New York Post

Congress ‘Brain Dead’ About Its War Powers

- JACOB SULLUM Twitter: @jacobsullu­m

THE short-lived CBS series “Brain Dead,” now available on Netflix, is a science-fiction satire about an invasion of Washington, DC, by extraterre­strial bugs that crawl into people’s ears and hijack their minds as part of a plot to conquer the world. But the most implausibl­e aspect of the story is a dramatic Senate committee vote on whether to authorize military action in Syria.

In the real world, of course, no such vote is necessary, because the president does whatever he wants with the armed forces he controls while Congress abdicates its constituti­onal responsibi­lity to decide when the country should go to war. Last week, 61 senators showed they are happy with that situation by tabling an amendment that would have forced a debate about endless, metastasiz­ing wars that cost trillions of dollars and thousands of lives without making Americans any safer.

The amendment, introduced by Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), would have repealed the 2001 Authorizat­ion for the Use of Military Force against the perpetrato­rs of the 9/11 attacks and the 2002 resolution approving the war in Iraq. The repeal would have taken effect in six months, giving Congress time to consider the justificat­ion for continued US military involvemen­t in Afghanista­n, Iraq and the various other countries supposedly covered by those resolution­s.

“The war in Afghanista­n has gone on 16 years now,” Paul said before the vote on his amendment. “We have people who will be fighting in the war . . . in the next year or so who were not yet born on 9/11. We have long since killed the people who perpetrate­d 9/11.”

For years, Donald Trump posed what has become America’s longest war, calling it “a total and complete disaster” that has “wasted an enormous amount of blood and treasure.” After becoming president, he changed his mind, reaffirmin­g the US commitment to remain in a country where, by his own account, “we don’t know what we are doing.”

But as far as 61 senators are concerned, there is nothing to debate here.

Barack Obama said the 2001 AUMF should be repealed because it was dangerousl­y obsolete. He neverthele­ss claimed it authorized military action against ISIS, which did not exist when the resolution was passed. Obama belatedly sought congressio­nal permission for that war while insisting he did not need it.

But as far as 61 senators are concerned, there is nothing to debate here.

Paul notes that Congress never approved US interventi­on in Libya, Syria, Yemen, Nigeria or Somalia. As a presidenti­al candidate, Trump criticized such hamhanded meddling in foreign civil wars. As president, not so much.

But as far as 61 senators are concerned, there is nothing to debate here.

Obama opposed the war in Iraq. So did Trump, although not until after it started. Even Hillary Clinton, who as a senator voted for the war, eventually conceded it was a mistake. “For years now,” Paul noted last week, “some senators and candidates have lamented that they voted for the Iraq war.”

But as far as 61 senators are concerned, there is nothing to debate here.

Those 61 senators include every Republican aside from Paul, Mike Lee (Utah) and Dean Heller (Nev.), who opposed tabling Paul’s amendment, and Marco Rubio (Fla.), who did not vote. Opponents of the amendment also included 13 Democrats, several of whom have publicly questioned Trump’s fitness for office.

Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) thinks Trump is a “buffoon.” Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) says Trump is attacking “basic institutio­ns of government . . . in unpreceden­ted ways.” Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), who last year remarked that Trump “doesn’t seem to know what’s happening outside of Trump Tower,” recently worried that he “tries to make national-security policy or foreign policy through tweeting.”

These senators view the president as ill-informed and reckless, if not mentally unbalanced. That they are neverthele­ss OK with granting him a blank check to use the world’s most powerful military as he pleases suggests how desperate members of Congress are to dodge their duties.

The president does whatever he wants with the armed force she controls while Congress ’ abdicates its constituti­onal responsibi­lity.

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