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Marie Cocco: Resolving to End the WarPosted on Jan 15, 2007By Marie Cocco WASHINGTON—Could it be that it was all so simple then? The last time the United States Congress declared war, it did so in one brief paragraph. It directed President Franklin D. Roosevelt to use “the entire naval and military forces’’ to defeat the enemy and pledged “all of the resources of the country’’ to the effort. War has become complicated since 1941. We no longer have wars, in fact. We have “conflicts’’ or “military actions’’ or “peacekeeping missions’’ or “enforcement actions.’’ In Iraq, we started with the October 2002 “authorization for use of military force’’ against Saddam Hussein’s regime for allegedly threatening the U.S. with its alleged weapons of mass destruction, and for defying various United Nations resolutions. American involvement in this war has exceeded World War II in its duration—fitting, perhaps, for a conflict that started with a resolution no mere paragraph in length, but six pages long. The muddying of the constitutional separation of war-making powers—they’re divided between the president and Congress—went on and on through the Cold War and has continued long after its end. Now we careen toward a constitutional showdown. President Bush does not see in November’s election a public mandate to change course in Iraq. He does not regard the public will, or the expression of it that comes through the new Democratic Congress, as impinging on what he takes to be his unfettered prerogatives as commander in chief. He is escalating the U.S. military commitment in Iraq despite bipartisan opposition. “I made my decision and we’re going forward,’’ Bush said Sunday night on CBS’ “60 Minutes.’‘ This clipped statement of presidential defiance comes after a more explicit enunciation of White House thinking, delivered last week by spokesman Tony Snow. “Congress has the power of the purse,’’ Snow correctly pointed out. “The president has the ability to exercise his own authority if he thinks Congress has voted the wrong way.’‘ This notion would no doubt surprise the Founders, as it should anyone who believes the United States is a democracy. “I think this was the issue that was decided at Lexington and Concord,’’ says Michael J. Glennon, a professor of international law at Tufts University’s Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and a former counsel to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. The colonists rejected a system in which “If the king believes that parliament is wrong, the king may do what he wishes.’‘ The autocratic impulse of the Bush administration, long on display and for just as long ignored by the Republicans when they controlled Capitol Hill, now faces its first genuine test. Democrats and Republicans opposed to Bush’s troop escalation have yet to agree on a way to constrain his monarchical tendency. The Constitution gives Congress the power to “raise and support Armies’’ as well as to “make rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and naval Forces.’’ Vice President Dick Cheney is dismissive. You can’t “run a war by committee,’’ he declares—though the Constitution envisioned something like that by giving only Congress the power to declare war and to raise the money for it. In reality, the sole way for Congress to halt the new Iraq troop deployment—a cutoff of funds for any additional soldiers—already is being thwarted by the White House. Movements necessary for the mobilization are under way; money to support these additional soldiers was included in last year’s defense spending bill, officials say. It was one of only two routine spending bills the Republicans managed to pass before adjourning last fall. None of these maneuvers should surprise. The Bush White House treats legitimate misgivings and uncertainties about deepening the military involvement in Iraq precisely the way the Bush campaign treated the legitimate misgivings and uncertainties about the 2000 Florida vote: by attempting to shut down any process that might result in Bush failing to get his way. As they did in Florida, the president’s men are likely to win the short-term contest. The money is already in the pipeline, they say; the commander in chief commands troop movements at will. The only way to stop this is, quite literally, to declare war. The original Iraq resolution effectively declared war on Saddam, who is no longer with us, and demanded compliance with U.N. sanctions that no longer apply. As Glennon has pointed out—and to use an appropriately Nixonian phrase—the old war resolution is inoperable. Let’s have a new one that voids it, and allows for the withdrawal of troops who have, after all, already accomplished the mission of 2002. Previous item: Do You Heart Huckabee? Next item: Susan Estrich: The Battle at Home Elsewhere: . CommentsAre you a Truthdig member yet? Login now, or register with Truthdig. Add Your Comment
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By SamSnedegar, January 17, 2007 at 2:07 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
You are missing two salient points Marie:
The first has been covered by other posters who say correctly that we are there for the oil, not for any other made up purpose.
