Just in case you forgot that you are living under a self-authorized presidential dictatorship, here’s what the Bush administration has to say on the role of Congress in determining the relations of the United States with Iraq:
The Bush administration says the 2002 congressional authorization to go to war in Iraq gives it the authority to conduct combat operations in Iraq and negotiate far-reaching agreements with the current Iraqi government without consulting Congress.
The assertion, jointly made Tuesday by U.S. Ambassador David Satterfield and Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs Mary Beth Long, drew an incredulous reaction from Democrats on a Joint House committee during a hearing on future U.S. commitments to Iraq.
“It’s the view of the administration that as long as there’s trouble in Iraq that you have authorization of this Congress to continue there in perpetuity and define trouble as you desire?†asked Rep. Gary Ackerman, D-N.Y.
“We have authorization to defend the national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by Iraq,†Satterfield replied. “The situation in Iraq continues to present a threat to the United States.â€
The Bush administration also feels it does not need to seek the authorization of Congress to ratify two pending agreements with Iraq: a “Strategic Framework†that would govern “normalized†relations with the U.S., and a Status of Forces Agreement that would govern the “authorities and protections†of U.S. troops in Iraq past Dec. 31, the expiration of a U.N. resolution that the administration says authorizes their presence.
The agreements will “not tie the hands of the next president or, indeed, this president,†Satterfield said. “They will ensure that every policy option remains on the table. The size of the U.S. presence in Iraq, the missions to be performed by such forces, if forces are present, are decisions for the president and for the next president to make.â€
And the president, the two officials said, can negotiate those agreements with the government of Iraq.
“You don’t intend to submit this particular Status of Forces Agreement with its authority to fight to the Congress for its approval?†asked Rep. Bill Delahunt, D-Mass.
“The secretary of defense has already testified, and I believe Secretary [of State Condoleezza] Rice has reiterated, that it is our intent and our obligation to coordinate with the members,†Long replied.
“Coordination is a lovely word, and I know consultation and notification are also words that are being used and will be used,†Delahunt said. “But I used the word, authorization,’ †Delahunt said. “It’s the position of this administration that they do not need to come before Congress to receive authorization?
“That’s correct,†Long said.
“That’s correct,†Satterfield echoed.
Got it? The president decides all. That is the logical implication of the administration’s position. For, if the president decides to wage more war or increase the size of the US forces in Iraq, then that decision commits the US to spend more money and kill more people. And the consequences of such actions will affect everything else that happens in this country. But the (incredulous? hah!) Democrats have taken impeachment off the table and have authorized the expenditure of every dime that Bush wants for the war. The only thing that the Democrats do not like about the imperial war policy is that Bush is running it and not them. It will continue in the next administration whether the president is McCain, Clinton or Obama. Only the rhetoric will change.
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#1 by KipEsquire on March 6th, 2008
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If the position of the United States government is that Iraq is at this moment a sovereign nation (and that is our position), then any “far-reaching agreements with the current Iraqi government” would be “treaties” in the constitutional sense and would require ratification by the Senate. The AUMF, which is neither a treaty nor a constituitional amendment, simply cannot apply to “far-reaching agreements with the current Iraqi government” any more than it could apply to “far-reaching agreements with the current Canadian government” or “far-reaching agreements with the current Australian government.”
#2 by Libertarian on March 6th, 2008
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Is it January 2009 yet?
#3 by Don Bangert on March 7th, 2008
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Looks like it’s time to cancel the AUMF. It was a bad idea (and unconstitutional, IMO) in the first place and now we see its morphing into something it was never meant to authorize.