THE US CONGRESS AND
DECISION-MAKING ON WAR
DEBATES ON WAR POWERS
IN THE SEPARATION OF POWERS SYSTEM
83
FIIA Working Paper
February 2015
Anna Kronlund
e Finnish Institute of International Affairs
Kruunuvuorenkatu 4
FI-00160 Helsinki
tel. +358 9 432 7000
fax. +358 9 432 7799
www.fiia.fi
ISBN: 978-951-769-438-4
ISSN: 2242-0444
Language editing: Lynn Nikkanen
e Finnish Institute of International Affairs is an independent research
institute that produces high-level research to support political
decision-making and public debate both nationally and internationally.
All manuscripts are reviewed by at least two other experts in the field
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for the views expressed ultimately rests with the authors.
Anna Kronlund
Senior Research Fellow
e Finnish Institute of International Affairs
3
TABLE OF CONTENTS
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 4
Introduction 5
Framework of the Working Paper 6
Constitutionally granted war powers in theory and practice 8
Congressional authorization of war and its problems 14
e 1973 War Powers Resolution and the politics of interpretation 17
Examples of war powers debates – the cases of Libya and Syria 19
Concluding remarks 25
CONGRESSIONAL DEBATES 27
REFERENCED CONGRESSIONAL AND LEGISLATIVE MATERIALS 28
BIBLIOGRAPHY 30
4
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Debates on the war-making powers of the US Congress and the President have been
topical of late. President Barack Obama’s actions in relation to Libya (2011), Syria (2013),
and more recently the “targeted” actions against ISIL in Iraq and Syria, have raised
discussions about the powers of the President as the Commander-in-Chief vis-à-vis the
powers of Congress. If and when should the President seek congressional authorization
for the use of US armed forces?
This paper argues that Congress has constitutionally established but contingently
manifest powers when it comes to decision-making on war. To examine this, the paper
explicates the procedures of congressional involvement in the decision-making process
on war and illustrates congressional debates on the war powers between the branches of
government. The recent cases of Libya and Syria are examined in more detail to indicate
the (aspired) role of Congress.
The powers between the branches of government are not static but rather (re)interpreted
and (re)defined in different political contexts. War powers are one example to explicate
the constitutional powers of the US Congress and the President that are divided, and to
examine how these powers are considered and debated. While the debates are considered
against the backdrop of the Constitution, the question to consider is how they relate to
the political realities and power relations in changing political settings.
The paper also explicates the role of Congress in the broader perspective rather than
through the legislative record and voting only, even though the members of Congress
have particularly emphasized debate (and voting) in the decision-making process.
Concepts such as collective judgment, popular sovereignty and separation of powers are
used in this context to indicate the role of Congress in this field. The changing nature
of war and the concept of war pose new challenges for understanding and defining the
powers related to “war making”, and are reflected in the continuing debates concerning
the scope and relevancy of the power of Congress (and the President) when it comes to
decision-making on the use of US armed forces.
5
Introduction
1
The alignment of US foreign policy has been the subject of much discussion recently.
The rebalancing towards Asia, the current events in the Middle East and the situation
in Ukraine, debates on the NSA and intelligence gathering, and the use of drones in
counter-terrorism have drawn attention to US foreign policy under the administration of
President Barack Obama.
Foreign policy decision-making is often seen as a set of executive actions, yet the
executive dominance of US foreign policy and the congressional involvement in making
it seem to be at odds. The tension between the branches of government in the foreign
policy context is nothing new, however.
2
The trend for increasing the powers of the
President in relation to foreign policy has been evident in the United States since the
Second World War.
3
Despite the certain executive dominance in foreign affairs, the legislature should be, and
is, often involved. Recently, the US Congress has, for numerous reasons, taken an active
role in foreign policy discussions. The cooperation between the branches of government
in foreign policy is often actualized in the measures related to funding, treaties and
legislation.
4
Recent examples of the President seeking support from Congress for his actions and
US foreign policy priorities during the 113th Congress include Obama’s appeal for
congressional support for the Counterterrorism Partnership Fund (up to 5 billion)
launched in his speech at the Military Academy Commencement Ceremony on May 28,
2014, as well as the announcement made by the President on June 3, 2014 during his
visit to Poland, stating that he would request congressional approval for funding (one
billion) to support the effort to bolster the security of US NATO allies in Europe.
5
After
the 2014 midterm elections, President Obama also referred to the appropriateness of the
engagement of Congress with both additional funding and a new Authorization to Use
Military Force (AUMF) against ISIL.
6
1 I would like to thank a colleague of mine, Juha Käpylä, for his comments on earlier drafts of this Working
Paper.
2 R. B. Zoellick, Congress and the Making of US Foreign Policy. Survival, 41–4, Winter 1999–2000, 20.
3 See for example Schlesinger’s e Imperial Presidency (1973).
4 See e.g. the enacted measure “To impose sanctions with respect to the Russian Federation, to provide
additional assistance to Ukraine, and for other purposes” (H.R.5859). http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/
bdquery/z?d113:h.r.5859
5 See Obama’s remarks at the Military Academy Commencement Ceremony, May 28, 2014: http://www.
whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/05/28/remarks-president-united-states-military-academy-
commencement-ceremony. See Obama’s remarks in Poland, June 3, 2014: http://www.whitehouse.gov/
the-press-office/2014/06/03/remarks-president-obama-and-president-komorowski-poland-joint-
press-conf
6 Remarks by the President at a Press Conference, November 5, 2014: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-
press-office/2014/11/05/remarks-president-press-conference. Senate Foreign Relations passed the
authorization for three years at the end of the 113th Congress (no boots on the ground) but neither the
Senate nor the House acted upon it before Congress adjourned (Matishak, 2015).
6
The powers of Congress
7
are examined in this paper from a specific war and emergency
powers perspective.
8
The paper draws on both theoretical and empirical aspects of
the role of Congress in the decision-making on war.
9
The aim is not to encompass all
conceivable contingencies or developments, but to consider congressional involvement
in the decision-making on war in the separation of powers system. The more historical
aspects of the paper relate to the framing of a certain turning point by Congress in the
early 1970s to reassert its powers by enacting the War Powers Resolution (WPR) in 1973
and the National Emergencies Act (NEA) in 1976. The more recent developments in the
decision-making on war are selectively discussed to explicate the debates on the powers
exerted between the branches of government in exceptional situations.
While US foreign policy and conducting war is often actualized in the measures taken
by the President, there is a certain role for Congress to play that is also actualized in
the congressional debates on the powers exerted between the branches of government.
The first part of the paper sets the framework for the Working Paper by introducing
the constitutional and legislative frameworks of war powers. The following part of the
paper indicates the war powers of Congress in the separation of powers system and the
problematique of the declaration of war. What will be considered in particular is the
constitutional interpretation of war powers and the contingent nature of these powers.
In the latter part of the paper the practice of war-making is analyzed by taking a closer
look at the congressional debates on war powers, also in relation to the question of the
use of US military force in respect of Libya in 2011 and Syria in 2013.
Framework of the Working Paper
There are numerous studies on the US Congress and foreign policy.
10
The main emphasis
here is to take a more thematic approach to the topic and to look at it largely from the
separation of powers system and Congress’s perspective as exemplified in the debates on
war and emergency powers. The debates on the executive-legislative relations regarding
the decision-making on war can be examined through three lenses in particular: the
Constitutional framework, political realities and historical precedents, and the statutory
legislation. The distinction is not explicit in the sense that the categories often overlap.
The Constitutional interpretation is commonly connected to the historical and political
precedents, or to the enactment of measures such as the War Powers Resolution of 1973.
7 It should be noted that many of the congressional proceedings discussed in this Working Paper fall within
the time frame of the 113th Congress, which met between 3.1.2013 and 3.1.2015. Some proposals may be
reintroduced in the 114th Congress, while others may not.
