Obama?s War on Libya: A Constitutional View

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
Obama?s War on Libya: A Constitutional View
<!-- | http://madjacksports.com/forum/#comments_controls
-->Michael Boldin

Tenth Amendment CenterMarch 25, 2011

With military action taking place in Libya right now, the essential question must be asked: Is it even Constitutional? For those of you who don?t want to read more than a sentence or two, here?s the short answer. Absolutely not.

DELEGATED POWERS

The ninth and tenth amendments, while they didn?t add anything new, defined the Constitution. In short, they tell us that the federal government is only authorized to exercise those powers delegated to it in the Constitution?and nothing more. Everything else is either prohibited or retained by the states or people themselves.

What does this have to do with Libya? Well, whenever the federal government does anything, the first question should always be, ?where in the Constitution is the authority to do this?? What follows here is an answer regarding American bombs being dropped on Libya.

WHO DECIDES?

Ever since the Korean War, Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution has been regularly cited as justification for the President to act with a seemingly free reign in the realm of foreign policy ? including the initiation of foreign wars. But, it is Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution that lists the power to declare war, and this power is placed solely in the hands of Congress.
Article II, Section 2, on the other hand, refers to the President as the ?commander-in-chief of the army and navy of the United States.? What the founders meant by this clause was that once war was declared, it would then be the responsibility of the President, as the commander-in-chief, to direct the war.

Alexander Hamilton clarified this when he said that the President, while lacking the power to declare war, would have ?the direction of war when authorized.?

Thomas Jefferson reaffirmed this quite eloquently when, in 1801, he said that, as President, he was ?unauthorized by the Constitution, without the sanction of Congress, to go beyond the line of defense.?

In Federalist #69, Alexander Hamilton explained that the President?s authority:
?would be nominally the same with that of the King of Great Britain, but in substance much inferior to it. It would amount to nothing more than the supreme command and direction of the military and naval forces, as first general and admiral of the confederacy; while that of the British king extends to the declaring of war, and to the raising and regulating of fleets and armies; all which by the constitution under consideration would appertain to the legislature.?
James Madison warned us that the power of declaring war must be kept away from the executive branch when he wrote to Thomas Jefferson:
?The constitution supposes, what the history of all governments demonstrates, that the executive is the branch of power most interested in war, and most prone to it. It has accordingly with studied care vested the question of war in the legislature.?
WORDS HAVE MEANING

If, like any legal document, the words of the Constitution mean today just what they meant the moment it was signed, we must first look for the 18th Century meaning of the words used. Here?s a few common 18th-century definitions of the important words:

War: The exercise of violence against withstanders under a foreign command.
Declare: Expressing something before it is promised, decreed, or acted upon.
Invade: To attack a country; to make a hostile entrance

What does this all mean? Unless the country is being invaded, if congress does not declare war against another country, the president is constitutionally barred from waging it, no matter how much he desires to do so. Pre-emptive strikes and undeclared offensive military expeditions are not powers delegated to the federal government in the Constitution, and are, therefore, unlawful.

HOW IT APPLIES TODAY

Here?s the quick overview of how this all plays out:
  • In Constitutional terms, the United States is currently at war with Libya.
  • Libya is not invading the United States, nor has it threatened to do so.
  • Congress has not declared war. Barack Obama did.
Some would claim, and news articles are already reporting on it, that the 1973 war powers resolution authorizes the President to start a war as long as it?s reported to Congress within 48 hours. Then, Congress would have 60 days to authorize the action, or extend it.
The only question you should have to ask for this would be ? ?where in the Constitution is congress given the authority to change the constitution by resolution??

It doesn?t. And that resolution, in and of itself, is a Constitutional violation. More on that in a future article, of course.

James Madison had something to say about such a plan when he wrote:
?The executive has no right, in any case, to decide the question, whether there is or is not cause for declaring war.? [emphasis added]
War Powers resolution or no war powers resolution ? without a Congressional declaration, the president is not authorized to start an offensive military campaign. Period.


http://www.efoodsdirect.com/2010-holiday-special/?aid=13&adid=48
The bottom line? By using US Military to begin hostilities with a foreign nation without a Congressional declaration of war, Barack Obama has committed a serious violation of the Constitution. While he certainly is not the first to do so in regards to war powers, it?s high time that he becomes the last.
 

