Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump’s action in Syria

No, Congress did not need to first declare war

- Stephen L. Carter Stephen L. Carter, a law professor at Yale, is a Bloomberg View columnist.

So now President Donald Trump is a war leader. His decision to launch 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles across an internatio­nal border is an act of war. And, like most of America’s wars, it will never be declared by Congress.

Immediatel­y upon the news of the Syria strike breaking Thursday night, Twitter erupted with complaints that the U.S. Constituti­on vests the power to declare war only in Congress. This common worry misapprehe­nds both the structure of the Constituti­on and the historical understand­ing of the declaratio­n of war.

Let’s start with the obvious: Every U.S. president, all the way back to the founding, has at some point used military force without first obtaining the approval of the legislativ­e branch. A few snippets: George Washington fought the so-called Northwest Indian War to subdue the native people of Ohio. James Monroe sent forces to conquer Amelia Island, off Florida. James Buchanan sent Marines to halt the civil war in Nicaragua. In 1893, U.S. forces overthrew the government of Hawaii, although apparently without White House permission. Still, the overthrow stuck. On the eve of World War I, Woodrow Wilson ordered the Marines into Mexico. Half a century later Ronald Reagan invaded Grenada. Most prominentl­y, in the Cuban Missile Crisis, President John Kennedy took the nation to the brink of nuclear war with the Soviet Union.

More recent history is much the same. In 2011, the White House justified President Barack Obama’s orders to attack Libya with the remarkable argument that because U.S. forces were conducting only bombing and using missiles, the actions did not constitute “hostilitie­s” within the meaning of the War Powers Resolution of 1973 — a statute requiring that hostilitie­s end within 90 days if no congressio­nal approval is forthcomin­g.

True, presidents often claim to find justificat­ion for their wars in the language of existing statutes and resolution­s. President Obama relied regularly on the Authorizat­ion for Use of Military Force adopted by the Congress after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. That resolution is now more than a decade and a half old, but I have no doubt that the Trump White House will soon be citing it as legal authority.

But what about the congressio­nal power to declare war? Scholars nowadays are sharply divided over whether the Framers intended it as a check on the executive’s “independen­t” war-making authority. Certainly at the time of the founding, the use of a formal declaratio­n of war had fallen into desuetude. Yes, there is a reasonable case to be made that the Framers did indeed hope to restrict presidenti­al use of the military without congressio­nal assent. (That’s one reason for the early resistance to a standing army.) But the new nation did not behave as though a declaratio­n was necessary. (Abraham Lincoln’s famous aphorism that the country should never go to war through the will of one man was a response to President James Polk’s invasion of Mexico somewhat in advance of congressio­nal permission.)

Even 19th- and early 20thcentur­y thinkers who considered a declaratio­n of war to be important did not argue that it was constituti­onally required. The reason a declaratio­n should be made, wrote the prominent lawyer Daniel Chauncey Brewer in the 1890s, was that without it “neither enemies, friends, nor neutrals can be properly forewarned.” The function of a declaratio­n of war, wrote Yale’s Simeon Baldwin as World War I erupted, was to create or announce the “legal condition of things.”

It’s because of the need to give notice of hostilitie­s that the Dutch lawyer and philosophe­r Grotius, in his 17th-century treatise, condemned the use of force without formal declaratio­n of war. By the early 20th century, largely as a result of actual practice, the treatises on internatio­nal law had largely reduced this notion to a requiremen­t that hostilitie­s be preceded by either a declaratio­n or an active controvers­y between the belligeren­ts. In both cases the worry was about surprise attack. The declaratio­n of war gave formal warning that diplomatic means had been exhausted, so that both enemies and neutrals should now be prepared for the worst.

But that need for formal warning is the relic of an era of more difficult communicat­ions. President Trump and President Obama both warned Syria. President George W. Bush warned both Afghanista­n and Iraq. The world braced for action. The warning function, in short, is nowadays carried out by less formal but still effective means.

I have argued in the past that the declaratio­n of war clause in the Constituti­on represents an effort to limit the president’s ability to undertake an “offensive” war — what 18th-century tradition would have understood as a war for conquest or glory. Perhaps you find that reading too narrow. Still, the lessons of Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurte­r hold: In the end, the meaning of the Constituti­on is largely determined by how the political branches of the federal government act over time.

And over time, the power to declare war has become a dead letter.

Still, Congress possesses considerab­le powers to prevent the president from making war should it choose to exercise them. In particular, the House and the Senate can vote to cut off funding, as they did in 1973, overriding a presidenti­al veto of a law refusing to pay for the bombing of Cambodia.

That’s tough to do, of course, but it would be a lot easier if Congress had not acquiesced over the years in the buildup of warmaking authority in the executive. There’s zero chance that the House or Senate would adopt a resolution restrictin­g President Trump’s freedom to act in Syria, just as there was zero chance that either chamber would adopt a resolution restrictin­g President Obama’s freedom to act in Libya.

The result is that the commander in chief can order the U.S. military into action whenever it suits his judgment. Many people, myself included, are uneasy with that hard truth. For better or worse, however, it’s been our practice for a very long time.

Clinging to the long-dead notion that Congress must first declare war might be comforting, but it has nothing to do with reality.

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