Monday, 10 April 2017

President Trump’s Airstrikes in Syria: Constitutional or Not?




Whether it was constitutional for Trump to carry out airstrikes in Syria without congressional approval is not an easy question to answer.


PunditFact.com
PUNDITFACT.COM
TDB
04.09.17 11:14 PM ET



Some Democrat and Republican lawmakers are criticizing President Donald Trump for carrying out airstrikes in Syria without getting Congress’ approval first.

The United States launched nearly 60 cruise missiles at a Syrian airfield April 6, reacting to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s recent chemical attack that killed more than 80 civilians.

"The Constitution says war must be declared by Congress," said Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., in a statement April 7. "I voted for military action against Syria in 2013 when Donald Trump was advocating that America turn its back on Assad’s atrocities. Congress will work with the president, but his failure to seek congressional approval is unlawful."


Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., issued a similar statement that read, "While we all condemn the atrocities in Syria, the United States was not attacked. The president needs congressional authorization for military action as required by the Constitution, and I call on him to come to Congress for a proper debate."

Whether it was constitutional for Trump to carry out these airstrikes in Syria without congressional approval is not an easy question to answer — especially because the Trump administration has not yet made public its own legal justification. We asked the Trump administration, and we’ll update this post if we hear back.

The Constitution says Congress has the power to declare war, but throughout the past 70 years or so, presidents have adopted a flexible view of their own constitutional role as commander-in-chief in order to engage in military action without congressional approval.

What we found is that in some cases people saying Trump needed congressional approval have gone too far, as U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan did in claiming that there is "no legal basis" for Trump's action. (PolitiFact Wisconsin rated that claim False.)

Yet the courts have not settled some constitutional questions about what is war and who gets to decide when the United States attacks. This story explains the complicated issue.

War powers evolution
For most of American history, the consensus view among politicians and legal scholars was that the Founding Fathers meant for Congress to have the "sole authority" in deciding to initiate any hostilities or war with another country. Although this remains the most common view among academics, actual practice has diverged significantly, said Andrew Kent, a law professor at Fordham University and an expert in the Constitution and national security.

"Hence, there is a kind of customary law of war initiation in modern times that has supplanted a long-held view, and the view of the Founders, about what the Constitution means," Kent said.
The last time Congress actually declared war was World War II. In 1973, to retain control over their constitutional authority, Congress passed the War Powers Resolution. The resolution required that, in the absence of a war declaration, the president must report to Congress within 48 hours of introducing armed forces into hostilities and must remove forces within 60 days unless Congress permits otherwise.

As of this writing, Trump is still within the 48-hour window to notify Congress and seek their approval.

But some legal scholars think the War Powers Resolution unconstitutionally restricts the president’s authority, and it hasn’t always stopped presidents from taking military action without congressional approval. For example, President Bill Clinton sent thousands of U.S. troops into Kosovo in the 1990s to participate in a NATO peacekeeping mission. Clinton never received congressional approval, yet he did not remove the troops after the 60-day mark.

Controversially, President Barack Obama took a broad interpretation of Congress’ decade-old authorizations for 9/11-related military action in order to justify airstrikes and other measures against the Islamic State, including in Syria, without obtaining further congressional approval.
Trump can’t easily use that same justification because the United States attacked Assad’s regime, not Islamic State fighters, wrote Harvard Law School professor Jack Goldsmith in an April 7 Lawfare article. But he might be able to find precedent in the Obama administration’s legal justification for the 2011 U.S. intervention in Libya.

The White House Office of Legal Counsel determined then that it would be consistent with the Constitution and the War Powers Resolution for Obama to take military action in Libya because it served the "national interest." Also, the operation was intended to have a limited scope and short duration, as opposed to a full-on war.

Goldsmith noted, however, that it will be difficult for the Trump administration to come up with a sufficient reason why attacking Syria serves the national interest beyond maintaining regional stability and protecting international norms against chemical weapon use. Interestingly, Trump said the airstrikes were in the national interest when he announced them April 6 in Florida: "It is in this vital national security interest of the United States to prevent and deter the spread and use of deadly chemical weapons."

So over the past few decades, presidents have routinely asserted their authority to take military action without prior congressional approval. Congress has largely acquiesced, and the Supreme Court hasn’t weighed in in any significant way.
So reasonable minds can disagree over whether this trend is constitutional.

Although Trump felt justified to take this action in Syria without congressional approval, he had a different take as a civilian about four years ago, when Obama was mulling taking military action in Syria after a chemical weapons attack. Trump said then that Obama shouldn’t attack Syria, but if he does he needs congressional approval first.

"The President must get Congressional approval before attacking Syria-big mistake if he does not!" Trump tweeted Aug. 30, 2013.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

The United Nations should ignore this because Hun Sen is just serving his Vietnamese bosses in Hanoi by killing more Cambodian/Khmer people to exchange the power for himself. Hun Sen is a real criminal similar to Assad. However Hun Sen is far worse that Assad because he was a Khmer Rouges soldier partnering with the Communist Vietnamese military along with Hen Samrin and secret Yuon/Vietnamese agents who had hidden in Khmer Rogues uniforms (who could speak, write and read Khmer/Cambodian language) that ended up killing 3 millions of innocent Khmer/Cambodian people and children (from 1975 to 1979). Don't just blame Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouges soldiers. The secret source has shown that Hun Sen and his Vietnamese secret agents have been behind the Killing Fields (1975-1979) and now Hun Sen is still trying to kill the Cambodian/Khmer people who are tired of and oppose him because he is just a Vietnamese puppet controlling Cambodia for over 30 years plus by using his Communist Vietnamese military protections to make him stay in power. Vietnamese master-minded killers (leaders in Hanoi) are trying to complete their dirty plans to create another Killing Fields using Hun Sen and his CPP supporters. Among CPP supporters, there are brainwashed and uneducated Cambodians (criminals) and secret Yuon/Vietnamese agents ( hiding in CPP) who will destroy the lives of Cambodian/Khmer people again in different ways to fool the International Community or UN.
Today, the Vietnamese communist master-minded leaders in Hanoi are trying to find or seek the new way as the dirty and deadly plans to fool the International Community or UN, by using the dirty games and manipulating that Cambodian/Khmer people kill their own kinds. Clearly, the Vietnamese communist leaders and military commanders in Hanoi have been pushing the gullible CPP Officials and Hun Sen to allow their illegal Yuon/Vietnamese immigrants to stay and float on Cambodian water (like Tonle Sap Lake and Mekong Lake) and Cambodian soils. Those illegal Vietnamese residents or immigrants in Cambodia have been used as a Human Shields when it comes to the civil wars or violence between CPP supporters and CNRP supporters. CPP supporters are military folks (including hidden Vietnamese secret agents in CPP) in civilian cloths. When the bloody violence occurs, there will be the illegal Vietnamese immigrants going behind and then kill Cambodian people to rob their lands, properties and everything from Cambodian people or victims. This is a very clear that Vietnamese communist leaders and military commanders in Hanoi and illegal Vietnamese/Yuon immigrants are dreaming of taking over Cambodian land or country when there will be a fewer and fewer Cambodian/Khmer people in Cambodia in many years to come. This is very dangerous situation to Cambodia and Cambodian people while the Vietnamese puppet Hun Sen continues to control Cambodia using his Vietnamese community military protections and staying in power for himself.