8 By congressional involvement in war-making this paper refers in particular to the introduction of armed
forces by congressional declaration of war and/or authorizing the President to act through resolutions such
as AUMF 2001 or AUMF 2002. It should be mentioned, however, that the other powers of Congress, such as
the power of the purse, are important to note in this context. e writer recognizes, but does not consider
in detail, the debates revolving around the concept of war-making and the problematique of the question
of authority related to the conflicts that do not necessarily fulfil the description of “war” as such.
9 e writer recognizes the wider perspective of US foreign policy and Congress’s role in it, but due to the
focus of this paper questions such as foreign aid or diplomatic efforts, sanctions, trade negotiations (TTIP)
and so forth are excluded from it. It should also be mentioned that the Supreme Court has considered cases
related to the powers of Congress and the President in exceptional situations, such as in Youngstown vs.
Sawyer (1952), but the court cases are not considered in detail here.
10 See, e.g. J. M. Lindsay, Congress and Foreign Policy: Why Hill Matters. Political Science Quarterly. Vol. 107,
no. 4, 1992; Zoellick, 2000.
7
By enacting the resolution, Congress not only considered the constitutional war powers
but also set a political precedent.
The Constitutional framework establishes the foundation for a discussion on the war
powers. The US Constitution is based on the twin ideas of separation of powers, and
checks and balances. The constitutionally established framework defines the powers of
the President and Congress but the relationship between the branches of government is
not unaltered. The powers exerted between the branches of government are dependent,
for example, on the contemporary political context, power relations within and between
the executive and legislature, and public opinion and the current political agenda, to
mention just a few key factors.
The war powers of Congress and the President are defined in the Constitution, namely
in Articles I and II. The Constitution grants Congress the power to declare war, but
defines the executive branch as the Commander-in-Chief. Congress also has other
related powers enumerated in Article I, including the power “to grant Letters of Marque
and Reprisal, and make Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water; To raise and
support Armies; To provide and maintain a Navy; To make Rules for the Government
and Regulation of the land and naval Forces; To provide for calling forth the Militia
to execute the Laws of the Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions; and
To provide for organizing, arming, and disciplining, the Militia”. Most importantly,
Congress has the power to legislate.
11
The Commander-in-Chief powers are not explicated in further detail in Article II of the
Constitution. It has been acknowledged, however, that the US president has the power
to respond to sudden attacks. The debates on presidential war powers have focused
on the question of whether the President can unilaterally commit US Armed Forces to
hostilities when the power to declare war is constitutionally granted only to Congress.
As an institution, the President is generally considered better suited to respond to the
different situations requiring swift and decisive action.12 For example, former Defence
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld referred to the ideas of the Founding Fathers and the
constitutional framework when describing the institutional differences between the
branches of government in conducting war as follows:
By Constitutional design, Congress is intended to be slow – to promote
deliberation and the weeding out of ideas that may be popular for a moment,
but imprudent. Congress was not intended or organized to meet the demands of
operation decision-making in a crisis. America’s founding fathers knew what
they were doing when they put the powers to conduct war in the hands of a single
commander-in-chief, not those of a committee composed of the 535 members of
the national legislature.
13
The debates on war powers between the President and Congress are generally divided
into three different categorizations: the “presidentialists” refer to the prerogatives of the
President under the Commander-in-Chief clause; the “congressionalists” refer to the
constitutional power of Congress to declare war; and the “shared power” group includes
11 See the US Constitution 1787, Article I, sections 8 and 1.
12 See e.g. Alexander Hamilton’s arguments in the Federalist Papers no. 74, 1788.
13 D. Rumsfeld, Known and Unknown. A Memoir. Sentinel Penguin Books, New York, 2011, 603.
8
those who argue that both Congress and the President have a significant role in war-
making.
14
While the powers between the executive and legislature are constitutionally
established, there is some room for interpretation.
Constitutionally granted war powers in theory and practice
While the Constitution establishes the formal legal framework between the branches
of government when it comes to the decision-making on war, the question is to what
extent the Constitution should be read taking into account the political realities of the
time. The conception of the act of declaring war has changed significantly since it was
established in the Philadelphia Convention in 1787, not least because the practice of war
itself has transformed over the years.
The core principles of the Constitution are still considered valid and meaningful, as
exemplified in the following argument during the Senate debate on authorization for use
of military force against Iraq in 2002: “The subsequent 204 years have demonstrated
many times the wisdom and foresight of our Constitution. Its principles should give
special pause to this body when being admonished by the President, by any President,
not to ‘‘tie my hands’’. Those words indicate a regrettable lack of regard for Congress
and for our constitutional standing as a coequal branch of Government. Our Nation’s
Founders darn well wanted to tie a President’s hands”.
15
While the conception of declaring war has changed, so have the powers of the branches
of government. According to former US President Woodrow Wilson (1913–1921), by the
early 20th century the presidency had already changed compared to the idea espoused
by the Founding Fathers. He argued in his book Constitutional Government in 1917
[1908] that the presidency had come to wield a certain amount of law-making power in
addition to its traditional power to execute established law:
The makers of the Constitution seem to have thought of the President as what
the stricter Whig theorists wished the king to be: only the legal executive, the
presiding and guiding authority in the application of law and the execution of
policy. His veto upon legislation was only his ‘check’ on Congress, – was a power
of restraint not of guidance. He was empowered to prevent bad laws, but he was
not to be given an opportunity to make good ones. As a matter of fact he has
become very much more. He has become the leader of his party and the guide of
the national political purpose, and therefore in legal action. The Constitutional
structure of the government has hampered and limited his action in these
significant roles, but it has not prevented it. The influence of the Presidents have
varied with the men who have been presidents and with the circumstances of their
times, but the tendency has been unmistakably disclosed, and springs out of the
very nature of government itself. It is merely the proof that our government is a
living, organic thing, and must like every other government, work out the close
14 e categorization relies on Katzmann’s 1990 wording. Phelps and Boylan (2002, 647–648) have identified
four different groups in the War Powers Resolution debates that they refer to as “congressionalists”,
“presidentialists”, “legalists” and “realists”.
15 Senator Mark Dayton (D-MN), S. J. Res. 45, Congressional Record, October 10, 2002, S10244.
9
synthesis of active parts which can exist only when leadership is lodged in some
one man or group of men.
16
Wilson’s argument above refers to the flexibility of the Constitution, which has enabled,
for example, the expansion of the powers of the President, particularly in foreign policy
matters. This interpretation has been widely disseminated – but also criticized – ever
since. In the following illustrative argument by Representative Mark Kirk (R-IL),
17
the
changes to presidential war power and the power of Congress to declare war are located
in the 1950s and 1960s, primarily in relation to the Korean and Vietnam Wars:
With regard to military force, our founding fathers debated the proper place for
the power to make war at the constitutional convention and feared it most in
a new democracy. They specifically rejected proposals to give such a power to
the President and directed that only the elected representatives of the American
people in our Congress could declare war. For most of our history, Presidents
followed the restrictions of the Constitution when going to war. In the 1950s
and 1960s, we deviated from the clear requirements of the Constitution to our
profound detriment.
18
Congress has responded to this trend towards increasing executive powers. To reassert
its constitutional powers in foreign policy matters, Congress has enacted measures such
as the War Powers Resolution of 1973 and the National Emergencies Act of 1976.
19
The
War Powers Resolution, which was enacted over President Richard Nixon’s veto and
required a two-thirds majority, was considered important at the time. The debates
on the resolution raised many controversial questions regarding, for example, the
interpretation of the Constitution, political realities, power relations and substance, as
well as the meaning and significance of the resolution.
The opponents, for example, questioned the timing of passing the resolution directly
after the Vietnam War, and because the majority of Congress was controlled by the
Democrats, and the White House by the Republican Party. Proponents of the resolution,
however, also referred to timing, indicating the actual imbalance of powers and the
support of the resolution in Congress, which was indicated by the two-thirds majority to
override President Nixon’s veto.
