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The National Security Council was established by the National Security Act of 1947 (PL 235 – 61 Stat. 496; U.S.C. 402), amended by the National Security Act Amendments of 1949 (63 Stat. 579; 50 U.S.C. 401 et seq.). Later in 1949, as part of the Reorganization Plan, the Council was placed in the Executive Office of the President.
The national Security Act of 1947 provides the council with powers of setting up and adjusting foreign policies and reconcile diplomatic and military establishments. It established a Secretary of Defence, a National Military Establishment which serves as central intelligence agency and a National Security Resources Board.
National Security Act of 1947; National Security Advisor (United States) National Security Council coordinator for strategic communications; National Security Council Deputies Committee; National Security Study Memorandum 200; Nationalities Working Group; NSC Intelligence Collaboration Environment; NSC Working Group on South Vietnam
The National Security Council was created at the start of the Cold War under the National Security Act of 1947 to coordinate defense, foreign affairs, international economic policy, and intelligence; this was part of a large reorganization that saw the creation of the Department of Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency.
President Trump signed a memorandum that removed the nation's top military and intelligence advisers as regular attendees of the NSC's Principals Committee.
John Kirby, the spokesman for the US National Security Council, issued a stark rebuke Friday of the Israeli finance minister over comments undercutting a ceasefire proposal between Israel and ...
Executive Secretary of the National Security Council: Joan Virginia O'Hara November 19, 2018 October 11, 2019 [145] Director of Strategic Planning of the National Security Council Rich Higgins: January 20, 2017 July 21, 2017 [146] Deputy Chief of Staff for the National Security Council Tera Dahl January 20, 2017 July 6, 2017 [147]
The group, organized by former Trump national security adviser Robert O'Brien and former National Security Council chief of staff Alex Gray, wrote in a letter that "securing peace" is "the legacy ...