Paper prepared for the International Studies Association (ISA) Conference in Montreal, Canada, March
17-20, 2004. I wish to thank Charles-Philippe David, Joseph M. Grieco, Marie T. Henehan, David Grondin,
Benoît Gagnon, Sébastien Barthe and everyone at the Raoul Dandurand Chair for their valuable help
and comments.
Though U.S. congressional-executive interaction in matters of national security policy has varied significantly over time, a majority of scholars argue that since World War II it has been marked by a pattern of “dominant presidency-compliant Congress.”
Documents joints