The Commander in Chief, Too Much Power in the Hands of One Person
Wednesday, March 26th, 2008
No matter how things turn out in Mesopotamia, President Bush will undoubtedly continue to consider the war in Iraq a smashing success for the rest of his life. He has chosen to simply ignore the majority of Americans who believe that invading Iraq was a mistake. Bush governs as though he were king. When it comes to the US Armed Forces, one man and only one man is in complete control.
Article 1, Section 8
The first page of the Constitution states that Congress shall have the power to declare war, but Congress has completely abdicated that responsibility. The last time Congress declared war was during World War II.
President Truman sent troops into Korea without a Congressional declaration of war in the 1950s. We then failed to obtain a surrender from, or sign a peace agreement with, the North Koreans. As a result American taxpayers are still paying for the 50,000 troops we’ve had stationed in South Korea for over 60 years.
Empire Building
Since Truman, presidents have repeatedly sent our troops into foreign countries without a declaration of war. These presidential initiatives put us in Cuba, Viet Nam, Panama, Iraq, Iran, Somalia, Cambodia, Laos, Lebanon, Haiti, Nicaragua, Grenada, Kosovo, Bosnia and Kuwait. We still have military bases in many of these countries. The sun never sets on the United States Empire.
The Corporate Model
CEOs exercise tremendous influence over the companies they lead. But they don’t make decisions from a bubble. Shareholders expect the Board of Directors to weigh in on initiatives requiring a major investment of human and capital resources, particularly when it involves a radical change in the direction of the company (country).
The US Military on the other hand has no board of directors. The Commander in Chief calls all the shots when it comes to direction of the most powerful organization in the world. America needs to transfer Commander in Chief responsibilities to a small elected group.
Commander in Chief, Cuba, Viet Nam, Panama, Iraq, Iran, Somalia, Cambodia, Laos, Lebanon, Haiti, Nicaragua, Grenada, Kosovo, Bosnia, Kuwait, Korea, Truman, Bush, king, empire
