For 16 years American presidents have used vague authorizations of military force to wage protracted wars against amorphous and evolving enemies in multiple states in the Middle East.
Time has come for Congress to pass a new authorization against our new foe, the Islamic State, and against our old enemies, al-Qaeda and the Taliban, that sets a reasonable time limit for the ongoing conflict and is as specific as possible.
Rep. Mike Coffman, R-Aurora, introduced a new authorization for the use of military force on Thursday that would take just such a step to rein in the use of force abroad without explicit approval from Congress.
The bipartisan bill is similar to previous efforts to stop the executive branch’s abuse of the authorization made in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, and a second authorization for the war in Iraq in pursuit of weapons of mass destruction. We hope this effort, or similar measures in the Senate, get the traction needed to change the course of our military conflicts.
When President Barack Obama launched an attack on Libya to help rebels overthrow Col. Moammar Khadafy, he did so without authorization of Congress. He called the decision an effort to intervene to prevent an imminent humanitarian crisis, but targeted Khadafy’s troops, air fields and other government defenses. We were skeptical of the justification of the attack and called on Obama to get Congressional approval.
The decision to support regime change in Libya, although brief, contributed to instability in the entire region, and has proven to be a poor one. Such an action deserved a public debate on the floor of the House and Senate as our representatives weighed the decision to involve ourselves in a foreign conflict with little foreseeable end.
A narrower and time-limited authorization of force would be a step toward Congress reclaiming its long-held power of declaring war. We wrote in 2011 that “this nation’s founders wisely sought to limit the power of a single elected leader to wage war, and their logic is no less relevant today.”
Since World War II, history has been on the side of that balance of power — with few notable exceptions, including Obama’s attack in Libya and President Bill Clinton’s 1999 bombing in Kosovo. Congress prepared for the invasion of Afghanistan by passing a joint resolution after Sept. 11, 2001 authorizing “the use of United States Armed Forces against those responsible for the recent attacks launched against the United States.”
In 2002 Congress approved use of force in Iraq. Both have served as justifications for our ongoing fights.
But Coffman, a Marine veteran, points out both of those authorizations are insufficient to guide our current military operations, particularly, he noted when American troops are dealing with the Taliban in Afghanistan. He said the authorization from 2001 covered military interactions with al-Qaeda but fall short of extending to the Taliban, leaving our troops waiting for suspected combatants to first show harmful intent.
“The rules of engagement have been very confused,” Coffman said.
Our troops need our unconditional support: explicit authorization of their conflict, clear directives of engagement, and promises that we will not send them to war without a deliberative process before this nation’s once great legislative branch.
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