20
The War Powers Resolution has been heavily criticized since its enactment. The
idea behind the resolution was to restore the constitutionally envisaged “collective
judgment” concerning the use of US armed forces in hostilities. The consultation and
reporting requirements included in the resolution provided Congress with a role in war-
making. But in practice these parts have not really fulfilled their purpose. The purpose
and policy section of the joint resolution indicated that the Commander-in-Chief powers
of the President to introduce US armed forces into hostilities should be used only when
16 W. Wilson, Constitutional Government in the United States. Columbia University Press, New York, 1917
[1908], 59–60.
17 Each name of a member of the US Congress is followed by a code, where the first letter indicates either
Democrat (D) or Republican (R), while the latter two letters indicate the Congress member’s home state.
18 H. J. Res. 114, Congressional Record, October 8, 2002, H7273.
19 Congress also passed the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (P.L.95–223) in 1977.
20 See A. Kronlund, “Parliamentary Control of the Exceptional Situations. Debating the Reassertion of the
Constitutional Powers of the US Congress”. University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, 2013, (dissertation).
10
there is a declaration of war, other statutory authorization, or a national emergency. The
President is required to submit a report to Congress after introducing US armed forces
into hostilities, thereby setting a time limit of 60 days for the use of such forces. After
the 60 days (and a possible 30-day extension), the President should withdraw the use of
force unless Congress declares war, provides other statutory authorization, or is unable
to meet because of a national emergency (see P. L. 93–148 for details).
Presidents have reported under the War Powers Resolution, without specifically citing
the provision of the resolution, and have thus avoided triggering the 60-day timeline
for the use of troops without a congressional declaration of war or other statutory
authorization.
21
For example, President Obama reported to Congress in compliance
with the War Powers Resolution in June 2014 in order to keep Congress informed about
US military actions in relation, for example, to “military operations in support of U.S.
counterterrorism objectives”, and more recently related to actions against ISIL in Syria
and Iraq.
22
Due to the problematique related to the resolution, members of Congress have proposed
amending or even repealing it. For example in 1989, Senators John Danforth (R-MO),
George Mitchell (D-ME), Robert Byrd (D-VW), David Boren (D-OK), John Warner (R-
VA), Samuel Nunn (D-GA) and William Cohen (R-ME) proposed an amendment that
would have terminated the provision requiring the withdrawal of troops after 60 days
of submitting the report under provision 4 (1). The amendment would have required
affirmative action from Congress either to authorize or to demand the withdrawal of the
armed forces.
23
The question of affirmative action on the part of Congress was discussed
as early as the 1970s. In 2008, the War Powers Commission proposed that the War Powers
Resolution should be repealed and replaced by the War Powers Consultation Act.
24
In addition to war powers, the subject of emergency powers sparked debates in the
United States in the 1970s. Generally speaking, emergency power provisions of some
sort have been included in the constitutions of most modern democracies.
25
To some
extent, the United States has been an exception to this trend. The US Constitution does
21 ere are numerous studies on the War Powers Resolution, its substance and meaning, related
constitutional questions, and its “usability”. See e.g. Grimmet 2010b, Spong 1975, Glennon 1984a & Glennon
1984b, and Fisher & Adler 1998.
22 See http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/06/12/letter-president-war-powers-resolution
Recently, there have been discussions on the reporting requirement related to War Powers Resolution
letters to Congress in relation to US air strikes in Iraq (Goldsmith, 2014).
23 R. A. Katzmann, War Powers: Toward A New Accommodation. In omas E. Mann (ed.) A Question of
Balance: e President, the Congress, and Foreign Policy. e Brookings Institution Press, Washington,
1990, 67.
24 See the National War Powers Commission Report 2008.
25 See J. Ferejohn & P. Pasquino, “e Law of the Exception: A typology of Emergency Powers”, ICON –
International Journal of Constitutional Law, Vol. 2, Issue 2, April 2004, 210.
11
not recognize any explicit emergency power provision.
26
The purpose of the National
Emergencies Act passed in Congress in 1976 was to ensure that the constitutional
separation of powers would not be overlooked in the event of emergency circumstances.
By creating statutory guidelines for national emergencies – including their proclamation,
execution, and termination – Congress proceeded to restore the distinction between
normal and exceptional situations, which had become blurred due to the continued
emergencies and statutory granted emergency power provisions available for use at any
given time.
This legislation is still valid. After the 9/11 terrorist attacks, President George W. Bush
declared through a proclamation (7463) that a national emergency existed according
to the National Emergencies Act of 1976. Most recently, in September 2014, President
Obama, in a notice of continuation of the National Emergencies message, announced
that the threat that had led to the proclamation of a national emergency after 9/11 still
remained, and the emergency proclamation was duly extended for one year.
27
The reforms of the 1970s were not only about new legislation. The institutional changes
in the early 1970s enhanced the possibilities of Congress to be part of foreign policy
decision-making. The seniority and Committee systems were reorganized in addition to
the information system in order to provide more possibilities for Congress to stay up-
to-date in respect of foreign policy matters.
28
In the decades following the Vietnam War,
Congress altered the procedures and structures of decision-making concerning foreign
policy and defence in several ways.
29
Studies on the role of parliaments in relation to war have largely been bypassed in the
comparative research on parliaments, as argued by Dieterich et al (2008).
30
The US
Congress has been an exception to this trend, although the focus has not really been
26 ere is no explicit emergency power provision in the Constitution. is should be compared, however,
with the following two provisions of the Constitution, which are considered to refer to “emergency”. (On
the constitutional emergency power provisions, see e.g. Gross & Aoláin Ní 2006.) Article I, Section 8: “e
Congress shall have Power […] To provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the Union,
suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions.” Article I, Section 9: “e Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus
shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.”
e following two references could be mentioned as well: Article IV, Section 4: “e United States shall
guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government, and shall protect each of them
against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature cannot
be convened), against domestic Violence.” Article II, Section 4: “[e President] … may, on extraordinary
Occasions, convene both Houses, or either of them, and in Case of Disagreement between them, with
Respect to the Time of Adjournment, he may adjourn them to such Time as he shall think proper;”
27 See http://fas.org/irp/news/2001/09/fr091801.html for President Bush’s proclamation. On the
continuation for one year, see http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/04/continuation-
national-emergency-notice. More recently, President Obama also continued “the national emergency
with respect to persons who commit, threaten to commit, or support terrorism”, which was declared by
President George W. Bush on September 23, 2001 on the basis of the International Economic Emergency
Powers Act http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2014/09/17/notice-congress-terrorism
28 Zoellick, 2000; W. Kravitz, e Advent of the Modern Congress: e Legislative Reorganization Act of 1970.
Legislative Studies Quarterly, Vol. 15, No. 3. Aug. 1990.
29 See J. M. Lindsay, 1994, 285–288.
30 ere are, however, studies on debates conducted on the “war powers” of parliaments, see e.g. T.
Häkkinen, “e Royal Prerogative Redefined: Parliamentary Debate on the Role of the British Parliament in
Large-scale Military Deployments, 1982–2003.” University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, 2014 (dissertation).
12
on the actual congressional debates as such.
31
The US Congress has been seen as an
example of a “parliament” (legislature) with considerable “war powers”, particularly
after it enacted the War Powers Resolution in 1973.
32
However, the role of the US
Congress in decision-making on war is ambiguous in part because of the experienced
controversiality of the War Powers Resolution after its enactment.
33
So far, the Supreme
Court has not decided on the constitutionality of the resolution. Further, there are also
differing opinions among constitutional lawyers concerning the congressional war
powers. What is also different when compared to the parliamentary system is that in the
US system both the legislature and the executive are responsible to the people.
