Kosovo and Serbia Conflict of Term Paper

Total Length: 1143 words ( 4 double-spaced pages)

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As NATO plans to "intensify the air campaign," Clinton said the operations are working. "Each day our military campaign takes a toll on Serbia's machinery of repression (Clinton warns Congress not to double Kosovo appropriations request http://www.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/stories/1999/04/28/kosovo/

April 28, 1999 Web posted at: 6:24 P.M. EDT (2224 GMT))."

He believed that ground forces were not needed and that continued air strikes would bring about the desired result of having Serbian forces leave Kosovo.

Clinton assured all involved if he believed ground troops were needed he would seek advice from Congress, to which the House of Representatives decided to require its authorization if ground troops were requested.

As the conflict continued members of Congress began to assert that Clinton was actually committing acts of war, without the approval of Congress, by calling it something other than war (Albright to Congress: "We cannot fail' in Kosovo (http://www.counterpunch.org/serbia.html).According to Clinton the U.S. was simply "strengthening and maintaining its military strength" while Congress argued that he was permitting and ordering acts of war against Yugoslavia without going through the mandated federal steps to do so.

The response by Congress was swift. A lawsuit was filed on behalf of 13 congressional members against Bill Clinton (Albright to Congress: "We cannot fail' in Kosovo (http://www.counterpunch.org/serbia.html).

The suit accused Clinton of going to war without permission as well as demanded he remove U.S. troops within 60 days of the filing unless Congress voted to declare war within that time frame (Albright to Congress: "We cannot fail' in Kosovo (http://www.
counterpunch.org/serbia.html).

The suit brought to light the fact that a President using the War Powers Resolution has an obligation to report to Congress within 48 hours of introducing hostile actions to the mix if those hostilities used the United States Armed Forces.

At that point Congress has a sixty day period in which to declare war, or bring the troops home, however, the president can extend if for 30 days if that will more significantly insure the troops safety during withdrawal.

Congress and the president agreed that military action had begun in March. They disagreed whether or not the president was in compliance with the acts of war that he was obligated to follow. Clinton said he was following the war by reporting his decisions to Congress. Congress believed that he was dragging out the actions of the military, and presenting a smokescreen through funding requests to hide the fact that he was committing war without the approval of Congress (Albright to Congress: "We cannot fail' in Kosovo (http://www.counterpunch.org/serbia.html).

Clinton was ordered to either withdraw the troops or submit to the rules of Congress with regard to letting Congress decide whether or not to declare war......

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