Fixing
What’s Wrong With
Iraq
May 21, 2007
Many of my colleagues, faced with the reality that the war in
Iraq
is not going well, line up to place all the blame on the president. The
president “mismanaged” the war, they say. “It’s all the president’s
fault,” they claim. In reality, much of the blame should rest with Congress,
which shirked its constitutional duty to declare war and instead told the
president to decide for himself whether or not to go to war.
More than four years into that war, Congress continues to avoid its
constitutional responsibility to exercise policy oversight, particularly
considering the fact that the original authorization no longer reflects the
reality on the ground in
Iraq
.
According to the original authorization (Public Law 107-243) passed in late
2002, the president was authorized to use military force against
Iraq
to achieve the following two specific objectives only:
“(1) defend the
national security of the
United States
against the continuing threat posed by
Iraq
; and
(2) enforce all relevant United Nations Security Council resolutions regarding
Iraq
”
I was highly critical
of the resolution at the time, because I don’t think the
United States
should ever go to war to enforce United Nations resolutions. I was also
skeptical of the claim that
Iraq
posed a “continuing threat” to the
United States
.
As it turned out,
Iraq
had no weapons of mass destruction, no al-Qaeda activity, and no ability to
attack the
United States
. Regardless of this, however, when we look at the original authorization for
the use of force it is clearly obvious that our military has met both
objectives. Our military very quickly removed the regime of Saddam Hussein,
against whom the United Nations resolutions were targeted. A government approved
by the
United States
has been elected in post-Saddam
Iraq
, fulfilling the first objective of the authorization.
With both objectives
of the original authorization completely satisfied, what is the legal ground for
our continued involvement in
Iraq
? Why has Congress not stepped up to the plate and revisited the original
authorization?
This week I plan to
introduce legislation that will add a sunset clause to the original
authorization (Public Law 107-243) six months after passage. This is designed to
give Congress ample time between passage and enactment to craft another
authorization or to update the existing one. With the original objectives
fulfilled, Congress has a legal obligation to do so. Congress also has a moral
obligation to our troops to provide relevant and coherent policy objectives in
Iraq
.
Unlike other proposals, this bill does not criticize the president’s handling
of the war. This bill does not cut off funds for the troops. This bill does not
set a timetable for withdrawal. Instead, it recognizes that our military has
achieved the objectives as they were spelled out in law and demands that
Congress live up to its constitutional obligation to provide oversight. I am
hopeful that this legislation will enjoy broad support among those who favor
continuing or expanding the war as well as those who favor ending the war. We
need to consider anew the authority for
Iraq
and we need to do it sooner rather than later.