The
Greatest Trick Obama Ever Pulled Was
Convincing The World America Isn't Still At
War
Afghanistan, Iraq, the illegal conflict with
Isis, secret drone strikes across the Middle
East: You would think Congress might want to
vote on the Forever War. But you would be
very, very wrong
By Trevor Timm
January 06, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Guardian" -
The
holiday headlines blared without a hint of
distrust:
“End of War” and
“Mission Ends” and
“U.S. formally ends the war in Afghanistan”,
as the US government and Nato celebrated the
alleged end of the longest war in American
history. Great news! Except, that is, when
you read past the first paragraph: “the
fighting is as intense as it has ever been
since the U.S.-led invasion in 2001,”
according to the Wall Street Journal.
And about 10,000 troops will remain there
for the foreseeable future (more than we had
a year after the Afghan war started).
Oh, and they’ll continue to
engage in combat regularly. But other
than that, yeah, the war is definitely over.
This is the new reality of
war: As long as the White House doesn’t
admit the United States is at war, we’re all
supposed to pretend as if that’s true. This
ruse is not just the work of the president.
Members of Congress, who return to work this
week, are just as guilty as
Barack Obama in letting the public think
we’re Definitely Not at War, from
Afghanistan and Somalia to the new war with
Isis in Iraq and Syria and beyond.
Thirteen years on, the
near limitless war authorization Congress
passed for the Afghanistan war remains in
place, with no sign that Congress wants to
even debate revoking it. This is what will
allow US troops to continue fighting,
despite the mission supposedly being
“formally” over. Just a month before Obama
made
his farcical announcement last week, he
signed a secret order to ensure US
troops continue to engage in combat missions
against various “militant groups” in
Afghanistan for all of 2015.
Another place the United
States is Definitely Not at War? Pakistan,
where,
according to the Bureau of Investigative
Journalism, the US conducted
multiple drone strikes between Christmas
and New Year’s Eve, killing at least nine
people. We don’t know who died, but the
Associated Press
assured us they were “militants”,
despite the US government’s definition of
“militant” having been
manipulated beyond comprehension.
Another six “militants”
were reportedly killed in a drone strike in
Pakistan on Sunday, the targets
apparently having nothing to do with
al-Qaida – they often never do, as we
learned from
new Snowden documents published by Der
Spiegel over the holiday break. (There was
yet another American drone strike
in Somalia on 30 December.)
The US Congress, of
course, has steadfastly
refused to attempt to place any real
legislative limits on drone strikes, even
those that have killed American citizens –
which, as various scholars have been
screaming for years, represent
an unconstitutional violation of the Fifth
Amendment.
Meanwhile, the Defense
Department quietly announced a few days
before Christmas that, later this month,
another 1,300 troops will deploy to Iraq
in its ever-expanding undeclared war on
Isis. A Pentagon spokesperson
emphasized these are Definitely Not
Combat Troops, despite the US government’s
current definition of “combat” being so
narrow that it’s
“rejected by virtually every military
expert” – not to mention that the troops
already in Iraq are already under “regular”
fire,
according to CNN. The US
continues to launch airstrikes against
Isis and various other groups in Syria as
well.
As the new Congress opens
in Washington on Tuesday, it once again has
the opportunity to formally debate and
actually vote on the war against Isis, a
constitutional obligation from which
America’s politicians shamefully
slunk away, preferring instead to
campaign for re-election – free of difficult
decision-making. Now, almost five months in
to a war the administration
freely admits will last for years
if not decades, hardly anyone seems to
care what legal experts across the political
spectrum believe:
this
war
is
without
precedent – and
it’s
illegal without Congressional approval.
Now, the US Congress is
not exactly a body
known for its nuance and restraint, and
there are many reasons why war against Isis
remains a terrible idea, but if either
the Republican-controlled House and Senate
want to make an actual case for war, then
that is their prerogative. But vote on it.
Because the Obama administration has already
gone down a dangerous path wherein the
executive branch can unilaterally carry out
virtually any war it wants without any
official input from Congress.
Given the GOP’s
newfound hatred of executive power,
which the party seem to have conveniently
forgotten was pioneered during every
Republican administration since Nixon, you’d
think Washington’s new majority might want
to take this tiny step of debating and
voting on the Isis war, as is
their own constitutional duty.
Republicans would do well
to use the president’s own words against
him. As Barack Obama himself
told the Boston Globe back in 2007:
The President does not
have power under the Constitution to
unilaterally authorize a military attack
in a situation that does not involve
stopping an actual or imminent threat to
the nation.
Since virtually the entire
US intelligence community agrees that Isis,
no matter how awful and heinous the group
may be,
does not imminently threaten the
mainland United States, maybe Congress can
start off the new year by doing its job and
actually voting on something required of
them months ago.