From: http://www.9000phoneticwords.com/wisdom%20and%20courage/scopeandduration.html
The New York Times / January 29, 2007 / Editorial Observer
Congress, the Constitution and War: The Limits on Presidential Power / By ADAM
COHEN
"In giving Congress the power to declare war, the Constitution gives it authority to make decisions about a war’s scope and duration."
Bold and color emphasis added by this website.
President Bush doesn’t seem to care that Congress wants a bigger role in
guiding the Iraq war. Talking about his plan to send in 20,000 additional troops,
he said on “60 Minutes” that he knows Congress can vote against it, “but
I’ve made my decision and we’re going forward.”
It is hardly the first time this president has insisted that he is “the
decider,” or even the first time he’s used the Constitution to
justify it, as Vice President Dick Cheney did when he told Fox News: “The
Constitution is very clear that the president is, in fact, under Article 2,
the commander
in chief.” But Mr. Cheney told only half the story. Congress
has war powers too, and with
70 percent of Americans now opposed to President Bush’s handling of the
war, according to an ABC News/Washington Post poll, it is becoming more assertive
about them. Congress is poised to pass a resolution denouncing the troop increase.
Down the line, Congress may well consider mandatory caps on the number of troops
in Iraq, or setting a date for withdrawal.
If it does, we may be headed toward a constitutional clash, with the administration
trying to read powers into the Constitution — as it has with its “enemy
combatant” doctrine and presidential “signing statements” — that
the Founders did not put there. The Constitution’s drafters were
intent on balancing power so no one branch could drift toward despotism. The
system
of checks and balances that runs through the document divides the war power
between the president and Congress.
The Constitution’s provision that the president is the commander in chief
clearly puts him at the top of the military chain of command. Congress would
be overstepping if, for example, it passed a law requiring generals in the field
to report directly to the speaker of the House. But the Constitution also gives
Congress an array of war powers, including the
power to “declare war,” “raise and support armies” and “make
rules concerning captures on land and water.” By “declare war,” the
Constitution’s framers did not mean merely firing off a starting gun. In
the 18th century, war declarations were often limited in scope — European
powers might fight a naval battle in the Americas, for example, but not battle
on their own continent. In giving Congress the power to declare war,
the Constitution gives it authority to make decisions about a war’s scope
and duration.
The Founders, including James Madison, who is often called “the father
of the Constitution,” fully expected Congress to use these powers to rein
in the commander in chief. “The constitution supposes, what the History
of all Governments demonstrates, that the Executive is the branch of power most
interested in war, and most prone to it,” Madison cautioned. “It
has accordingly with studied care, vested the question of war in the Legislature.”
In the early days of the republic, the Supreme Court made clear that Congress
could limit the president’s war powers — notably in the Flying Fish
case. In 1799, during the “Quasi War,” the undeclared sea war between
the United States and France, Congress authorized President John Adams to clamp
down on trade between the two nations by stopping ships headed to French ports.
But Adams went further, ordering commanders to stop ships that were sailing to
or from a French port. When the Flying Fish was seized while sailing from a French
port — something
Congress had not authorized — the ship’s owner sued. The
Supreme Court decided in his favor, ruling that the president had no right
to issue the
order he did. John Marshall, the nation’s greatest chief justice,
declared that even in a time of hostilities, a president’s decision to act militarily
beyond what Congress had authorized was “unlawful.”
The court has repeatedly reinforced this principle. In 1952, in the steel seizure
case, it ruled that President Harry Truman could not seize steel mills
to avert a strike — even though steel was needed for the Korean War — because
Congress had set out a different way of handling the labor unrest. More recently,
in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, it held that President Bush must follow Congressional
guidelines when he sets up military tribunals for detainees.
Past Congresses have enacted just the sort of restrictions the Bush administration
is trying to foreclose today. During the Vietnam War, the Foreign Assistance
Act of 1974 capped the number of American military personnel in South Vietnam
at 4,000 within six months. The Lebanon Emergency Assistance Act of
1983 required the president to get Congress’s approval for any substantial
increase in the number or role of armed forces in Lebanon.
There is little question that Congress could use its power of the purse to
end a war. But cutting off financing is a drastic step, and one that members
of Congress
are understandably reluctant to take, because it can look like a refusal to
support the troops. The Constitution’s text, Supreme Court cases
and history show, however, that Congress can instead pass laws that set the terms
of military engagement. Whether it would be wise for Congress
to adopt such limits is debatable; whether it has the authority to do so should
not be.
The Bush administration insists that if Congress tries to manage the Iraq war,
it will leave the commander in chief with too little authority. But the greater
danger is the one Madison recognized at the nation’s founding — that
all the power will be left with the person “most interested in war, and
most prone to it.”
Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company