34
In the framework of the presidential system, Congress does not have the same
possibilities to control the executive branch as, for example, parliaments in a cabinet
government system. Congress can act rather independently, however. “[As] the
president is not electorally dependent on the assembly … [it] allows legislators to
challenge the executive to a far greater degree than in other advanced industrial
democracies, almost all of which are parliamentary systems”.
35
Further, the powers of
Congress to legislate, investigate and fund/defund (i.e. the power of the purse) have been
regarded as superior to any other national legislative branch.
36
Whereas there is a certain independency between the branches of government,
war powers are one of the constitutionally divided powers. As the division of war-
making powers between Congress and the President indicates, the interrelations
between the branches of government are part of the decision-making processes in
the United States. In relation to the dependencies, Robert B. Zoellick writes that the
executive branch of government cannot uphold extended policies without support
from Congress.
37
The actual decision-making process, namely how disagreements are
31 As an exception, see G. A. Phelps and T. S. Boylan, Discourses of War: e Landscape of Congressional
Rhetoric. Armed Forces & Society. Vol. 28, No. 4, 2002; Kronlund, 2013.
32 See Dieterich, et al. “Strengthening Parliamentary ‘War Powers’ in Europe: Lessons from 25 National
Parliaments”. DCAF Policy Papers, 2008, 6–7. An example of the differences between Congress and the
British parliament in relation to the war against Iraq, particularly from the committee perspective, is
provided by MP Andrew Tyrie. According to him, in the US Congress the main debates on Iraq took place
in the committees, which differed from Westminster (see Tyrie, 2004, 29). In relation to the Iraq war,
the “more substantive and generally accepted” role of the committees in Congress had two follow-ups.
First, the committees and Congress have access to intelligence materials at regular intervals. Second,
compared to the committees in Westminster, Congressional committees are more active and involved
with the executive branch. is is exemplified by the argument of the Chairman of the House Armed
Services Committee in September 2003 according to which during the preceding 12 months, either in the
Committee rooms or on the House floor, 44 distinguished classified briefings were conducted, “where
members can engage directly with either the Secretary of Defense personally or his senior civilian and
uniformed advisers” (Tyrie, 2004, 30). It should be mentioned, however, that congressional committees are
considered to have a different role in the first place (see e.g. Pradshaw and Pring, 1972). Nonetheless, Mann
and Ornstein (2006, 74–75) have criticized the lack of oversight activities of Congress related to the Iraq
war.
33 Dieterich et al., 2008, 6-7.
34 Ibid.
35 T. Power & N. C. Rae (eds.) Exporting Congress? e Influence of the U.S. Congress on World Legislatures.
University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburg, 2006, 5. See also Dieterich et al.’s 2008 & 2010 comparison of the
war-making powers of the US Congress with the war powers of parliaments.
36 S. Huntington, American Ideals Versus American Institutions. In Ikenberry John G. (ed.) American Foreign
Policy eoretical Essays, 5th edition. Houghton Mifflin Company, New York, Boston, 2005, 241.
37 Zoellick, 2000, 23.
13
settled and compromises made, can be seen as a complex and controversial procedure.
Related to this, it has been pointed out by Zoellick that, “Those from parliamentary
systems sometimes do not recognize how America’s separation of powers produces a
distinctive process of governance”.
38
As discussed, the role of Congress in either supporting and/or overseeing is relevant. The
political setting and the power relations, as well as the party dynamics in Congress and
between Congress and the White House, are pertinent in this context. In times of unified
government, the role of Congress as a separate branch of government and its oversight
duties have sometimes been questioned (compare this, for example, with the debates
after 9/11).
39
The support of the President’s party can also play a meaningful role even when it does
not control the majority of Congress. In relation to George W. Bush’s government,
the then Secretary of Defence, Robert Gates, commented on the strategy concerning
the debate on the surge related to the war in Iraq by saying: “We knew we were in a
precarious position with Congress. Everything depended on the Republican minority in
the Senate holding firm in using that body’s rules to prevent legislative action by a now
Democratic-controlled Congress to impose deadlines and timelines that would tie the
president’s hands”.
40
The argument indicates the role of the Republican party at the time
even in the minority position.
Congress has been also criticized for the “rally ’round the flag” phenomenon.
41
During
the Bush administration, Gates described the congressional procedures during the war
against Iraq as follows:
Almost immediately after the president’s January 10 announcement of the surge,
both Republican and Democratic members of Congress began looking for ways
to reverse it or at least express their disapproval. In the Senate, Republican John
Warner put forward a bipartisan resolution opposing the surge but supporting
the forces going after al-Qaeda in Anbar province. The Democratic leadership
supported Warner’s nonbinding resolution, believing that if they could get that
passed, they could then move toward stronger steps, such as attaching conditions
to war spending. But Warner could not rally the necessary sixty votes to prevent
a filibuster, so the resolution quietly died. Too many senators just couldn’t bring
themselves to support a bill that seemed to undercut the troops.
42
38 Ibid.
39 For example, Howell & Pevehouse (2007, 96) have argued that partisan politics has an effect on the support
or opposition of Congress for presidents’ “calls for war”.
40 R. M. Gates, Duty: Memoirs of a Secretary at War. Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 2014, 50.
41 e question of national unity is often connected to foreign policy-making. Senator Richard Durbin (D-IL),
during the discussion on the measure “to support sovereignty and democracy in Ukraine, and for other
purposes”, referred to the expectation of the unity in foreign policy decision-making as follows: “ere are
some differences between us. ere are some differences between the parties. ere comes a moment—
and there always has, at least in the past—where we decide we are going to stand together as a nation,
particularly when it comes to issues of foreign policy”. Congressional Record, Support for the sovereignty,
integrity, democracy, and economic stability of Ukraine Act of 2014 – motion to proceed, March 24, 2014,
S1684.
42 Gates, 2014, 53–54. For further details on the legislative efforts of Congress, see “to use war funding bill to
force a change in strategy”, Gates, 2014, 55.
14
The above argument indicates Congress’s problematique in challenging the executive
actions, but also distinguishes the elements of Congressional powers, such as the power
of the purse and passing (non-binding) resolutions, which will be considered later in this
paper.
Congressional authorization of war and its problems
Congress has formally declared war on only 11 occasions in US history, the last instance
of which was in 1942.43 It has, however, authorized the President to use the armed
forces, for example in 1964 related to the Tonkin Gulf incident, after 9/11 for the so-
called Global War on Terror (GWOT), and in 2002 for the purposes of intervening in
Iraq.
44
In 2001, by a vote of 98 to 0 in the Senate and 420 to 1 in the House, Congress
authorized President George W. Bush to “use all necessary and appropriate force
against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized,
committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or
harbored such organizations or persons […]”.
45
In 2002, Congress passed a measure with a vote of 77–23 in the Senate and 296–133 in the
House stating that “The President is authorized to use the Armed Forces of the United
States as he determines to be necessary and appropriate in order to (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”.
The language of the resolution indicates it is consistent with the War Powers Resolution:
“Nothing in this joint resolution supersedes any requirement of the War Powers
Resolution”.
46
The authorizations for the use of military force have been considered problematic for
two reasons. First, they have remained valid for a long time. Unlike the Tonkin Gulf
Resolution, which was eventually repealed in 1971, the 2001 and 2002 AUMFs are still
valid and have been referred to in the current discussions concerning the authority to
act against ISIS (see the discussion on p. 24). Second, the resolutions are sometimes seen
as problematic because of their substance and wording.
