A tussle over who can legally declare
war / Cheney reasserts presidential right to attack Iraq,
without new vote by Congress.
By Howard LaFranchi | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor.
WASHINGTON - As the White House steps up the making of its case for toppling
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, it will argue the United States has what might
be called residual authorization.
The idea is there’s a leftover “go” from the Gulf War and from
congressional action in the days following the Sept. 11 attacks.
President Bush already has all the legal and moral authorization he needs to
attack Iraq, the executive thinking goes, because Mr. Hussein never complied
with the Gulf War’s terms of surrender, and because defensive measures
adopted after Sept. 11 apply to a developer and user of weapons of mass destruction.
Therefore no new Congressional authorization – nor any United Nations Security
Council resolution – is necessary.
But that position is causing alarm in Congress and among legal experts, renewing
a debate over presidential war powers that is nearly as old as the American republic
itself.
The White House emphasizes that President Bush might yet seek authorization from
Congress out of national interest and as a way to back a war with unity. In the
administration’s most forceful case yet for regime change in Iraq, Vice
President Dick Cheney said in a speech Monday that the administration would consult
both Congress and America’s allies.
Creating a precedent
Yet the claim that there is no legal necessity for Congress to authorize a war
against Iraq appears designed to carve out a precedent-setting freedom of action
for the president. Already it’s an opinion that even some White House allies
view dimly.
“
The White House should be mindful of the important distinction between what the
president can do, and what he ought to do,” said Henry Hyde, chairman of
the House Committee on International Relations, in a statement Monday. Noting
he agrees with the analysis that the Bush administration is not obliged to seek
approval to take action, he also warned that “any policy undertaken by
the president without a popular mandate from Congress risks its long-term success.”
But other Republicans and many legal scholars go a step farther. “The administration’s
position is simply wrong,” says Michael Glennon, a professor of international
law at Tufts University’s Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy in Medford,
Mass. He says there’s no doubt that congressional authorization for the
1991 Gulf war was “extinguished” the day Iraq signed terms of a ceasefire – whether
it complied with the terms of cessation of hostilities or not.
Sen. Arlen Specter (R) of Pennsylvania argues that in an “emergency,” the
president as commander-in-chief can act unilaterally, but that in this case there
is time for Congress to make and make the final decision.
As for the Bush administration argument that Iraq is covered by last September’s
congressional vote that authorized the president to act against perpetrators
of the terrorist attacks, Professor Glennon says, “That argument may be
correct, but only if Iraq can be linked to events of Sept. 11.”
Vice President Cheney’s speech, before a convention of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars in Nashville, appeared designed to accomplish two tasks: give firm
ground to the Bush argument for a right to preemptive action against regimes
or organizations seeking weapons of mass destruction; and quiet the dissenting
voices from within the president’s own party as well as principal figures
involved in the Gulf War.
Preemptive strike
Arguing the case for preemptive action against Mr. Hussein, Cheney said Hussein
would possess nuclear weapons “fairly soon” if left on his current
course.
But legal experts say those concerns do not override constitutional requirements
for the president to seek congressional authorization for war.
“
I cannot imagine why the administration is asserting this singular power, except
that it sees this as an opportunity to assert a constitutional position,” says
Roger Pilon, director of the Center for Constitutional Studies at the Cato Institute
in Washington. “The president is probably obligated to get Congressional
authority because the mere commander-in-chief function does not entail waging
war on his own initiative,” Mr. Pilon says.
A call for further dialogue
Some observers, and even Republican leaders, say that despite the Cheney speech,
which argued that regime change in Iraq would “benefit the region,” unease
about the administration’s actions will continue until the president himself
makes the case for attacking Iraq. The White House says administration officials
will participate in a second round of Congressional hearings on Iraq next month.