Making American Foreign Policy: President-Congress Relations from the Second World War to the Post-Cold War EraExpanded from the original edition to include the post-Cold War era, Making American Foreign Policy explores the struggle between the President and the Congress to shape U.S. foreign policy from World War II, through Vietnam and "Operation Desert Storm," to the Clinton Administration's policy in Somalia. Case studies make the book especially useful for classroom teaching and the six common themes identified give students a more focused understanding of foreign policy formulation. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 36
Page 5
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Page 7
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Page 8
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Page 12
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Page 19
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Sorry, this page's content is restricted.
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Constitutional Setting | 2 |
The Cases Studied | 7 |
Congress and Collective Security The Resolutions of 1943 | 15 |
Republicans to Be Consulted | 17 |
The House Acts First | 20 |
Hull Facilitates Congressional Action | 21 |
The Senate Follows Suit | 24 |
The Senate Consents | 103 |
Summing Up | 104 |
Kennedy and the Congress The Nuclear Test Ban Treaty 1963 | 107 |
Kennedys Efforts | 110 |
Congressional Doubts | 111 |
A Bipartisan Strategy | 114 |
Dirksens Role | 120 |
Summing Up | 122 |
Summing Up | 28 |
Epilogue | 29 |
Congress and Bipartisanship The Formation of NATO 1949 | 31 |
Forming NATO | 33 |
Fully Bipartisan? | 35 |
Congressional Opposition | 37 |
The Treaty Approved | 41 |
Summing Up | 42 |
Congress and Franco Spain The Pact of Madrid 1953 | 47 |
The Spanish Lobby | 50 |
The Administration Weakens | 57 |
Negotiations and Agreement | 64 |
Summing Up | 66 |
Epilogue | 67 |
Congress and the Cold War USChina Policy 1955 | 69 |
Truman and Chiang Kaishek | 70 |
The New Look | 71 |
LegislativeExecutive Relations | 72 |
Into the Abyss | 74 |
Hitting First | 76 |
Ridgway Not Consulted | 77 |
Lehman Langer and Morse | 78 |
UN Agenda Items | 80 |
Treaty Ties Approved | 80 |
Summing Up | 81 |
Congress and the Middle East The Eisenhower Doctrine 1957 | 83 |
Dulles and the Middle East | 85 |
Congress and the High Dam | 87 |
Dulles and the Doctrine | 89 |
A Bipartisan Strategy | 92 |
Dulles under Fire | 95 |
The Senate Balks | 99 |
Nixon Versus the Congress The War Powers Resolution 1973 | 125 |
Political Context | 128 |
Nixon and the War | 130 |
Congressional Assertiveness | 132 |
The War Powers Resolution | 134 |
Nixon versus the Congress | 139 |
Summing Up | 141 |
The Grenada Intervention 1983 | 143 |
Decision to Intervene | 145 |
Combat and Congressional Response | 147 |
The Trust Factor | 151 |
Summing Up | 153 |
Congress and the Gulf War From Desert Shield to Desert Storm 1991 | 155 |
Desert Shield | 157 |
Congressional Resistance | 159 |
Authorizing War | 161 |
Summing Up | 164 |
Common Themes and a Look at Clintons Congressional Relations | 167 |
Common Themes | 171 |
Clinton and the Congress | 184 |
Clinton the Congress and Somalia | 187 |
The Fulbright Resolution | 189 |
The Vandenberg Resolution | 191 |
The Formosa Resolution | 193 |
War Powers Resolution | 195 |
Authorization for Use of Military Force against Iraq Resolution | 201 |
Notes | 203 |
Bibliography | 229 |
Index | 243 |
251 | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
1st sess Acheson administration administration's agreement alliance amendment American Foreign Policy approval armed forces Article 51 attack authority bipartisanship branches collective security commitment Cong Connally Resolution Constitution Dean Acheson declaration defense Democratic Dulles's Eban effort Eisenhower Eisenhower Doctrine executive Foreign Relations Committee Formosa Resolution Formosa Strait Franco Franklin D Fulbright Grenada Gulf Hull Ibid Israel January John F John Foster Dulles joint resolution Kennedy Knowland legislative Lehman ment Middle East military Minority Leader Morse Moscow Nixon November Nuclear Test Ban October opposition Pact of Madrid party peace political Powers Resolution president and Congress president's Public Papers Reagan recorded interview Republic of China Republican role Roosevelt Secretary Security Council Senate Foreign Relations Senator Vandenberg Soviet Union Spain Spanish lobby Test Ban Treaty tion Truman U.S. foreign policy United Nations United States Armed Vandenberg Resolution Vietnam Vietnam War vote War Powers Resolution Washington White House York