More Unlawful Presidential Killing
As the debate rages over whether the president needs
congressional authorization for war prior to his deployment of the
military to degrade or destroy ISIS, the terrorist organization that
none of us had heard about until a few months ago, the nation has lost
sight of the more fundamental issue of President Obama's infidelity to
the rule of law.
On the lawfulness of his proposed war, the president
has painted himself into a corner. Last year, he quite properly
recognized that the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF), a
statute enacted by Congress in 2002 to permit President George W. Bush
to use the military to track down, capture, degrade or kill all persons
or organizations that planned the attacks of 9/11, cannot apply to
organizations that did not exist at the time of 9/11, of which ISIS is
one.
That leaves the president with two remaining
alternatives. One is the War Powers Resolution (WPR), a statute enacted
by Congress in 1973 to limit presidentially ordered military invasions
absent congressional assent to 180 days or fewer. But the WPR is
unconstitutional, as it consists of Congress giving away to the
president express authority to
declare war, which the Constitution delegates to Congress. The Supreme
Court has prohibited such giveaways of core powers and responsibilities
from one branch of the federal government to another.
Even if Obama decides to rely on the WPR, and
expects that no federal judge will interfere with that decision, his
military advisers have told him he cannot achieve his objective in 180
days. They also have told him he cannot achieve his objective by the use
of air power alone.
The remaining mechanism for starting a war is to
follow the Constitution by seeking a congressional declaration of war.
But Obama has not yet asked for such a declaration. Why not? No doubt,
he has two fears. One is that Congress will impose restrictions on the
location and duration of hostilities, unlike the AUMF, which is
open-ended. The other is that he will disaffect his loyal political base
by doing what he promised he would never do: bring the country into
another offensive war in the Middle East.
In 2008 and in 2012, Obama ran as a candidate and an
incumbent determined to end American military involvement in the Middle
East, not increase it. Hence his promise, by now made many times, that
he will not introduce ground troops into this war. Apparently, just as
when he bombed Libya into chaotic instability in 2010, he does not
consider bombs an act of offensive warfare.
But he does consider the use of boots to be an act of war. When the president promises no ground troops, note the phrase he uses: "No boots on the ground." This is a term of art that apparently has different meanings to different folks.
There are already more than 1,000 pairs of American military boots
on the ground in this effort to destroy ISIS. Yet, because they are not
yet directly engaged in the use of violence in pursuit of ISIS fighters
(they are training others to do so or finding targets to destroy by
air), or because they are Special Forces and thus out of uniform (but no
doubt armed and violent and wearing boots), the president feels he has a clear conscience when he says there are no boots on the ground.
When he says that, he means, "There is no one in an
American military uniform shooting from the ground at an enemy target" —
but there are military personnel in uniform on the ground, and there
are military personnel out of uniform shooting ISIS fighters. Is this
hair-splitting language consistent with the president's moral obligation
to be truthful to us?
In another deceptive move, Obama announced on
Monday that the operation against ISIS, whether authorized by Congress
or not, will be directed by retired Marine Corps General John Allen.
This is a novel use of government assets,
as Allen is no longer a part of the Pentagon and thus not subject to
the military chain of command. Apparently, the president does not trust
his military advisers, whose advice he has repeatedly rejected, to run
his war. Is the White House planning to run this war directly as LBJ did
in Vietnam? Is the State Department? How can a civilian who is not the
president command military troops?
On Monday of last week, the White House announced
that in its pursuit of ISIS, the U.S. will go wherever it finds ISIS
targets, and if ISIS hides in Syria and the government of Syria does not
permit U.S. jets to use its airspace, the U.S. will attack Syria. That
sounds like Russian President Vladimir Putin in the Ukraine.
Attacking Syria because its government denied the
U.S. airspace would be an unprovoked and unlawful act of war that would
probably provoke Putin. Congress rejected declaring war on Syria just a
year ago. If it does so now, there would be no lawful or moral basis for
such a declaration, as Syria is a sovereign country, lawfully entitled
to control its airspace, that poses no present threat to American
freedom or security. The U.S. can no more legally commandeer Syrian
airspace than Syria can commandeer ours.
Something is amiss here. Last year the president
wanted to help ISIS indirectly by degrading the Syrian military. Now he
wants to help Syria indirectly by degrading ISIS, but only if Syria
stays out of our way. And he is prepared to violate the Constitution,
break the law and lie to the American people to achieve his purposes.
Why all the unlawfulness, when he could and should
leave these disputants to their own devices and keep the American
military at home for genuine defensive purposes?
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