NSA conducts wireless surveillance (2002) U.S. coalition begins strikes against Islamic State (2014) U.S. launches strikes against Syria (2017) Guantanamo Bay U.S. invades 2001 AUMF detention Afghanistan (2001) camp opens (2002)
NSA conducts wireless surveillance (2002) U.S. coalition begins strikes against Islamic State (2014) U.S. launches strikes against Syria (2017) Guantanamo Bay U.S. invades 2001 AUMF detention Afghanistan (2001) camp opens (2002)
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Question
Look at the U.S. History question. Circle or choose one of the five U.S. actions on the infographic below, and explain in a sentence or two how it was justified using the 2001 AUMF.
![What is an AUMF?
The president is commander-in-chief of the armed forces, but the White House needs Congress's permission to use
military force abroad for any operation lasting longer than sixty days. Lawmakers can declare war, giving the president
broad powers, but that practice is effectively obsolete; Congress issued its last official declaration of war during World
War II. Alternatively, Congress can pass a law authorizing a narrower scope of military operations. AUMF laws serve
as that authorization, and they typically restrict military action to specific locations and, often, time frames. The 2001
AUMF, however, is so broad that it has been compared to declarations of war and is arguably, in one respect, even
broader: the enemy is described, rather than named.
Its open-ended nature means that the 2001 law is still operational and that it has been used to justify some of the most
significant national security policy and military operations since 9/11.](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2Fb8cdfc59-cccb-445b-b857-cd0440ecd591%2F34e3c923-3e92-43a4-9cc4-4345a2866862%2F0d5jov_processed.jpeg&w=3840&q=75)
Transcribed Image Text:What is an AUMF?
The president is commander-in-chief of the armed forces, but the White House needs Congress's permission to use
military force abroad for any operation lasting longer than sixty days. Lawmakers can declare war, giving the president
broad powers, but that practice is effectively obsolete; Congress issued its last official declaration of war during World
War II. Alternatively, Congress can pass a law authorizing a narrower scope of military operations. AUMF laws serve
as that authorization, and they typically restrict military action to specific locations and, often, time frames. The 2001
AUMF, however, is so broad that it has been compared to declarations of war and is arguably, in one respect, even
broader: the enemy is described, rather than named.
Its open-ended nature means that the 2001 law is still operational and that it has been used to justify some of the most
significant national security policy and military operations since 9/11.
![U.S. coalition
NSA conducts
wireless
surveillance
(2002)
U.S. launches
strikes against
Syria
(2017)
Guantanamo Bay
detention
begins strikes
against
Islamic State
(2014)
U.S. invades
2001
AUMF
Afghanistan
(2001)
camp opens
(2002)](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2Fb8cdfc59-cccb-445b-b857-cd0440ecd591%2F34e3c923-3e92-43a4-9cc4-4345a2866862%2Fyjlfvge_processed.jpeg&w=3840&q=75)
Transcribed Image Text:U.S. coalition
NSA conducts
wireless
surveillance
(2002)
U.S. launches
strikes against
Syria
(2017)
Guantanamo Bay
detention
begins strikes
against
Islamic State
(2014)
U.S. invades
2001
AUMF
Afghanistan
(2001)
camp opens
(2002)
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