Townhall...
President
Nixon, er, Obama
By Mona Charen
7/1/201
How
many times have we heard awestruck
references to Barack Obama’s history as a law professor? Many came from
the man
himself, as when he told a crowd at a 2007 fundraiser, “I was a
constitutional
law professor, which means unlike the current president, I actually
respect the
Constitution.”
Does
he? At his press conference on
June 29, the president was asked whether he thought the War Powers Act
-- which
he has flamboyantly flouted in the case of our armed conflict with
Libya -- was
constitutional. His reply, during which he managed to inject yet
another
reference to his credential as a law “professor” (he was actually not a
professor but a senior lecturer, but never mind), expressed the most
flippant
disregard for law that we’ve heard from an American president since
Richard
Nixon jousted with David Frost.
“Let
me focus on, initially, the issue
of Libya. I want to talk about the substance of Libya because there’s
been all
kinds of noise about process and congressional consultation and so
forth.”
What
the president dismisses as
“noise” are the words of a valid U.S. law, the War Powers Resolution.
Some
presidents have thought it unwise. Some believed it to be
unconstitutional.
That is the case with many laws. It doesn’t permit presidents, or
anyone else,
to disregard them.
Under
the terms of the law, the
president was required to seek congressional authorization within 48
hours of
commencing a military conflict, and/or to withdraw American forces
within 90
days if such authorization was not forthcoming. Both deadlines have
passed.
The
president’s contempt for the law
should have been evident since early March, when his administration
tortured
the English language to avoid using terms that might be a)
commonsensical, or
b) mentioned in the War Powers Resolution. Thus, deploying bombers and
long-range missiles was “kinetic activity.”
A
White House letter to congressional
leaders, issued close to the 60-day mark, argued that the action in
Libya did
not amount to “hostilities” as envisioned in the WPR. “U.S.
participation has
consisted of: (1) non-kinetic support to the NATO-led operation,
including
intelligence, logistical support, and search and rescue assistance; (2)
aircraft that have assisted in the suppression and destruction of air
defenses
in support of the no-fly zone; and (3) since April 23, precision
strikes by
unmanned aerial vehicles against a limited set of clearly defined
targets in
support of the NATO-led coalition’s efforts.”
That’s
all very interesting, or not,
but it’s completely irrelevant to the law, which doesn’t specify why or
how the
conflict unfolds, but only whether U.S. forces are involved. The
kinetic
activity that was supposed to last “days, not weeks” has now lasted
months with
no discernible exit and has cost, as of mid-June, $716 million. The
total will
top $1 billion by the end of September. (Congress, for a variety of
reasons,
declined to punish the president’s law breaking and voted to continue
funding
for the Libya operation.)
The
president’s self-justification at
Wednesday’s press conference was highly revealing. The president
emphasized
half a dozen times that the U.S. had acted pursuant to a UN resolution.
We know
how dearly this president wants to reduce American leadership in the
world, but
in this context, his emphasis on the Security Council served to
highlight the
absence of authorization from the Congress.
Gadhafi
is an evil figure, President
Bush, um, Obama continued. “Moammar Gadhafi, who, prior to Osama bin
Laden, was
responsible for more American deaths than just about anybody on the
planet” was
planning to kill more of his people, the president explained. That
sounds like
something the president could have mentioned when he asked Congress for
approval
of this “war of choice.” Bush believed that Saddam Hussein’s evil was
unstoppable by anything short of war, too. And he, too, had a UN
resolution in
his pocket. But he went to Congress.
Obama
asserted airily that the WPR was
intended to prevent another Vietnam, and that the Libya action didn’t
count.
The former law lecturer should know that the framers’ intent is not the
law.
The words on the page are the law. It doesn’t matter that the war is
starting
slowly (sound familiar?), or that the president merely “led from
behind.” He
has demonstrated contempt for the law. Period.
Imagine
if any Republican had done it.
Read
it at Townhall...
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