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Who Makes Foreign Policy?
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
The Iraq Study
Group released its report last week, giving the president several
recommendations to consider in prosecuting the war. Similarly, the
incoming Democratic leaders in Congress promise to urge the President
to take a new course in Iraq. Meanwhile, one newly elected member
of Congress was asked on national television about the Iraq war.
She responded by saying she had no real opinion, and that foreign
policy was up to the president.
In each instance,
it is assumed that the president will make Iraq policy. Im
not talking about the details of actual military operations in Iraq;
Im talking about the broader policy questions of how long
our troops will stay, how many will stay, and how victory will be
defined.
The media,
Congress, and the American public all seem to have accepted something
that is patently untrue: namely, that foreign policy is the domain
of the president and not Congress. This is absolutely not the case
and directly contrary to what our founding fathers wanted.
The role of
the president as Commander in Chief is to direct our armed forces
in carrying out policies established by the American people through
their representatives in Congress. He is not authorized
to make those policies. He is an administrator, not a policy maker.
Foreign policy, like all federal policy, must be made by Congress.
To allow otherwise is to act in contravention of the Constitution.
Library of
Congress scholar Louis Fisher, writing in The Oxford Companion to
American Military History, summarizes presidential war power:
The president's
authority was carefully constrained. The power to repel sudden
attacks represented an emergency measure that allowed the president,
when Congress was not in session, to take actions necessary to
repel sudden attacks either against the mainland of the United
States or against American troops abroad. It did not authorize
the president to take the country into full-scale war or mount
an offensive attack against another nation.
But its
not simply the decision to wage war that is left to Congress. Consider
also the words of James Madison:
Those who
are to conduct a war cannot in the nature of things, be proper
or safe judges, whether a war ought to be commenced,
continued, or concluded. They are barred from the latter
functions by a great principle in free government, analogous to
that which separates the sword from the purse, or the power of
executing from the power of enacting laws (italics added).
So Congress
is charged not only with deciding when to go to war, but also how
to conduct and bring to a conclusion properly declared wars.
Of course the administration has some role to play in making treaties,
and the State Department should pursue beneficial diplomacy. But
the notion that presidents should establish our broader foreign
policy is dangerous and wrong. No single individual should be entrusted
with the awesome responsibility of deciding when to send our troops
abroad, how to employ them once abroad, and when to bring them home.
This is why the founders wanted Congress, the body most directly
accountable to the public, to make critical decisions about war
and peace.
It
is shameful that Congress ceded so much of its proper authority
over foreign policy to successive presidents during the 20th century,
especially when it failed to declare war in Korea, Vietnam, Kosovo,
and Iraq. Its puzzling that Congress is so willing to give
away one of its most important powers, when most members from both
parties work incessantly to expand the role of Congress in domestic
matters. By transferring its role in foreign policy to the President,
Congress not only violates the Constitution, but also disenfranchises
the American electorate.
December
12, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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