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(in the US) The State Department carries out the Government's foreign plicy agenda.
Foreign policy is the strategy that a government has for dealing with other nations. Each nation has their own foreign policy.
To state the Vietnam policy for each of the following presidents a person would need to know what the following is. When this is not included with the question the answer will not be able to be known.
International policy is the same as foreign policy. Each nation deals with other nations based on the foreign policy of all nations.
Cheif of staff.
The torch bearer in US politics is the US president. Each president makes both domestic and foreign policies based on the powers of the executive office. A president has veto power as one tool. A president can enact certain types of agreements and not call them treaties. Only when the opposing party has overwhelming majorities in both houses of the US Congress can presidential polices actually be truly challenged.
In the US, the legislature formally establishes laws. The President establishes foreign policy, and matters of trade. The Supreme Court establishes legal policy in the form of precedent and common law. So, each branch, the Legislative, Administrative, and Judicial, each have some hand in establishing some form of formal policy.
Foreign policy is the strategy that a government has for dealing with other nations. Each nation has their own foreign policy.
In 1817 the so-called executive agreement became an instrument of US foreign policy. In this situation US president Monroe arranged with Great Britain the limitations concerning the limitation of naval power for each nation on the Great lakes.
No. The two have almost nothing whatsoever to do with each other.
The U.S. Secretary of State is the foreign minister and the official charged with conducting foreign policy. However, the President of the United States has the final authority on foreign policies. Each country outside of the US, conduct their own foreign policy with cabinet members or country leader having the final say so.
In 1817 an executive agreement between President James Madison and Great Britain was made concerning each nation's naval presence on the Great Lakes. President Monroe based this foreign policy initiative on legislation passed in 1815 authorizing the president to deal with naval operations on the Great Lakes.