Regents Prep: U.S. History: Presidential Decisions:
Head Diplomat
As Head Diplomat the president represents the United States in negotiations with foreign countries. Article II of the Constitution grants the President the power to negotiate and sign treaties on behalf of the United States (treaties do require ratification by the Senate to take effect). The president also extends or removes recognition of nations and their governments. As head diplomat the president sets US foreign policy, to be carried out by the Department of State, via the Secretary of State, US Ambassadors and US envoys around the globe.

NOTE: The examples listed below are selected for their value in study for the Regent's Examination,
and represent a small fraction of the possible examples
.

Jefferson makes the Louisiana Purchase:
In 1803 France presented then president Thomas Jefferson with a deal much too good to pass up. Napoleon of France wanted to sell France's territories in North America, in part to finance war against Britain in addition to ridding France of colonial territory thousands of miles away.

Since the Constitution made no provisions for the president purchasing territory, Jefferson decided to push through the $15 million dollar sale as treaty with France. Even though treaty making was a power of the presidency, this action was seen as a loose interpretation of the Constitution, clearly in opposition to Jefferson's own strict views on the document. Regardless of the Constitutional debate, the sale was completed and later ratified by the Senate and the size of the United States' territory doubled overnight.

 

Woodrow Wilson's 14 points:
President Woodrow Wilson had led the United States throughout the First World War and wanted to insure the war truly was a war to end all wars, so following the Nov. 11th armistice he began to work for his 14 point framework for lasting world peace.

While many of Wilson's 14 points were rejected or undermined by the leadership of the European Allies, his 14th point calling for the creation of League of Nations survived the negotiations in Versailles. The League of Nations was intended as an international peace keeping body that would mediate international disputes in order to prevent the eruption of another wide-ranging conflict.

The Treaty of Versailles (with Wilson's provision for a League of Nations included) was then sent to the US Senate for ratification (as required by the Constitutional process). The Senators feared that the League would threaten US autonomy and security by requiring the US to follow direction from an international body. Despite Wilson's best attempts to convince the Senate and the American people of the League's merit, the Senate rejected the Treaty of Versailles and along with it membership in the League of Nations. Without US support and lacking any real enforcement powers, the League of Nations was doomed to failure and was in fact ineffectual in preventing the early aggressions that later erupted into World War II.

Camp David Peace Accords:
Amid tensions in the Middle East and an on-going energy crisis, fueled by high prices dictated by OPEC (Organization of Petroleum Exporting Nations) President Carter attempted to broker peace between the Israelis and their Arab neighbors.

These attempts at peace bore fruit in the 1977 Camp David Peace Accords, during which Carter brought Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat (pictured with Carter below) together at the presidential retreat of Camp David. The Camp David Peace Accord resulted in a lasting peace between Israel and Egypt, stationed US troops as observers in the Sinai peninsula that separates the two nations and started a framework for talks on the status of the Palestinian refugees


While tensions and violence in the Middle East remain high, the 1977 accords remain an example that lasting peace agreements can be crafted given the proper circumstances and diplomatic initiative.

 

 

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