Dwight D. Eisenhower, the 34th President of the United States, ran for office without a specific political platform. Instead, he focused on his military credentials as a five-star general and the Supreme Commander of the Allied forces in World War II. Known for his leadership, integrity, and commitment to national defense, Eisenhower won the presidency in 1952 and emphasized a moderate, bipartisan approach to governance.
Benito Juarez.
If only Congress held military powers, then any action would be too slow; with the president holding military powers, a quick, immediate response could be made without political squabbling.
Because the congress controls and tells what the president has to say or do.
The president is commander in chief of all the US military forces. This power is almost without limit. The president always has the final authority over and responsibility for any and all military matters. However, the Constitution does not assign all and absolute war powers to the president. Military power in the United States is held by both the president and Congress, with the president in the dominant position. Also, the president may use the armed forces to keep the domestic peace.
The position of Commander in Chief, belongs to the US President. The president has the overall ability to make military appointments and to take military action with the advice and consent of the US Congress. Without Congressional support, military actions by the president, may not be funded by Congress. In addition, as commander in chief, war policies are proposed and under the war powers act, the president may take immediate military actions in an emergency.
The expanded use of executive actions to combat economic crises
In 2006 the Supreme Court said the president could not unilaterally establish military commissions; while the president could request they be established, they needed an Act of Congress to be legitimized.
the authorization for use of military force that was passed by Congress. The President alone does not have the authority to initiate military action without congressional approval, so Congress needed to be persuaded by the justification and reasoning behind the military action.
The president is commander in chief of all the US Military forces. This power is almost without limit. The president always has the final authority over and responsibility for any and all military matters. However, the Constitution does not assign all and absolute war powers to the president. Military power in the United States is held by both the president and Congress, with the president in the dominant position. Also, the president may use the armed forces to keep the domestic peace.
As the Commander in Chief the US President has authority over the entire military, so all of them. He has the authority to deploy up to 400,000 at a time without needing the approval of Congress
Yes but the operation can be funded for no more than 30 days without congressional approval.
The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution expanded the powers of the President by giving him the authority to take military action in Vietnam without a formal declaration of war from Congress. This resolution effectively allowed the President to escalate US involvement in the Vietnam War without needing explicit permission from Congress. It is considered a significant expansion of executive power and has been used as a precedent for future military actions without congressional approval.