47
The 9/11 AUMF, in particular,
43 See declarations of war by Congress https://www.senate.gov/pagelayout/history/h_multi_sections_and_
teasers/WarDeclarationsbyCongress.htm
44 Declarations of War and Authorizations of the use of force by Benjamin Wittes are listed in the Lawfare
blog (Jan. 18, 2013). e classification is based on the article “Congressional Authorization and the War
on Terrorism” by Curtis A. Bradley and Jack L. Goldsmith http://www.lawfareblog.com/wiki/the-lawfare-
wiki-document-library/declarations-of-war-and-authorizations-of-military-force/. See also CRS Report
for Congress (April 18, 2014) Declarations of War and Authorizations for the Use of Military Force: Historical
Background and Legal Implications and CRS Report for Congress (January 27, 2010) Instances of Use of
United States Armed Forces Abroad, 1789-2009. e estimated number provided by the State Department
is 125 for the use of military force in hostilities, whereas the Congressional Research Service number is
215 (Zeisberg 2013, 17). Zeisberg (ibid. 18) also refers to the fact that while few wars have actually been
declared, many of them have been authorized or supported with the resolutions.
45 S.J.Res. 23 (P.L.107-40), https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/107/sjres23 ; http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-
bin/bdquery/z?d107:s.j.res.00023:
46 See H.J.Res. 114 (P.L.107–243). http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d107:h.j.res.00114:; http://www.
gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-107publ243/html/PLAW-107publ243.htm
47 On the AUMF 2001, see e.g. Bradley and Goldsmith, 2005.
15
is often seen as unprecedented in US history as its precise meaning seems to remain
unresolved even today.
48
According to a recent study, there have been more than 30 instances during the
presidencies of George W. Bush and Barack Obama to undertake or to continue to
undertake military or involved activities under the authority of the 2001 AUMF. For
example, President Bush relied on the AUMF to deploy US armed forces in Afghanistan
in 2001 to remove the Taliban from power and to close down the “training sites and
safe harbors” of al-Qaeda.
49
However, while ambiguous, the resolutions are not blank
cheques as such; by authorizing powers, Congress usually also sets limitations on the
available executive powers.
50
At the minimum, the actions taken by the President can be
evaluated in the future against the background of the authorization.
The question related to declaring or authorizing war is also a question of terminating war
because the Constitution is silent on the issue.
51
Returning to the state of peace in the
United States has been possible in three different ways: through legislation ending the
conflict; via a proclamation by the President; and in accordance with a treaty that has
been negotiated and signed by the President and ratified after the advice and consent of
the Senate. The Supreme Court has recognized the legitimacy of all three of the above.
52
The authority of the resolutions could therefore be repealed. On the part of Congress
there have been proposals to repeal the AUMF of 2001 (see for instance a proposal by
Representative Barbara Lee (D-CA) in 2011 (H.R.2859) and 2013 (H.R.198). In addition,
Representative Adam Schiff (D-CA) introduced an amendment to the FY2014 military
appropriations bill that would have cut funding for the purposes to be used under AUMF
2001. But the amendment failed.
53
The possibility to repeal the AUMF of 2001 was also mentioned by President Obama
in a 2013 speech when he considered that there should be a return to normalcy in
respect of war: “So I look forward to engaging Congress and the American people in
efforts to refine, and ultimately repeal, the AUMF’s mandate. And I will not sign laws
designed to expand this mandate further. Our systematic effort to dismantle terrorist
organizations must continue. But this war, like all wars, must end. That’s what history
advises. That’s what our democracy demands”.
54
48 R. F. Grimmet, e War Powers Resolution After irty-Six Years. CRS Report for Congress, April 22, 2010, 40.
49 See the list of actions, M. Weed, e 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force: Background in Brief.
Congressional Research Service memorandum July 10, 2013.
50 For more on “the laws of war as a source of authorized powers, as a limitation on authorized powers” and
“as a prohibition on presidential action”, see Bradley & Goldsmith, 2005.
51 To indicate the related actions in Congress, for example, the Senate Committee on the Judiciary organized a
hearing on the issue of “Exercising Congress’s Constitutional Power to End a War” on January 30, 2007. See
the record of the hearings at http://fas.org/irp/congress/2007_hr/endwar.pdf
52 J. K. Elsea et al. Congressional Authority to Limit Military Operations. CRS Report for Congress, February 19,
2013, 15.
53 A. Schiff, House Narrowly Defeats Rep. Schiff Amendment Sunsetting 9/11 Authorization for Use of Military
Force (Press release), May 22, 2014. See also Schiff’s sunsetting amendment to the annual defense
authorization bill (H.R.4435).
54 Remarks by President Obama at the National Defense College, May 23, 2013.
16
At the beginning of 2014, Senator Rand Paul (R-KY), along with a group of Senators from
both parties, introduced a bill (S.1919) to repeal the AUMF of 2002. If passed, the law
would have formally ended the war in Iraq. According to Senator Paul, “[t]his bipartisan
piece of legislation […] ensures that our military involvement in Iraq is officially closed
and that any future engagement will require congressional authorization and support,
as required by the Constitution”.
55
Further, in May 2014, Senators Robert Menendez
(D-NJ), Barbara Boxer (D-CA), Ben Cardin (D-MD), and Tim Kaine (D-VA) introduced
legislation that would have repealed the 2002 AUMF Against Iraq.
56
Similarly, there have
also been efforts to repeal the authorization in the House.
57
Congress has also refused to authorize measures. The 1999 US armed forces participation
in the NATO operation in Yugoslavia indicated not only the possible options for Congress
to act, but also the often-contradictory nature of these actions. In 1999, the members
of Congress had several votes on the issue and by two votes the House declined a joint
resolution to authorize the war and the air strike in Yugoslavia (in opposition to the
Senate concurrent resolution authorizing air strikes). However, it also voted against the
concurrent resolution to end US involvement in the NATO operation, but passed a bill
to prevent certain funds from being used to finance the involvement without certain
authorization.
58
The main duty and power of Congress is to legislate. The control exerted over time and
the agenda should be mentioned in this context. Much more action is conducted in
Congress than merely voting or legislating, however. The public and the President can
be influenced by organizing hearings or through letters or resolutions, or by speeches
on the floor and in the media.
59
The power of the purse and the appropriation process is
often mentioned as the most important mechanism for Congress to control the executive
55 Quoted in http://thehill.com/blogs/floor-action/defense/195501-paul-bill-ends-use-military-force-in-
iraq. Senator Paul also proposed an amendment to the National Defense Authorization bill (FY 2012) “To
repeal the Authorization for the Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution of 2002”. e amendment
failed by a vote of 30 to 67. http://www.senate.gov/legislative/LIS/roll_call_lists/roll_call_vote_cfm.cfm?c
ongress=112&session=1&vote=00211
56 See Resolution Authorizing Use of Military Force Against Iraq (press release), May 22, 2014: http://www.
foreign.senate.gov/press/chair/release/senators-introduce-legislation-to-repeal-2002-resolution-
authorizing-use-of-military-force-against-iraq-
57 In June 2014, the House Appropriations Committee voted down an amendment to the defence spending bill
(FY 2015) proposed by Representative Barbara Lee, whose purpose was to ban funding for the 2002 AUMF in
Iraq. e second amendment, also proposed by Lee, concerned the AUMF of 2001, and would have called for
reports from the administration for Congress on the actions taken under the AUMF of 2001. http://thehill.
com/policy/defense/208813-lawmakers-reject-official-legal-end-to-iraq-war
58 See Silberman, Circuit Judge, Campbell v. Clinton 2000. A group of members of Congress filed a case against
the President arguing that the “president violated the War Powers Resolution and the War Power Clause
of the Constitution by directing U.S. forces’ participation in the recent NATO campaign in Yugoslavia” (see
Campbell v. Clinton 2000). See also Garcia, 2012, 8.
59 Zoellick, 2000, 34. In respect of the War Powers Resolution, it could also be mentioned that the members
of Congress have challenged the executive branch in court in relation to the War Powers Resolution and
otherwise. For example, in Dellums vs. Bush (1990) a group of members of Congress challenged the
possibility to use US military force against Iraq in court before Congress declared or authorized the war. For
further details and other congressional litigation after the enactment of the War Powers Resolution, see CRS
report for Congress, M. J. Garcia, 2012.