The second is the fact that Congress has had all its teeth pulled and has no denture to replace them. That’s right, our Congress was made nugatory in December of 2000 when the Supremely corrupt Court installed its own dictator and promised to rule in his favor over any Congressional argument or law.
That is correct: USA democracy died in December of 2000, and no life support system can bring it back. The Executive ignores Congress as though it never had any powers at all via outright misappropriation of funds such as was done in using money allocated for Afghanistan operations for Iraq runup, and via “signing statements” which have been used to avoid enforcement of other Congressional supposed mandates.
Our legislative branch today resembles those of Cuba, China, Pakistan, Egypt, Israel, and other dictatorships around the globe, and if the election of 2008 appears to be a way to install some democrat as dictator, then there will be no election. It’s that simple.
Oh, you say, that can’t happen. It has already happened two times, first in 2000 and then in 2004, and in both cases the democrat won but was prevented from gaining the Presidency because he wasn’t sufficiently malleable to the corporatist masters calling the shots. In both cases there was a way to get it done without murdering the democrat, but they were just lucky they didn’t have enough votes to overcome the fraudulent totals amassed by the republican puppet.
All that is left to say is that you’d also better watch out for the democrat puppets, of which Kerry was one and very likely Hillary another.
Report thisBy Bashonot, January 16, 2007 at 6:56 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)
Nice column Marie and good comment from CAGilles.
Report thisI remember the summer of 99 when the campaign was ramping up; we all thought McCain would emerge as the Republican candidate, but in my rear-view mirror during that Summer and Fall, there was this very large thunderhead growing, coming out of the west. Its size and ferocity was potentially menacing indeed. As it rapidly grew, it began to glow from all the gold laid at its base. In time it showed itself as the candidacy of GWB….The rest is (our sorry) history.
We have had a coup.
The Bushco paradigm, (the acquisition of resources to replenish that gold) operates on keeping this goal in focus, whatever complications arise. “Mistakes” are merely inconveniences…Bush can say he’s disappointed in some of the aspects of the war’s descent into the abyss, but apologize? Never. To admit a mistake means you concede their is a higher authority…There is no higher authority… Not God; not the Pope; not the UN; certainly not Congress, and certainly certainly not The People, (my god, how quaint).
By CaliforniaGilles, January 16, 2007 at 12:33 pm #
(Unregistered commenter)
The question is what means do the people have to force Congress to effectively give up the imperialistic politics of the US? The US goal is of course to gain control of the oil in the Middle East no matter what the collateral damage given the obtuse greedy way they go about it.
Congress wont act on stopping the war until it is forced to by the people. A politicians only aim is to stay in saddle by catering to those who have the power. In the USA the powerful are the big transnational corporations and banks and associated big wealth families, in other words they are all the big beneficiaries of our imperialistic mis-adventures.
The People have to use any means legal or not to demand that Congress impeach the Bushcos and pull out of Iraq. The stakes are not only the mess in Iraq but the madness of extending aggression to Iran and Syria.
The incentive for our (non-)Representatives is to have millions in the streets willing to stick their neck out and to paralyze the country until it done!
Report thisBy oregoncharles, January 16, 2007 at 9:36 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
Didn’t the last King George in America cause a revolution?
Report thisBy George S Semsel, January 16, 2007 at 5:23 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
Nice thoughts, Marie. Unfortunately, the emperor has made clear that he is not interested in criticism and will do as he pleases no matter what. And the Democrats don’t seem capable of doing what the voters expected of them - take any meaningful action. This country is in deep trouble.
Report thisBy Michelle, January 16, 2007 at 2:09 am #
(Unregistered commenter)
“Of the people,
by the people,
and for the people.”
Bush and Co. have completely trashed this basic principle.
Perhaps it’s time THE PEOPLE pulled this tenet back outta da trashcan and hit them with it.
Where’s my pitchfork…
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