- Undeclared war
An undeclared war is a conflict that is fought between two or more nations without a formal
declaration of war being issued.In the United States, a Declaration of War customarily has to be passed by the legislature. There is no format required for declaration(s) of war. The term "Declaration of War" is not, in fact, mentioned by the
United States Constitution . Instead the Constitution says "Congress shall have the power to ... declare War, ..." without defining the form such declarations will take. Therefore, manyWho|date=September 2008 have argued that congressionally passed authorizations to use military force are "Declarations of War." That concept has never been tested in the US Court system.After the
United Nations action inKorea , a number of democratic governments pursued usually limited warfare by characterizing them as something else, such as a "military action" or "armed response." This was most notably used by the United States in its more than decade-long involvement in Vietnam. Nations such as France, which had extensive colonies in which its military provided order, continued to intervene in their former colonies' affairs as police actions since they could no longer be deemed internal conflicts.Not declaring war provides a way to circumvent constitutional safeguards against the executive declaring war, and also, in some cases, to avoid being bound by the established laws of war. Not using the word "war" is also seen as being more public relations-friendly. For these reasons, theyWho|date=September 2008 have generally ceased to issue declarations of war, instead describing their actions by euphemisms such as "
police action " or "authorized use of force."Historical examples include the
Quasi-War between theUnited States andFrance between 1798 and 1800, theIndian Wars of the AmericanOld West and theAnglo-Zulu War Fact|date=September 2008.ee also
*
Command responsibility
*Jus ad bellum
*Jus in bello
*War crime
*War of aggression
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