17
branch.
60
For example, Congress passed a resolution in 1973 including the Church-
Cooper amendment to deny the use of any funds in Southeast Asia after a certain date.
61
e 1973 War Powers Resolution and the politics of interpretation
The War Powers Resolution enacted in 1973 has not worked as intended. Even though the
resolution itself has not been highly appreciated, the thinking behind it is still upheld
and continues to define discussions on war powers exerted between the branches of US
government. Senators John McCain (R-AZ) and Tim Kaine (D-VA) proposed legislation
viz.“The War Powers Consultations Act of 2014” (introduced January 16, 2014, read twice
and referred to in the Committee on Foreign Relations) which, if passed, would have
revised the 1973 WPR by reasserting the “consultative process” between the President
and Congress concerning when and where the US armed forces should be introduced in
military action.
62
Senators Kaine and McCain referred to the need to reform the WPR by
dubbing it “ineffective at establishing a consultative process between the executive
and legislative branches of government over our nation’s most important decision –
whether or not to send our men and women in uniform into harm’s way”.
63
The premise for introducing new legislation is that the constitutional provision granting
the power to Congress to declare war would not only appear to be ineffectual due to
the lack of a congressional declaration, but also outdated due to changes in warfare.
As Senator McCain has argued, “[t]he Constitution gives the power to declare war to
Congress, but Congress has not formally declared war since June 1942, even though our
nation has been involved in dozens of military actions of one scale or another since
that time. There is a reason for this: The nature of war is changing. It is increasingly
unlikely that the combat operations that our nation will be involved in will resemble
those of rival nation-states on clearly-defined fields of battle”.
In the aftermath of 9/11, questions were raised on how to define the circumstances
and requisite authorities (compare this with the conception of the “war on terror”).
McCain refers to this shift in US foreign policy by saying that, “after the September 11th
attack, we embarked on an expansive foreign policy. Spending on defense and foreign
assistance went up, and energy shifted to the executive. Now, things are changing. […]
The desire to curb presidential powers across the board is growing. And the political
momentum is shifting toward the Congress”.
64
60 See the procedural matters on appropriations to limit military operations in Elsea et al., 2013; and war and
appropriations in A. Fletcher & F. Shen, “War and Appropriations”. Harvard Law School, Federal Budget
Policy Seminar. Briefing Paper, No. 9. Final Draft, May 4, 2005.
61 Zelizer, J. 2007. How Congress Helped End the Vietnam War, e American Prospect, February 6, 2007.
62 e idea is not new. e National War Powers Commission proposed a law viz. “the War Powers Consultation
Act of 2009”. (For further details, see the National War Powers Commission report 2008). See also a
proposal by Chris Gibson (R-NY) “War Powers Reform Act” on January 24, 2013. http://gibson.house.gov/
news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=317675. e Subcommittee on International Organizations,
Human Rights, and Oversight, House Committee on Foreign Affairs held a hearing on the issue of “War
Powers for the 21st Century: e Executive Branch Perspective” on April 28, 2008 and “War Powers for the
21st Century: the Constitutional Perspective” on April 10, 2008.
63 See Kaine’s press release of January 16, 2014 for further details.
64 Congressional Record, January 16, 2014, S441–S442.
18
As far back as the debates conducted in the 1970s on the War Powers Resolution, it was
considered problematic as to whether and to what extent the constitutionally established
war powers were relevant in relation to the political realities of the time. The changing
nature of war and conflicts calls for updating the procedures and powers. Hence, the idea
behind the War Powers Consultation Act of 2014 was that Congress and the President
should establish “a new war powers consultative arrangement” that would be in
accordance with the Constitution but would, if passed, also reflect the characteristics of
contemporary conflicts.
65
While the actual provision of declaring war seems to be problematic in the contemporary
context, the idea that Congress should be involved in the decision-making on war is
not: “The challenge for all of us serving in the Congress is this: How do we reconcile
the changing nature of war with Congress’s proper role in the declaration of war? This
is not exactly a new question, but it is a profound one – for unless we in Congress are
prepared to cede our constitutional authority over matters of war to the executive,
we need a workable arrangement for consultation and decision-making between the
executive and legislative”.
66
Senator McCain also implied that he sees the introduction
of the bill “as the start of an important congressional and national debate, not the final
word in that debate”.
67
According to Senator Kaine, the War Powers Consultation Act of 2014 would, if passed,
include two improvements to the War Powers Resolution. First, Congress would establish
a permanent consultation committee, including the majority and minority leaders of
the Senate and the House, as well as the chairs and ranking members of key committees
(armed service, foreign relations, intelligence and appropriations).
68
The second improvement would be the requirement to have a vote within seven days
of the commitment of a military force. The vote would be on the resolution authorizing
the use of force drafted by the consultation committee. Akin to Senator McCain, Senator
Kaine maintained that the reason for having the new resolution is related to the changing
nature of war, namely that the very concept of war has changed. The new bill would
provide an opportunity for regular consultation between the legislative and executive
branches of government in relation to the use of the armed forces in hostilities.
69
The consultation part was already included in the War Powers Resolution of 1973, but has
remained problematic because the resolution does not define the consultation in more
detail, namely who should be consulted, what the consultation should actually entail,
and who could feasibly review whether the consultation requirement has been fulfilled.
70
65 Ibid.
66 Ibid. 441.
67 Congressional Record, January 16, 2014, S441.
68 is idea has been proposed before. In the 1970s the then Secretary of State, William P. Rogers, proposed
establishing a joint congressional committee, which could act as a consultative body with the executive in
emergency situations (Department of State Publications 8591, 1971, 8; Rogers 1971, 1213).
69 Congressional Record, January 16, 2014, S442–S444.
70 See the text of the resolution P.L.93–148. On the consultation problematique, see e.g. J. H. Ely, Suppose
Congress Wanted a War Powers Act that Worked. Columbia Law Review. Vol. 88, No. 7, 1988.
19
Examples of war powers debates – the cases of Libya and Syria
The cases of Libya in 2011 and Syria in 2013 are considered here in chronological
order to explain and indicate the procedures for the decision-making on war, and for
introducing US armed forces into hostilities. Despite the shared war powers, President
Obama did not seek authorization from Congress regarding the actions taken in Libya.
The administration considered that the situation did not constitute “hostilities” in the
meaning of the War Powers Resolution.
71
Instead of Congressional authorization, the
government referred to the NATO operation and the UN Security Council resolution for
legal support.
72
The lack of congressional authorization in regard to Libya does not mean that the issue
was not considered in Congress.
73
The Libya example again shows that the measures
of Congress often seem contingent and contradictory. The resolutions are introduced
but they often fail either to authorize or terminate (or both) the actions taken by the
President (see the example of 1999 on p. 16). Libya proposals considered in Congress
included, for example, a supporting resolution enacted by the Senate “calling for the
Security Council to impose a Libyan no-fly zone” (see fn. 71).
In addition to the supporting view, the members also opposed the unilateral action taken
by the President. Members of Congress addressed the fact in the House by considering a
measure (H.Con.Res.31) that would have required President Obama to seek congressional
approval. The measure did not, however, proceed from the committee.
74
The House of
Representatives managed to approve a resolution (H.Res. 292) which criticized President
Obama for not seeking authorization from Congress. The resolution also imposed a time
limit of 14 days for President Obama to explicate the strategy in Libya and to argue to
the members that the operation was justified and in line with the interests of the United
71 See White House Report on United States Activities in Libya (June 25, 2011). According to Gates (2014, 520),
within the administration there were differing opinions on whether the President had the authority to act
without congressional action. e Senate passed a resolution (S.Res. 85) in 2011 that “urges the United
Nations Security Council to take such further action as may be necessary to protect civilians in Libya from
attack, including the possible imposition of a no-fly zone over Libyan territory”. (http://thomas.loc.gov/
cgi-bin/query/z?c112:S.RES.85:) Further, Fisher (2012, 184) wrote that the Office of Legal Council “relied in
part on legislative support from the Senate” in its report “Authority to Use Military Force in Libya”.
