Getting
Iraq War Funding Wrong Again
April 30, 2007
This week, Congress
finalized the controversial $124 billion Iraq emergency supplemental spending
bill, with the House and Senate both voting in favor of final passage. The
majority of my Republican colleagues and I voted against this measure, and the
president has vowed to veto the legislation.
In this final
version, the House leadership retained billions of dollars in pork meant to
attract skeptical votes, retained a watered-down version of the problematic
“benchmarks” that seek to micromanage the war effort, and continued to play
politics with the funding of critical veterans medical and other assistance. In
other words, this final version was even worse than the original in almost all
respects.
As I wrote when this
measure first came before the House, we have to make a clear distinction between
the Constitutional authority of Congress to make foreign policy, and the
Constitutional authority of the president, as commander in chief, to direct the
management of any military operation. We do no favor to the troops by
micromanaging the war from Capitol Hill while continuing to fund it beyond the
president’s request.
If one is unhappy
with our progress in Iraq after four years of war, voting to de-fund the war
makes sense. If one is unhappy with the manner in which we went to war, without
a constitutional declaration, voting against funding for that war makes equally
good sense. What occurred, however, was the worst of both. Democrats,
dissatisfied with the way the war is being fought, gave the president all the
money he asked for and more to keep fighting it, while demanding that he fight
it in the manner they see fit. That is definitely not a recipe for success in
Iraq and foreign policy in general.
What is the best way
forward in Iraq? Where do we go from here? First, Congress should admit its
mistake in unconstitutionally transferring war power to the president and in
citing United Nations resolutions as justification for war against Iraq. We
should never go to war because another nation has violated a United Nations
resolution. Then we should repeal the authority given to the president in 2002
and disavow presidential discretion in starting wars. Then we should start
bringing our troops home in the safest manner possible.
Though many will criticize the president for mis-steps in Iraq and at home, it is with the willing participation of Congress, through measures like this war funding bill, that our policy continues to veer off course. Additionally, it is with the complicity of Congress that we have become a nation of pre-emptive war, secret military tribunals, torture, rejection of habeas corpus, warrantless searches, undue government secrecy, extraordinary renditions, and uncontrolled spying on the American people. Fighting over there has nothing to do with preserving freedoms here at home. More likely the opposite is true.