Sheldon Richman
reason.com
September 14, 2013
The Constitution did not keep President Obama from attacking Syria. The
people did. Think about that.
Obama, his top advisers, and many of his partisans and opponents in Congress
insist that the president of the United States has the constitutional authority
to attack another country without a declaration of war or so-called
“authorization for the use of military force” even if that country poses no
threat whatever to the United States, the American people, or what are vaguely
called “our interests.” This seems wrong, especially in light of the 1973 War
Powers Act. But Obama already asserted this alleged authority in Libya. Bill
Clinton did it in Kosovo and Bosnia through NATO and the UN. George H.W. Bush
did it in Panama. Ronald Reagan did it in Lebanon and Grenada. And so on back to
Harry Truman in Korea. (I’m ignoring the many covert wars.)
Constitution, Shmonstitution. War Powers, Shmar Powers
Read more
Sunday, September 15, 2013
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