72 L. Fisher, e Law Military Operations in Libya: No War? No Hostilities? Presidential Studies Quarterly, 42,
no. 1 March 2012, 176. Similarly, former US presidents have referred to the “authorization from the Security
Council”. Fisher (2012, 179) gives the following examples: “Truman in Korea, Bush I in Iraq, and Clinton in
Haiti and Bosnia”.
73 e examples of congressional involvement in hostilities are selectively chosen to indicate the different
kinds of examples in regard to Libya and Syria. For a more comprehensive list, see e.g. CRS Report for
Congress (February 19, 2013), Congressional Authority to Limit Military Operations; CRS Report for Congress
(February 17, 2012), War Powers Litigation Initiated by Members of Congress Since the Enactment of the
War Powers Resolution. See also, CRS Report for Congress (January 16, 2007), Congressional Restrictions
on U.S. Military Operations in Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Somalia, and Kosovo: Funding and non-funding
approaches.
74 See also a proposal H.Con.Res. 32 “Expressing the sense of Congress that the President should adhere to
the War Powers Resolution and obtain specific statutory authorization for the use of United States Armed
Forces in Libya”. https://www.congress.gov/bill/112th-congress/house-concurrent-resolution/32. For
further details on the Libya resolutions in Congress and related authority, see e.g. Zeisberg, 2013; Gates,
2014.
20
States.
75
The House, however, rejected a measure by Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) that would
have set a time limit of 15 days for the President to withdraw from the Libya Operation.
76
Congressional actions aside, Representative Dennis Kucinich, together with nine other
members of the House of Representatives, filed a lawsuit against President Obama on
violating the War Powers Resolution with regard to continuing the deployment of US
armed forces in Libya without authorization by Congress.
77
There have been similar
efforts before, but they have not been that successful.
78
When it comes to authorizations, the question of binding or non-binding resolutions
also comes into play. For example, both of the measures H.Con.Res. 31 and H.Res.
292 that the House considered in relation to Libya were non-binding. This does not,
however, indicate that non-binding resolutions do not have any effect. During the
House debate on the Libya Resolution, the format of the measures was raised, namely
whether it is purposeful to have debates on non-binding resolutions. It was also
pointed out that the WPR is not a “bill” and does not have the force of law as such. For
example, Representative David Dreier (R-CA) stated during the House debate on the
Libya Resolution that “[…] there is no such thing as the ‘War Powers Act’. There was
a War Powers Resolution that passed that does not have the power and the strength
of an enacted law”.
79
It seems that the “War Powers Act” is often used to refer to the
resolution because it was the title of the Senate version of the measure: “The law is
frequently referred to as the ‘War Powers Act’, the title of the measure passed by
the Senate. Although the latter is not technically correct, it does serve to emphasize
that the War Powers Resolution, embodied in a joint resolution which complies with
constitutional requirements for lawmaking, is a law”.
80
The joint resolutions that
become public laws are often adopted in this context, however; compare, for example,
the AUMF of 2001 and the AUMF of 2002.
75 See H.Res. 292 (112th Congress) https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/112/hres292/text. Simple
resolutions such as the H.Res. 292 constitute “a legislative proposal that addresses matters entirely within
the prerogative of one house or the other” and they do not have the force of law. But they can be used to
“give ‘advice’ on foreign policy or other executive business”. For more on the definitions of different types
of legislation, see http://www.gpo.gov/help/about_congressional_bills.htm
76 See H.Con.Res. 51 “Directing the President, pursuant to section 5(c) of the War Powers Resolution, to
remove the United States Armed Forces from Libya”. See also Fahrenthold, 2011. Also in the Senate, S.J.Res.
18 (112th Congress) “Prohibiting the deployment, establishment, or maintenance of a presence of units
and members of the United States Armed Forces on the ground in Libya, and for other purposes” was
introduced but the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations did not report it. https://www.govtrack.us/
congress/bills/112/sjres18. e Committee on Foreign Relations (United States Senate First Session, 112th
Congress) held hearings on Libya and War Powers on June 28, 2011. http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-
112shrg68241/pdf/CHRG-112shrg68241.pdf
77 See F. Sonmez, “Kucinich, other House members file lawsuit against Obama on military mission, e
Washington Post, June 15, 2011: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/2chambers/post/kucinich-other-
house-members-file-lawsuit-against-obama-on-libya-military-mission/2011/06/15/AGrzd6VH_blog.
html. For example, President Bill Clinton was also sued in 1999 on the basis of violating the War Powers
Resolution regarding the use of military force in Kosovo. (See Campbell vs. Clinton; R. F. Grimmet, Richard F.
War Powers Resolution: Presidential Compliance. CRS Issue Brief for Congress, November 15, 2004, 5–6.)
78 For more on the court cases, see e.g. Grimmet, 2010b.
79 H.Res. 292 & H.Con.Res. 51 June 3, 2011, H3993.
80 See Grimmet, 2010b, 1. Joint Resolutions are passed by both chambers and presented to the President (as
are bills), apart from constitutional amendments.
21
A more recent example of the possible use of US armed forces in Syria indicates a
different course of action. President Obama decided to seek congressional authorization,
but in the end the vote was withdrawn when the matter proceeded through diplomatic
rather than military channels. The decision has sparked debates on whether there has
been a change in war-making powers or whether the decision was a “political gambit”
instead, in the words of Douglas L. Kriner (see the discussion on p. 24). The reasons for
seeking congressional authorization could be, for example, the lack of a UN Security
Council resolution and extensive international support for the actions, as well as the
lack of a direct, imminent threat to US national security. The Senate considered the
possible resolution on September 9 and 10, 2013. The Syria Resolution drafted by the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee included a 60-day time limit for the authorization
of the use of US armed forces. The resolution also included an optional 30 days if
certain conditions were fulfilled, unless Congress passed a law beforehand specifically
prohibiting the extension of the authority.
81
Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) characterized the role of Congress in the decision-
making process and the importance of the issue with regard to the potential use of
military force in Syria as follows: “It is often said that of all the questions we face as
lawmakers, none is more serious or indeed more difficult than the question of whether
to commit ourselves to military action. That is why it is so important for us to have
this debate, to lay out the arguments for and against military action in Syria, to let
the public know where we stand on this issue and why”.
82
The congressional vote was
considered even more important because of the lack of UN and international support
as mentioned by Bernard Sanders (I-VT) during the Senate debate on Syria: [Because
of unknown long-term implications and consequences] “[…] the American people are
extremely concerned about the United States unilaterally going into Syria without
the support of the international community and without the support of the United
Nations”.
83
The power of the executive branch to respond to sudden attacks in the US context has
always been approved of. Senator Richard Durbin (D-IL) noted during his comment
of the presidential leadership that: “This President could make a unilateral decision
and attack without even consulting Congress and thereby maintain the element of
surprise or he could do as this President has done and follow what he considers to
be our constitutional requirement of a national debate before we engage in military
action”.
84
The argumentation in the debates about whether the President should seek
prior authorization from Congress often refers to the different interpretations of whether
there is an imminent threat or danger, in which case the President can act as the
Commander-in-Chief (see Senator Barbara Boxer’s (D-CA) argument of September 10,
2013, S6314).
81 e text for the Foreign Relations Committee joint resolution (S.J.Res. 21): http://www.foreign.senate.gov/
imo/media/doc/DAV13973.pdf. It seems that the resolution was more limited compared to the proposal
by the administration prepared together with Congress. See J. Bresnahan, New Senate Syria plan limits
President Obama. Politico, September 2, 2013.
