5 Reasons Congress
Should Reject Obama’s ISIS War
The Obama administration wants a rubber
stamp on its unwise, unlimited, and
unauthorized new war in the Middle East.
It shouldn't get it.
By Peter Certo
February 12, 2015 "ICH"
- "FPIF"
- At long last, the Obama administration
has submitted
a draft resolution to Congress that
would authorize the ongoing U.S.-led
military intervention against the
Islamic State, or ISIS.
The effort comes more
than six months after the U.S. began
bombing targets in Iraq and Syria. Since
then, some 3,000 U.S. troops have been
ordered to Iraq, and coalition air
forces have carried out over 2,000
bombing runs on both sides of the
border.
Better late than
never? Maybe not.
The language proposed
by the White House would authorize the
president to deploy the U.S. military
against the Islamic State and
“associated persons or forces” for a
period of three years, at which point
the authorization would have to be
renewed.
In an attempt to
reassure members of Congress wary of
signing off on another full-scale war in
the Middle East, the authorization would
supposedly prohibit the use of American
soldiers in “enduring offensive ground
combat operations.” It would also repeal
the authorization that President George
W. Bush used to invade Iraq back in
2002.
The New York Times
describes the draft authorization as
“a compromise to ease concerns of
members in both noninterventionist and
interventionist camps: those who believe
the use of ground forces should be
explicitly forbidden, and those who do
not want to hamstring the commander in
chief.”
As an
ardent supporter of “hamstringing
the commander in chief” in this
particular case, let me count the ways
that my concerns have not been
eased by this resolution.
1. Its vague
wording will almost certainly be abused.
For one thing, the
administration has couched its
limitations on the use of ground forces
in some curiously porous language.
How long is an
“enduring” engagement, for example? A
week? A year? The full three years of
the authorization and beyond?
And what’s an
“offensive” operation if not one that
involves invading another country? The
resolution’s introduction claims
outright that U.S. strikes against ISIS
are justified by America’s “inherent
right of individual and collective
self-defense.” If Obama considers the
whole war “inherently defensive,” does
the proscription against “offensive”
operations even apply?
And what counts as
“combat”? In his
last State of the Union address,
Obama proclaimed that “our combat
mission in Afghanistan is over.” But
only two months earlier, he’d quietly
extended the mission of nearly 10,000
U.S. troops in the country for at least
another year. So the word seems
meaningless.
In short, the
limitation on ground troops is no
limitation at all. “What they have in
mind,”
said California Democrat Adam Schiff,
“is still fairly broad and subject to
such wide interpretation that it could
be used in almost any context.”
Any context? Yep.
Because it’s not just the ISIS heartland
we’re talking about.
2. It would
authorize war anywhere on the planet.
For the past six
months, we’ve been dropping bombs on
Iraq and Syria. But the draft resolution
doesn’t limit the authorization to those
two countries. Indeed, the text makes no
mention of any geographic limitations at
all.
That could set the
United States up for war in a huge swath
of the Middle East. Immediate targets
would likely include Jordan or Lebanon,
where ISIS forces have hovered on the
periphery and occasionally launched
cross-border incursions. But it could
also rope in countries like Libya or
Yemen, where ISIS knockoff groups that
don’t necessarily have any connection to
the fighters in Iraq and Syria have
set up shop.
This is no theoretical
concern. The Obama administration has
used Congress’ post-9/11 war
authorization — which
specifically targeted only the
perpetrators of the 9/11 attacks and
their patrons and supporters — to target
a broad array of nominally “associated
forces” in a stretch of the globe
reaching from Somalia to the
Philippines.
In fact, the
administration has used the very same
2001 resolution to justify its current
intervention in Iraq and Syria — the
very war this new resolution is supposed
to be authorizing.
How does the new
resolution handle that?
3. It leaves
the post-9/11 “endless war”
authorization in place.
Yep. That means that
even if Congress rejects his ISIS
resolution, Obama could still claim the
authority to bomb Iraq and Syria (not to
mention Lebanon, Jordan, Yemen, Libya,
and beyond) based on the older law.
It also means that if
Congress does vote for the war
but refuses to reauthorize it three
years from now, some future president
could fall back on the prior resolution
as well.
Obama is explicit
about this point. In his
accompanying letter to Congress, the
president claims that “existing statutes
provide me with the authority I need to
take these actions” against ISIS.
Yes, you read that
right: Obama claims he doesn’t even need
the authority he’s writing to Congress
to request. And he’s saying so in
the very letter in which he
requests it.
So what does that say
about this authorization?
4. It’s a
charade.
Obama says that the
war resolution is necessary to “show the
world we are united in our resolve to
counter the threat posed by” ISIS.
Secretary of State John Kerry added in
a statement that an
authorization would send “a
clear and powerful signal to the
American people, to our allies, and to
our enemies.”
But as any kid who’s
taken middle school civics could tell
you, the point of a war resolution is
not to “show the world”
anything, or “send a signal” to anyone.
The point is to
encourage an open debate about how the
United States behaves in the world and
what acts of violence are committed in
our name. Most importantly, it’s
supposed to give the people’s
representatives (such as they are) a
chance to say no. Without that,
it’s little more than an imperial farce.
Which is a shame.
Because an empty shadow play about the
scope of the latest war leaves out one
crucial perspective…
5. War is not
going to stop the spread of ISIS.
ISIS has flourished
almost entirely because of political
breakdown on both sides of the
Iraq-Syria border. That breakdown has
been driven by a mess of factors — local
sectarian tensions and a brutal civil
war in Syria, assuredly, but also the
catastrophic U.S. invasion of Iraq,
ongoing U.S. support for a sectarian
government in Baghdad that has deeply
alienated millions of Sunnis, and
helter-skelter funding for a variety of
Syrian rebel groups by Washington and
its allies.
Military intervention
fixes precisely none of these problems,
and indeed it repeats many of the same
calamitous errors that helped to create
them.
A better strategy might focus on
humanitarian assistance, strictly
conditioned aid, and renewed diplomatic
efforts to secure a ceasefire and
power-sharing agreement in Syria, equal
rights for minority populations in Iraq,
and a regional arms embargo among the
foreign powers fueling the conflict from
all sides.
But as Sarah Lazare
writes for Foreign Policy In
Focus, saying yes to any
of those things requires saying no
to war. That means not just
rejecting the ISIS authorization the
administration wants now, but also the
2001 law it’s used to justify the war so
far.
If you feel similarly,
I’d encourage you to
write your member of Congress
immediately and let them hear it:
No more rubber stamps. No more shadow
play.