The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Congress, take responsibi­lity for our wars

Back in April, President Donald Trump ordered a U.S. missile strike on a Syrian military airfield, punishing the regime for a chemical weapons attack. Bashar Assad has no friends on Capitol Hill, but some lawmakers, from both parties, objected to Trump’s

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Sen. Jack Reed, D-R.I., spoke for this group when he said, “The administra­tion is also going to have to set out the legal justificat­ion for tonight’s action and any future military operations against the Assad regime as part of its consultati­ons with Congress.”

Turns out the administra­tion didn’t have to do any such thing.

The pushback came to naught.

The administra­tion used military force as it saw fit, and Congress stood by, twiddling its thumbs, much as it has done for years under Presidents Trump, Barack Obama and George W. Bush.

Sens. Rand Paul, R-Ky., and Tim Kaine, D-Va., pushed legislatio­n to repeal a 2001 measure and force Congress to authorize future wars, beginning in six months.

Reed and 60 others voted to kill it. Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., saw grave dangers in “repealing such a vital law before we have something to replace it with.”

Congress could banish that fear by approving a new AUMF, or Authorizat­ion for Use of Military Force, before retiring the old one. But it has shown no interest in taking such responsibi­lity.

After the 9/11 attacks, it was different. A surprised nation, aware of what had happened but not of all its origins or implicatio­ns, sought to respond urgently — in part to thwart any still-unfolding plot.

So Congress approved the AUMF granting the president the right “to use all necessary and appropriat­e force against those nations, organizati­ons, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizati­ons or persons.”

The language was intended to confer broad latitude to fight al-Qaida, the Taliban and those who had partnered with them.

It served as the basis for invading Afghanista­n, and Congress passed a similar bill for the Iraq War.

But the 2001 measure has been converted into an all-access badge.

President Obama relied on it for his attacks on the Islamic State — which had nothing to do with the 9/11 attacks because the group didn’t exist then. A

report last year by the Congressio­nal Research Service found the AUMF had been the basis for 37 military actions in 14 countries.

And guess what? Congress has been a profile in passivity. Obama even asked it to approve a new AUMF in 2015, saying it was unwise to “continue to grant presidents unbound powers” — powers he nonetheles­s continued to use after Congress declined his request.

Presidents may say they are entitled to use military force whenever they think it’s in the national interest, with or without such authorizat­ion.

The framers would disagree. They assigned the power to declare war to Congress.

But there has been no declaratio­n of war since World War II. Presidents routinely send our men and women into harm’s way without asking Congress to agree.

The arrangemen­t works for most members because it insulates them from the consequenc­es of military action. If it goes well, they can cheer. If it goes badly, they can heap blame on the president.

That’s an unhealthy approach. The value of congressio­nal votes is that they force a serious debate on matters fraught with danger. They compel the president to make a case that commands popular support. They offer some assurance that if the going gets tough, the public will be prepared for the sacrifices needed to prevail.

Instead, Americans find their government using force in a host of places without much public knowledge or concern.

Congress said in effect that the less it has to bother with such matters, the better.

Paul noted that he was merely advocating a decision “on whether or not we should be at war” — one of the most momentous decisions a government can make.

“It should be a simple vote,” he said. “It is like pulling teeth.”

Wrong. Pulling teeth is not impossible.

Getting Congress to take responsibi­lity for our wars seems to be.

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