Waging War
James Madison is commonly referred to as the Father of the Constitution
in large measure because, in the secrecy of the Constitutional
Convention in Philadelphia in 1787, he kept the most complete set of
notes. He also had a very keen mind and a modest demeanor and an uncanny
ability to solidify consensus around basic principles that are woven
into the Constitution.
After he wrote the Constitution and before he became Thomas Jefferson's secretary of state and eventually a two-term president, he was a congressman from Virginia. When he spoke on the floor of the House, the parts of the Constitution
he was most adamant about restrained the president. Chief among those
restraints, in Madison's view, was the delegation to Congress, and not
to the president, of the power to wage war.
Madison knew that kings became tyrants through war.
He fervently believed that by keeping the war-waging power in the hands
of the president and the war-making power in the hands of Congress, the Constitution would serve as a bulwark against tyranny. He explained:
"Of all the
enemies to public liberty war is, perhaps, the most to be dreaded,
because it comprises and develops the germ of every other. War is the
parent of armies; from these proceed debts and taxes; and armies, and
debts, and taxes are the known instruments for bringing the many under
the domination of the few. In war, too, the discretionary power of the
Executive is extended; its influence in dealing out offices, honors, and
emoluments is multiplied; and all the means of seducing the minds, are
added to those of subduing the force, of the people. ... No nation could
preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare."
Madison is instructive for us today as President
Obama decides whether to ask the nation to go to war or to order
hostilities on his own.
Under the War Powers Resolution (WPR), the president
can deploy U.S. forces anywhere outside the U.S. for 180 days upon his
written notifications of congressional leaders. He does not need a
declaration of war to deploy forces for 180 days, yet he cannot deploy
forces beyond that without express authorization from Congress.
Obama used the WPR as the legal basis for his air
invasion of Libya in 2010. That resulted in the destruction of the
government there, which the U.S. had supported with $1 billion annually
since 2005 (we literally destroyed armaments that we had paid for), the
death of Col. Gadhafi, whom President George W. Bush and British Prime
Minister Tony Blair called a friend in the war on terror, the
instability of the nation, the death of our ambassador, and the seizure
by mobs of U.S. government-owned real estate. The president declined to use the WPR authority last year when he sought — and did not receive — express congressional authority to use military force to degrade the offensive weaponry of the Syrian military.
The WPR is a two-edged sword. Though the courts have
never reviewed it, it is certainly unconstitutional, as the courts have
consistently ruled that one branch of government cannot give away its
principal constitutional powers to another. Congress surely cannot give
its war-making power to the president any more than it can give it to
the courts. So, the political question with respect to war remains: Who
will take the heat for fighting a war against ISIS — the president via
the WPR or Congress via the Constitution?
Yet, beyond the political question is the more profound question of who will enforce the Constitution.
In addition to Madison's fears about foreign wars leading to domestic
tyranny, there are profoundly practical reasons why war is a decision
for Congress alone.
Here is where it gets dicey and inside the Beltway.
Republicans want war because they see ISIS as a dreaded enemy and can
use its televised barbarity to rally voters to their candidates.
Democrats want war because they can use it to show the voters that they,
too, can be muscular against terrorists. Yet, Republican leadership in
the House is reluctant to permit the House to debate and vote on a
resolution authorizing hostilities, because they can't agree on how to
instruct the president to end the war.
But war often has surprise endings and unexpected
human, geopolitical and financial consequences. A debate in Congress
will air them. It will assure that the government considers all rational
alternatives to war and that the nation is not pushed into a costly and
bloody venture with its eyes shut. A congressional debate will compel a
written national objective tied to American freedom. A prudent debate
will also assure that there will be an end to hostilities determined by
congressional consensus and not presidential fiat.
What should Congress do? It should declare once and
for all that we will stay out of this ancient Muslim civil war of Shia
versus Sunni. We have been on both sides of it. Each side is barbarous.
In the 1980s, we helped the Sunni. Now we are helping the Shia. Last
year, Obama offered to help ISIS by degrading its adversaries; now, he
wants to degrade ISIS. We have slaughtered innocents and squandered
fortunes in an effort to achieve temporary military victories that
neither enhance our freedom nor fortify our safety. We will only have
peace when we come home — when we cease military intervention in an area
of the world not suited for democracy and in which we are essentially
despised.
I suspect most Americans have had enough of war, and
they understand that if the political class ignores Madison's warnings,
it will do so at its peril.
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