The War Powers Resolution Fraud
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
by Thomas E. Woods, Jr.
In the wake
of the Vietnam War Congress passed the War Powers Resolution of
1973. As the history books would have it, Congress thereby restrained
presidential war powers and reasserted traditional congressional
prerogatives in foreign policy as envisioned by the Constitution.
Not so.
Not even close to being so.
Congress
did pass the War Powers Resolution, to be sure. But if anything,
the Resolution – sympathetic mythology to the contrary notwithstanding
– actually emboldened the president and codified executive warmaking
powers that would have astonished the framers of the Constitution.
I have
explained the intentions of the framers with regard to war powers
here.
Suffice it to say that the framers resolutely opposed placing offensive
war powers in the hands of the president, and deliberately assigned
such authority to the legislative branch.
The War
Powers Resolution does not restore the proper constitutional balance
between president and Congress in matters of war. Consider first
the resolution’s provision that the president may commit troops
to offensive operations anywhere in the world he chooses and for
any reason without the consent of Congress, for a period of 60 days
(though he must at least inform them of his action within 48 hours).
After the initial 60 days he must secure congressional authorization
for the action to continue. He then has another 30 days to withdraw
the troops if such authorization is not forthcoming.
Until the
War Powers Resolution, no constitutional or statutory authority
could be cited on behalf of such behavior on the part of the president.
Now it became fixed law, despite violating the letter and the spirit
of the Constitution.
It so happens,
moreover, that thanks to a loophole in the resolution, the 60-day
clock begins only if and when the president reports to Congress
under Section 4(a)(1) of the Resolution. Surprise, surprise: presidents
have therefore reported to Congress in a more generic manner rather
than expressly under that section. They issue reports "consistent
with" rather than "pursuant to" the Resolution.
Even still,
in a few cases presidents have acted as if the 60-day limit were
in effect, perhaps out of political considerations (even if from
a strictly legal point of view it was not). But Bill Clinton’s multi-year
military intervention in Bosnia alone, without even so much as a
nod in the direction of Congress, made perfectly clear that the
resolution, whatever good points may be buried within it, was effectively
a dead letter.
The Resolution
calls for "consultation" by the President with Congress
before committing troops to combat. This consultation, we are told,
is to occur "in every possible instance." (Who could possibly
find a loophole there?) In practice, presidents have interpreted
this provision to mean that they must notify Congress following
the initiation of hostilities – not exactly what its drafters probably
had in mind.
Ever since
the passage of the Resolution, opponents of presidential actions
have sometimes followed a strategy of appealing to the courts for
redress, waving the War Powers Resolution before federal judges.
For a variety of reasons, these judges have hesitated to intervene
in such cases. Louis Fisher and David Gray Adler, two experts on
presidential war powers, have therefore suggested that the War Powers
Resolution has diverted opponents of presidential wars into fruitless
judicial challenges instead of simply declaring that the president’s
action was unconstitutional and refusing to fund it.
Now it’s
true that the neoconservatives typically despise the War Powers
Resolution – and thus normal people may be inclined to support it
on that basis alone – but this can only be because it appears in
principle to limit the powers of the president. The neocons are
gripped by a weird paranoia on issues like this. Washington think-tanks
are constantly writing reports on the legislative branch’s dangerous
and shocking encroachments on executive power – encroachments that
exist only in the Bizarro World that our see-no-evil, truth-is-what-I-say-it-is
president also inhabits.
A partial
repeal of the Resolution was attempted in 1995, but the slimmed-down
version would actually have accentuated presidential power and eclipsed
Congress even further. House Speaker Newt Gingrich, that big opponent
of Bill Clinton, called on the House "to, at least on paper,
increase the power of President Clinton." Gingrich wanted to
"strengthen the current Democratic President because he is
the President of the United States. And the President of the United
States on a bipartisan basis deserves to be strengthened in foreign
affairs and strengthened in national security." Some 44 Republicans
abandoned Gingrich – these were still the days when at least a few
Republicans thought presidential power was something to restrain
– and the effort failed.
Fisher
and Adler insist that for the good of the republic, the War Powers
Resolution should be repealed:
Repeal
of the War Powers Resolution would eliminate the concession of
1973 that presidents may use military force anywhere in the world,
for whatever reason, for up to ninety days, if not longer. There
is no constitutional warrant for that proposition. Repeal would
remove that source of presidential power and put an end to fruitless
legislative debate over whether presidential "consultation"
had been sufficient, whether presidential reports were timely
and complete, and whether the president should have reported under
Section 4(a)(1), 4(a)(2), or some other provision. Repeal would
eliminate the current futile dash to federal court, hoping for
some kind of judicial answer. Members of Congress would understand
that only legislative action can stop the president: withholding
funds, prohibiting certain actions, and taking other concrete
measures.
A
War Powers Resolution is no more necessary than a balanced budget
amendment, and has proven at least as problematic. If you want a
balanced budget, then submit one. And if you want to restrain the
president’s power abroad, then do so – use the power of the purse
to cut off funding for foreign-policy adventurism. Mere resolutions
are no match for a determined executive, who can simply define "war,"
"consultation," and other critical terms to suit his agenda.
The War Powers Resolution, in short, is just one in a long line
of political gimmicks designed to give the impression that things
have changed, when in fact business has never been more usual.
(On this issue
see in particular Louis Fisher and David Gray Adler, "The War
Powers Resolution: Time to Say Goodbye," Political Science
Quarterly 113 [Spring 1998]: 120.)
February
4, 2006
Professor
Thomas E. Woods, Jr. [send
him mail; view
his website]
holds a bachelor’s degree in history from Harvard and his Ph.D.
from Columbia. He
is senior fellow in American history at the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. His
books include How
the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization (get a free chapter
here),
The
Church and the Market: A Catholic Defense of the Free Economy,
and the New York Times bestseller The
Politically Incorrect Guide to American History.
Copyright
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