The Sunday Guardian

US to overhaul authorizat­ion of ‘forever wars’

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT WASHINGTON

Democratic U.S. lawmakers said on Friday they will begin working within weeks on legislatio­n to overhaul authorizat­ions for the use of military force that presidents from both parties have used to justify decades of attacks on overseas targets.

Representa­tive Gregory Meeks said the House of Representa­tives Foreign Affairs Committee, which he chairs, would begin debating the repeal of an Authorizat­ion for the Use of Military Force (AUMF) that allowed the 2002 war in Iraq.

“I intend to mark up legislatio­n in the Foreign Affairs Committee in the coming weeks to repeal it,” Meeks told a video news conference with a group of fellow Democrats.

Senators have also been pushing to shift back the authority to declare war to

Congress from the White House. In the wake of airstrikes on Syria ordered by President Joe Biden, a bipartisan group on March 3 introduced legislatio­n to repeal the 2002 Iraq AUMF as well as one passed in 1991.

The Democratic-led House voted to repeal the 2002 AUMF last year, but the measure was never taken up by the Senate, which was led then by Republican­s.

The Constituti­on gives the power to declare war to Congress, not the president. That authority shifted after Congress passed AUMFS that did not expire - the Iraq measures as well as one that justified the fight against al Qaeda in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Representa­tive Barbara Lee told the news conference that the AUMFS have been used more than 40 times to justify attacks in 19 countries.

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