true
no
to make treaties
Yes and no
You may be inclined to think that Treaties achieve nothing at all. They are only good for the day on which they are written. Treaties are not necessarily permanent. Treaties allow withdrawal or may forbid withdrawal. Parties may, and often do, violate treaties, so the party in question may be suspended or membership may be cancelled. Treaties may be re-negotiated. Historical Treaties have deprived Natives of their own land without compensation. . On the contrary however, some formal statements between two or more States, parties or even individuals, do allow for a success in peace, commerce and other international relations
the five powers were to declare war, make peace, make treaties, coin, admit new states to the us the five powers were to declare war, make peace, make treaties, coin, admit new states to the us
State governments within the United States cannot declare war, make treaties, print money or mint coins.
Treaties are approved by 2/3 of the SENATE!
The minister for reviewing laws and treaties of the US
The legal reason is that Article 1, Section 10 states: "No State shall enter into any Treaty, Alliance or Confederation. . ." The reason this is in the Constitution is that the United States as a country must be the only entity to treat with other countries. If the states had the right to enter into treaties with other countries, there could be conflicting treaties with the same foreign country.
If this comment is pertaining to the states in the United States of America, it is incorrect. Coining money and making treaties with foreign countries is one of the specifically enumerated duties listed in to Constitution of the United States that are solely controled by the federal government in Washington, DC
State governments in the United States cannot sign treaties with foreign nations. This power is reserved for the federal government under the Constitution, specifically in Article II, Section 2, which gives the President the authority to make treaties with the advice and consent of the Senate. States may enter into agreements or compacts with one another, but these must not conflict with federal law or require the consent of Congress if they involve foreign entities.
It is up to the country not a state to make treaties. It wouldn't make sense for a state to make a treaty with a foreign government because a treaty applies to an entire country and not a particular state.