise/support army)
  • The Presidents diplomatic powers are constrained
    by the Senates role to advise and consent.
  • Congress is to regulate commerce and immigration.

23
Congressional Limits on the Presidents
  • All legislative Powers herein granted shall be
    vested in a Congress of the United States.
  • Power of Purse grant to Congress.
  • Congress is to make all laws necessary and
    proper for carrying into execution the foregoing
    powers.

24
Congress can make foreign policy through
  • 1) -- resolutions and policy statements2) --
    legislative directives3) -- legislative
    pressure4) -- legislative restrictions/funding
    denials5) -- informal advice6) -- congressional
    oversight.

25
Factors Developing the leadership role of the
President
  • 1) The Constitutions provisions that have
    combined with practice overtime.
  • 2) American role in a changing international
    enviroment.
  • 3) The Role of the Courts

26
1) The Constitutions provisions-1
  • Overtime, combined with practice to expand the
    central role of the president in the formulation
    as well as execution of FP.
  • Presidents have taken advantage of their ability
    to act decisively and set the FP bureacracy in
    motion (i.e.concluding treaties/agreements,
    public declarations, deploying military power)
  • Presidents have established the precedent of
    presidental leadership.

27
1) The Constitutions provisions-2
  • Congress has accepted in such exercises of power
    and has even delegated further responsibilities
    to the president (i.e.1921 budget reforms, 1934
    Reciprocal Trade Agreements)
  • Growth of executive FP institutions such as
    the DoD , the CIA , and the NSC established in
    1947 National Security Act- gave the president
    even greater tools to take FP actions.

28
2) American role in a changing international
enviroment 1
  • Further expanded the role and the ability of the
    president to act assertively and decisively in
    the post-WWII period.
  • The widely shared consensus ( including the
    Congress) that an active American word role
    required strong presidential leadership was
    needed.
  • Due to the requirements of CW FP, the presidents
    policy decisions went largely unchallenged.

29
2) American role in a changing international
enviroment 2
  • Congress several resolutions providing
    president broad power ( labeled as imperial
    presidency) to deal with external conflict
    situations
  • The Vandenberg Resolution (1949)
  • The Formosa Strait (1955)
  • Middle East (1957)
  • Cuban (1962)
  • Berlin (1962)
  • Gulf of Tonkin (1964)

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3) The Role of the Courts 1
  • Generally refrained from involvement in foreign
    policy issues.
  • In the case involvement, tendency to support
    presidential claims of authority that has
    solidified the presidents FP making role
    (i.e.the Courts ruling in United States
    v.Curtiss-Wright Export Corporation)
  • Furthered presidential leadership with
    nondecision as well through doctrine of political
    question (i.e.El Salvador in 1981, Kuwait in
    1987, the Persian Gulf in 1990)

32
3) The Role of the Courts 2
  • Several limitations of judicial support,
    arguably weakened the presidency
  • Youngtown Sheet and Tube.Co.et.al. v.Sawyer in
    1952.
  • New York Times v. United States in 1971.
  • US vs. Nixon in 1974.
  • The Whitewater affair
  • The Paula Jones sexual harassment
  • The Monica Lewinsky episode

33
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34
3) The Role of the Courts 3
  • Since Vietnam, more assertive Congress over
    American commitments and the presidents war
    powers. Several legislative efforts to
    circumscribe her/his authority
  • The National Commitments Resolution (1969)
  • The Repeal of the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
    (1970)
  • The Case Act (1972)
  • The War Powers Resolution (1973)
  • The Clintons assertive multilateralism

35
Democratic Dilemmas
  • Given the degree to which American politics is
    permeated by its cultural associations with
    democratic principles, FP has highlighted
    several points of tensions, democratic dilemmas.
  • Generally sharpened when translated into the
    normative constituents of legislative-executive
    relations over foreign policy issues.

36
4 Democratic Dilemmas
  1. Democratic diversity/governmental unity
  2. Open government/operational secrecy
  3. Rule of law/realpolitik
  4. Rationality/responsibility

37
1) Democratic diversity/governmental unity
  • The strain between democratic diversity/civil
    equality and a small enclosed group of experts
    making FP.
  • Because international affairs are thought to be
    complex in nature, the subject requires
    high-level of in-debt understanding.
  • The higher the stakes, or the closer the
    connection as issue to national security, then it
    more likely that small set of elites making FP.

38
2) Open government/operational secrecy
  • The drive to confine the domestic parameters to
    engage effectively with diverse centers of powers
    in the outside world.
  • Concealment as a regular modus operandi in
    foreign affairs.
  • A range of intelligence agencies utilize
    concealment as an instrumental device.
  • Contradiction with democracys association with
    open government, transparency, and
    accountability.

39
3) Rule of Law/realpolitik
  • The unequal relationship between the
    traditionally law-centered ethos of democracy,
    and the international realm in which the rule of
    law has at best a secondary significance.
  • FP have been externally driven and adaptive to
    changing conditions free from any strict
    validation process.
  • The linkages of democratic authority, consent and
    accountability are more difficult to trace in
    functionally oriented realm of FP.

40
4) Rationality/Responsibility
  • The disruptive effect that FP can have upon
    democratic governance.
  • At times of international crisis, key FP
    decisions were made not only without
    congressional approval, but were designed to
    avoid Congress.
  • Profound conflict between rationality
    understood by the President and responsibility
    as seen by Congress.

41
  • Those who regard political responsibility as
    the highest obligation of democratic leadership
    will argue that the President should have based
    his foreign policies on Congressional and popular
    consent, even if this has meant the
    self-destruction of the nationThose who place
    the highest value on rationality may argue that
    the President has a higher responsibilityto
    pursue foreign policies even if these could not
    be based on popular consent. (Dahl, 1964 180-1)

42
New Tensions in the post-9/11 period-1
  • Resemblance to previous crises between the
    Congress and the President.
  • The presidents usage of the rally around the
    flag effect, the CW apparatus of the national
    security state combined with a homeland security
    society that reached areas previously protected
    civil liberties and constitutional limitations.
  • The president was able to secure the accelerated
    passage through compliant Congress of the Patriot
    Act.

43
New Tensions in the post-9/11 period-2
  • Usage of the issue of international terrorism to
    reaffirm international institutions and
    multilateral process.
  • A new form of international coalition building
    that would bypass established processes in favor
    of ad hoc task force.
  • The intelligence-led linkage between Iraq, 9/11,
    WMD, and terrorism was clearly evident in the
    congressional resolution authorizing the threat
    posed by the regime of Saddam Hussein.

44
Critiques
  • Politically manipulating/misrepresenting the
    intelligence for the purposes of mobilizing
    public support and misappropriating the legal
    process relating to decisions over entering into
    a state of war.
  • Unilateral power to initiate wars without any
    congressional approval.
  • Interpret, terminate,or suspend at its discretion
    (i.e. detention of prisoners without trial at
    Guantanamo placed illegeal combatants beyond
    the scope of the Geneva Convention.

45
Detention of prisoners without trial at
Guantanamo placed illegeal combatants beyond
the scope of the Geneva Convention.
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