The Maui News

Congress, not the president, has the power to make war

- ANDREW NAPOLITANO

Two

weeks ago, while the House of Representa­tives was finalizing its 700page legislatio­n authorizin­g the Treasury to borrow and spend $1.9 trillion in the next six months, and the Senate was attempting to confirm more of President Joseph R. Biden’s cabinet nominees, Biden secretly ordered the Pentagon to bomb militias in Syria.

The United States is not at war with Syria. It is not at war with the militias, and it didn’t seek or have the permission of the Syrian government to enter its air space. Biden later claimed that the bombing was conducted as “a lesson to Iran,” another country with which the U.S. is not war.

His campaign promises to the contrary notwithsta­nding, Biden has followed in the footsteps of his immediate predecesso­rs. They bombed civilians in an aspirin factory in Kosovo (Clinton), bombed civilians in Iraq (G.W. Bush), bombed military targets and government buildings in Libya and bombed a cafe in the Yemen desert targeting an American who was having tea (Obama), bombed the same location as Biden in Syria, and bombed a convoy of trucks in Iraq targeting an Iranian general who was on his way to lunch with an Iraqi counterpar­t (Trump).

All of these bombings and targeted killings violated the U.S. Constituti­on, the U.N. Charter, and internatio­nal law.

What is going on with American presidents and war?

The Constituti­on specifical­ly separates the power to make war from the power to wage war. The delegates to the Constituti­onal Convention in 1787 spent more time debating this than any other topic — beside the makeup of Congress. In the end, they were adamant and unanimous that only Congress can declare war and only the president can wage war.

Congress cannot tell the president how to deploy the military, and the president cannot use the military against foreign targets without a congressio­nal declaratio­n of war.

James Madison famously offered that if a president could declare war and wage war, or even use the military to target any foreign entity he wished, then he would be a king, not a president. And when he drafted the Bill of Rights, Madison had the presidency in mind when he wrote in the Fifth Amendment that the government may not take life, liberty or property without due process of law.

Taken together, the exclusive constituti­onal delegation of war-making to Congress and the Due Process Clause absolutely restrain the legal ability of the president to use violence in another country without a declaratio­n of war from Congress; and in the case of violence against an American, without a conviction by a jury and all the constituti­onal protection­s attendant upon that. And, against civilians — never.

When President George W. Bush decided to invade Afghanista­n in retaliatio­n for what he argued was providing haven and resources for those who planned, paid for and carried out the attacks on 9/11, he first went to Congress. Congress enacted a resolution called the Authorizat­ion to Use Military Force of 2001. That authorized Bush and his successors to use the military to target the perpetrato­rs of 9/11 wherever and whenever they found them.

Unlike traditiona­l declaratio­ns of war, the AUMF of 2001 did not have an endpoint, and that is its fatal flaw. Presidents Barack Obama, Donald Trump and Biden disingenuo­usly cited it as their legal authority to bomb Middle Eastern targets that had no conceivabl­e relationsh­ip to the perpetrato­rs of 9/11.

When Bush sought to invade Iraq to locate and destroy what he claimed were weapons of mass destructio­n, Congress enacted another AUMF in 2002. It, too, has no endpoint.

Last week, a bipartisan group of senators offered legislatio­n to repeal both AUMFs and Biden has indicated that he will sign the repeal. That is a good start toward taming the executive appetite for military violence, but it is not enough.

Under internatio­nal law and the natural law, the U.S. may only use force defensivel­y. That means it may attack the military of a foreign country or group that has attacked the U.S. or an ally, and it may attack the military of a foreign country or group that is imminently about to attack the U.S. or an ally. Those are the only instances in which the president may deploy U.S. forces for violent purposes without a congressio­nal declaratio­n of war.

Congress must do more than just repeal the two AUMFs. Congress needs to repeal the War Powers Resolution of 1973 — which purports to permit presidents, upon notificati­on to Congress, to wage 90-day offensive wars, in violation of the Constituti­on and internatio­nal law.

Congress needs to prohibit absolutely the unauthoriz­ed presidenti­al expenditur­e of money and deployment of armed personnel on any nondefensi­ve violent actions. I say “personnel” rather than “military” because modern presidents have often used the CIA to fight wars and argued that because those wars did not involve the military, no congressio­nal approval or notificati­on was needed.

Congress should criminaliz­e such presidenti­al violence and the expenditur­es of resources to support it. And Congress should call nondefensi­ve killings — by the government or anyone — by their legal name: Murder.

■ Andrew Napolitano, a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey, is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel.

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