San Diego Union-Tribune

HOUSE VOTES TO REPEAL WAR APPROVAL

2002 authorizat­ion has since been used more than 40 times

- BY SARAH D. WIRE Wire writes for the Los Angeles Times.

The House passed a resolution Thursday repealing the nearly 20-year-old authorizat­ion for the use of military force against Iraq, which presidents have since invoked to justify military action in the Middle East without consulting Congress.

The measure passed 268161.

Sponsored by Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland, H.R. 256 would repeal the Authorizat­ion for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002. Lee was the lone voice in Congress opposing granting the president’s initial widespread authority to use military force in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

She has tried for 19 years to get Congress to reassert its constituti­onal authority to declare war, part of a longstandi­ng power struggle between the executive and legislativ­e branches.

Lee previously added repeal of the authorizat­ion to major defense spending bills, and it has even passed the House a few times, before dying in the Senate. But now momentum seems to be on her side.

Earlier in the week, the White House announced that for the first time a sitting president supports the repeal to the 2002 authorizat­ion, adding that doing so will “likely have minimal impact on current military operations.”

Lee told The Times she hopes support from President Joe Biden will ease the bill’s passage in the Senate.

“If the president said he

doesn’t need it and this is long overdue, then why would the members of the Senate want to not support repealing it?” Lee said. “The war is over, so I can’t imagine the argument for supporting maintainin­g the use of force as it relates to Iraq. It has no impact on current military operations at all.”

Sens. Tim Kaine, D-Va., and Todd Young, R-Ind., are shepherdin­g a version of the bill through the Senate that would repeal the 2002 authorizat­ion as well as the 1991 authorizat­ion — still in effect — that paved the way for the first Persian Gulf War. Backers of the bill hope to get it to Biden’s desk by September.

Young said in a statement that terminatin­g old authoritie­s for presidents to act without Congress’ explicit permission “is as important as any decision to wage war.” Congress has repealed just one of the four authorizat­ions for the use of military force that it has approved under the War Powers Act of 1973 — related to actions in Lebanon in 1983.

“Congress must assert its rights as a co-equal branch of government and ensure that our brave men and women in uniform are sent into war with the full backing and support of the American people’s elected representa­tives in Congress,” Young

said.

The Senate version of the repeal is scheduled to be considered by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee next week. Kaine has said he hopes it will come to the Senate floor later this summer, ahead of the 20th anniversar­y of the Sept. 11 attacks.

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., on Wednesday pledged a vote on the resolution this year, and for the first time announced he supports repealing the 2002 authorizat­ion.

Lawmakers and outside groups that have opposed repeal in the past have been largely silent this time.

Taking it off the books is important because future presidents might use the open-ended authorizat­ion, Schumer said. For example, the Iraq War officially ended in 2011, but the authority was used as recently as 2020, when Trump cited it as part of his justificat­ion for not consulting Congress before ordering an airstrike that killed Iranian Gen. Qassem Suleimani in Baghdad.

Legal scholars and foreign policy experts questioned whether it was a valid use of the authority.

But some in the GOP still oppose a repeal. Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky on

Thursday called the 2002 authority “an important legal foundation” for fighting terrorist groups with ties to Iraq and called the repeal “reckless.”

What started as a lonely quest for Lee in 2001 as the only House member to oppose authorizin­g force in Afghanista­n after the Sept. 11 attacks gradually gained allies over the last 20 years as opinions about the war shifted.

In time, veterans and grassroots activists demanded to know why Congress had provided such open-ended authority to then-President George W. Bush and why the United States was still in Iraq after it was shown that the basis for invading the country — the supposed stockpile of weapons of mass destructio­n by dictator Saddam Hussein — was incorrect, she said.

The few American troops remaining in Iraq are involved mostly in training and protecting the U.S. Embassy and other facilities.

Lee said she will continue pushing to repeal the earlier 2001 authorizat­ion that gave the president open-ended power to use the military against those who “planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizati­ons or persons.”

Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump each used that authorizat­ion to justify military action around the world, including fighting militants in Libya and Niger, and for drone strikes in Pakistan, Yemen and Iran. The Congressio­nal Research Service, citing unclassifi­ed documents, found that the authority had been invoked at least 41 times in 19 countries.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN AP ?? Vice President Kamala Harris talks with Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland. Lee’s H.R. 256 to repeal the Authorizat­ion for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002 was passed in the House Thursday, 268-161.
JACQUELYN MARTIN AP Vice President Kamala Harris talks with Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland. Lee’s H.R. 256 to repeal the Authorizat­ion for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002 was passed in the House Thursday, 268-161.

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