Lumi

LOKI
Forum Member
Aug 30, 2002
21,104
58
0
58
In the shadows
Libya Exposes Obama As Our Latest Neocon President

Libya Exposes Obama As Our Latest Neocon President

[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]Libya Exposes Obama As Our Latest Neocon President[/FONT][/FONT]

[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif][FONT=Times New Roman, Times, serif]by Richard M. Salsman[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]
[FONT=Georgia, Times New Roman, Times, serif]Forbes[/FONT][/FONT]​




In violation of the U.S. Constitution, President Obama has launched a semi-war against Libya, a nation that did not attack the U.S. and was not a threat to its self-interest or national security. But Obama and the neoconservative warmongers who inspire his unjust actions don?t even pretend to put America first. They presume foreign policy is morally ?noble? if it sacrifices America?s self-interest, her wealth, her soldiers and even her national security. And the more such values are sacrificed, the more ?success? they presume.


Although the U.S. Constitution properly designates the president as the commander-in-chief of the U.S. military, it also specifically states (in Article I, Section Eight) that the power ?to declare war? resides solely in the legislature ? in the U.S. Congress ? the body that also has the ?power of the purse,? to provide funding for legitimately-declared wars. In the same section Congress is given the power to ?suppress insurrections and repel invasions,? which implies that foreign nations properly may do likewise.

Yet Obama has invaded Libya without securing a declaration of war from Congress, and is intervening in what amounts to a civil war between equally-illiberal Arabs, one side of which seeks only to ?suppress insurrection.? Does this mean an insurrection in the U.S. against an illiberal Obama can be legitimately supported by foreign powers (say Canada) in a bombing campaign to degrade U.S. defenses and establish a no-fly zone on the East Coast?

It?s simply ludicrous for Obama to rationalize his actions on the grounds that he obtained permission from the U.N., NATO or the Arab League. The U.S. Constitution neither requires nor allows any of that; though it does require that Obama get permission ? an explicit war declaration ? from the U.S. Congress. He hasn?t done this, which is an impeachable defense, regardless of whether his predecessors committed the same wrong.

These entities are either innocuous or dangerous, for they either do not hold America?s interests as their primary aim (NATO) or actually stand opposed to America?s interests, security and the Constitution (U.N., Arab League). That?s why Obama took this route ? as did Truman, Bush I, Bush II and Clinton. They all put America second or last, the supposedly ?moral? stance. We?ve seen such evil before, as when Democratic presidents pushed America into disastrous wars ? see Woodrow Wilson (WWI), FDR (WWII), Truman (Korea), JFK and LBJ (Viet Nam) ? not solely out of U.S. self-interest, but to ?make the world safe for democracy,? which means: safe for a political system America?s Founders did not want and actively opposed.


Obama ? amid loud applause from neoconservative cheerleaders at The Weekly Standard, excuse-making ?anti-war? leftists at The New Republic, and the seeming approval of 70% of the American people ? defends his invasion and occupation of Libya on the grounds that it is not truly a ?war? but instead a ?humanitarian? mission. By that he means U.S. lives and wealth are to be sacrificed in order to prevent a savage political regime from harming or killing its own citizens, even if they are ?rebels? of equal or greater savagery. This is not ?humanitarian? or moral in the least; it?s an evil act, resting on an evil premise (that sacrifice is ?noble?) and an obscene abuse of American lives and liberties, with not a single selfish gain to be had in return.

Defenders of Obama?s current policy remind us that Gaddafi of Libya has been an enemy of the U.S. in the past; true enough, but nothing was done to vanquish him or his regime in the past? Why not? Why start now? Until a month ago Obama had retained the Bush designation (since 2003) of Gaddafi?s government as legitimate and off the U.S. enemies list. Why the sudden assault? Is it simply because ?victims? are observed in Libya?

What about the millions of victims of regime abuse in dozens of other countries like China, North Korea, Cuba, Venezuela, Yemen, Bahrain, Iran or Sudan? If Obama and the neoconservatives could get away with it, they?d invade many other nations too ? not to selfishly ?impose? Western values but merely to allow locals (as in Iraq, Afghanistan) to visit polling booths for the allegedly sacred act of pulling a lever and voting for a new group of rights-violating leaders. If it takes over a decade and vanquishes thousands of American lives and trillions of taxpayer dollars, that?s of no concern or consequence to the ?humanitarians,? and the more that is lost to America, the more sanctimonious and morally superior they feel.

 
Bet on MyBookie
Top