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The 1973 Showdown Over Presidential War Powers

Episode 5418 Published 3 weeks, 3 days ago
Description
In 1973, Congress passed the War Powers Resolution over President Richard Nixon's veto, attempting to reassert legislative authority over the nation's ability to wage war. The showdown represented the culmination of decades of frustration over presidential war-making that had bypassed congressional approval, from Korea to Vietnam, and raised fundamental constitutional questions about the balance of power that remain unresolved more than fifty years later. The Constitution deliberately divided war powers between the executive and legislative branches. Congress held the power to declare war and control military funding, while the president served as commander in chief of the armed forces. The founders intended this division to prevent any single person from dragging the nation into conflict. But the Cold War and the rise of American global military commitments had steadily eroded congressional authority as presidents deployed troops first and sought approval later, if at all. Vietnam was the breaking point. The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution of 1964 had given President Johnson broad authority to use military force in Southeast Asia based on an incident that was later revealed to be largely fabricated. By the early 1970s, hundreds of thousands of American troops had fought and fifty thousand had died in a war that Congress had never formally declared. Nixon's secret bombing of Cambodia, conducted without congressional knowledge, provided the final provocation. The War Powers Resolution required presidents to notify Congress within forty-eight hours of deploying troops into hostilities and mandated withdrawal within sixty days unless Congress specifically authorized continued military action. Its supporters believed it would restore the constitutional balance. Its critics, including Nixon, argued it was both unconstitutional and unworkable. In practice, every president since 1973 has treated the War Powers Resolution with varying degrees of defiance. Presidents have complied with notification requirements while denying the law's constitutionality, deployed forces in ways designed to avoid triggering its provisions, and generally treated congressional war powers as advisory rather than binding. This episode traces the political battle that produced the War Powers Resolution and examines why the fundamental question it tried to answer, who has the power to take the nation to war, remains dangerously unresolved.
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