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by defrost
638 days ago
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If the President orders a launch, the military launches ... that's it. Congress can ask questions about that later, if they're still about - but they don't have a place in the chain between POTUS deciding to launch and the launch. Ordering a strike before any missiles have landed on US soil has been possible the entire time (ie ordering what would be an effective First Strike) and deemed neccessary as carrying out such orders after missiles have landed has been considered as likley too little to late - predicated on having accurate justification (knowledge of incoming missiles) etc. History has been littered with false alarmns that should have (but didn't) trigger a launch - that remains at the judgement of the serving POTUS who might be a combat veteran or a reality TV show host. |
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Sure. That doesn't mean every launch must be legal or undeliberateable.
> they don't have a place in the chain between POTUS deciding to launch and the launch
Why not?
The Constitution "vests in the Congress the power to declare war" [1]. It has largely delegated that power to the President. But the spirit of the War Powers Clause recognises that war is a major political decision with national consequences. So is a nuclear first strike.
> Ordering a strike before any missiles have landed on US soil has been possible the entire time (ie ordering what would be an effective First Strike)
Not what first strike means [2]. (You're describing launch on warning, which is firmly in the retaliatory column [3].)
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_Powers_Clause
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_strike_(nuclear_strategy...
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Launch_on_warning