Congress can legislate an act of war. But it is reserved to the military, itself, and its Commander-in-Chief (the President of the US) to determined when and how many troops will be deployed. Thus, Congress preserves its legislative role and the Executive branch carries out the intended legislation, in action. C
The president and congress make the final decision as to where troops are deployed. The president has a 90 day window where he can deploy troops without congress consent but after that congress must approve of the deployment. I'm drunk right now.
Yes. Only Congress can officially declare war, and only congress can authorize funding of the military. However, Presidents can authorize military action/deployment without the consent of Congress. It is then left to congress to either support the President's decision by funding the deployment and/or declaring war, or not.
what year did congress approve Hispanic Herritange month
The Congress has to approve the president's budget to provide checks and balances where necessary.
yes
Congress did not approve of President Truman's plan to end racial discrimination. Executive Order 9981 ended racial discrimination in the military.
The U.S. military is subordinate to the Federal (civilian) government. Note that the US Congress controls the budget, and that the President is required to ask for a declaration of war, and the Congress then votes to approve or disapprove the request.
yes
congress
The soldier and his military comrades are packing for their third deployment to Iraq.
The President is the commander in chief of the military, and makes decisions about deployment of troops. Also, the president can veto bills passed by Congress.
The Declaration was published in July, but Congress didn't approve it until October.