82 Congressional Record, September 10, 2013, S6302.
83 Congressional Record, September 10, 2013, S6315.
84 Congressional Record, September 10, 2013, S6305.
22
Senator Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) considered that the President should seek an
authorization from Congress, particularly as there was no such imminent threat
in respect of Syria: “The gravity of these issues before us is significant and they
deserve a full debate. President Obama should be praised for understanding and
appreciating that fact. We must demand that all Presidents – not just this President –
come to Congress to get approval before taking military action in another country in
instances where we are not facing an imminent threat. I have made that case with both
Republican and Democratic Presidents”.
85
The President usually benefits from congressional cooperation as indicated by the
following comment by Senator Tom Udall (D-NM): “The President’s mandate is stronger
with congressional approval, and the mandate of the United States is stronger with
international support”.
86
The day before, during the motion to proceed with the debate,
Senator Daniel Coats (R-IN) also stressed the need to have public support for a possible
action: “We all know that taking America to war without support from the people is the
surest path to disaster”.
87
One of the aspects of debates in the legislature is informing and educating the public (see
McConnell’s argument on p. 21 and Kaine’s argument on p. 23). During the Senate debate
on the Syria Resolution, Senator Sanders referred to public opinion by questioning
whether there should be support for the use of military force: “We have a very divided
Nation politically, but on this issue it appears the vast majority of Democrats,
Republicans, Independents, the vast majority of progressives […] conservatives,
moderates, have all come together to express deep concern about the United States
being involved in the third military intervention in the Middle East in 12 years”.
88
The Senator’s argument challenges the traditional view of the ‘rallying ’round the flag’
phenomenon and the unity of the nation with regard to the making of foreign policy.
The question of war powers is also a question of sustaining the checks and balances
and the separation of powers. Senator Benjamin Cardin (D-MD) brought up the
division of power in this context by stressing the role of Congress and referring both
to the War Powers Resolution and the Constitution in respect of the authorization:
“The Constitution envisions that both the President and Congress are involved in
the deploying of U.S. military. Certainly the President as Commander-in-Chief, and
the Congress, under the War Powers Act, have responsibility to authorize the use of
force”.
89
What is important to note in the previous argument is that the members of
Congress use several expressions to indicate the possible actions and congressional
involvement in the decision-making on war. Senator Udall, for example, emphasized the
meaning of the authorization with the following words: “Let’s be clear: This is a vote to
authorize an act of war”.
90
85 Congressional Record, September 10, 2013, S6319. Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) also introduced, together
with Senator Heitkamp, S.J.Res. 22 “a joint resolution to promote a diplomatic solution in Syria, and for
other purposes” to the Committee on Foreign Relations (see September 10, 2013, S6330).
86 Congressional Record, September 10, 2013, S6316.
87 Congressional Record, September 9, 2013, S6275.
88 Congressional Record, September 10, 2013, S6314.
89 Congressional Record, September 10, 2013, S6317.
90 Congressional Record, September 10, 2013, S6316.
23
Congressional action and the actual processes of Congress regarding the authorization
of the use of force was indicated by Harry Reid (D-NV) by emphasizing the committee-
level action as well as plenary session debates: “Since President Obama announced
he would seek congressional approval for the limited military action against Syria,
the Senate has held many committee hearings and briefings as well as five classified
all-Members briefings. There are more briefings and much debate to come this week—
including open debate here in the Senate”.
91
As the aforementioned quotes – especially
by Reid and Baldwin – indicate, debate is considered an essential part of the decision-
making process. Similarly to Senator Reid, Senator Kaine, while commenting in a
New York Times op-ed on the fight against ISIS, mentioned that “The Constitutional
involvement of Congress is not a dry constitutional principle”. The Senator further
referred to the role of Congress in debating and voting on the issue as follows: “By
debating and voting on the initiation of war, Congress educates the public about the
national interests, clarifies and refines the scope of the conflict, and reinforces the
core value of political consensus”.
92
During the debate on the Syria resolution in the Senate, Senator Dan Coats (R-IN) also
exemplified the significance of the resolution and the outcome for executive-legislative
relations if Congress did not authorize the use of force:
This is a deeply historic and profound moment for our Nation. It carries an
importance that goes well beyond Syria or even the Middle East. This debate
carries important consequences for the relationship between the executive and
legislative branches of our government. To refuse the Commander-in-Chief war-
making authorities when he has asked for them is not a decision any of us can take
lightly. We must all balance the views of the people we represent – even when
they have been nearly unanimous – with other elements, such as the abstract,
unknowable geostrategic factors that could carry profound consequences not just
for this year or next year, but for many generations; and such as the compelling
moral arguments that resonate with special strength in our unique Nation guided
from birth by moral principles; and now even the constitutional challenges that
could affect the delicate balance we have maintained for two centuries.
93
Before the actual announcement by President Obama that he would seek congressional
authorization, the members of Congress referred to the need to secure authorization
before any action was taken. In June 2013, Representatives Tom Rooney (R-FL) and
Michael McCaul (R-TX) introduced a “Congressional Accountability and Oversight in
Syria Act” (H.R.2501) that was assigned to a Foreign Affairs committee. The resolution,
if passed, would have been able to “prohibit the President from Providing Weapons, and
Military Support without Congressional Authorization”.
94
In a letter (sent in August
2013) to President Obama, the members of Congress indicated with reference to the
91 Congressional Record, September 9, 2013, S6274.
92 T. Kaine, Obama Must Get Congress’s Backing for the Fight Against ISIS. e New York Times, September 15,
2014: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/09/16/opinion/obama-must-get-congresss-backing-for-the-
fight-against-isis.html?_r=1. See also House Majority Leader John Boehner’s (R-OH) argument that if the
administration wants “ISIS authorization”, it should seek a new authorization (Matishak, 2015). See also
Obama’s remarks in 2015 State of the Union calling Congress to pass new authorization.
93 Congressional Record, September 9, 2013, S6276.
94 https://www.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/house-bill/2501
24
Constitution and the War Powers Resolution that the President should consult and seek
authorization from Congress before commanding the use of armed forces in Syria.
95
The
letter was signed by members of both parties.
Congress, however, authorized the training and arming of the Syrian opposition in
September 2014 (House Sept. 17, 2014 and the Senate Sept. 18, 2014). The measure
was regarded as an amendment to H.J.Res. 124 Continuing Appropriations Resolution
2015.
96
Recently, there have been proposals to provide authorization for the President
for actions against ISIL in Iraq and Syria, and the possibility was also mentioned by
the President after the midterm elections.
97
Common to these proposals introduced
both in the House and in the Senate has been the idea of limited action, no boots on the
ground, and also repealing the AUMF of 2002 (and 2001). Senator Kaine, for example, has
proposed that Congress should take action because neither the AUMF of 2001 nor that of
2002 are applicable “in the current Iraq crisis”.
98
As discussed, congressional support is essential vis-à-vis political legitimacy for the
President’s actions in the longer perspective.
99
Some commentators have referred to
President Obama’s decision to seek congressional support for possible use of military
force against Syria in 2013 as an indication that Congress has a role to play in making
US foreign policy by informal means: “While much foreign policy scholarship
has downplayed Congress’s importance in shaping the nation’s military affairs,
presidential actions, such as President Obama’s decision to seek congressional
authorization before using force against Syria, speak to the continued influence that
Congress exerts in foreign affairs through informal means”.
100
Even if Congress no longer formally “declares” war, it seems that presidents usually
benefit from seeking authorization because of the long-term support to be gained from
members.
101
According to Kriner, for example, President Obama’s decision to seek
congressional authorization in relation to Syria is significant not because it is legally
consequential, but because of the political value of these kinds of authorizations. The
members of Congress do not seem to change their votes even if military actions fail, do
not go as planned, or if the cost is higher than envisaged.
102
What Kriner does argue,
however, is that the decision to seek congressional authorization should not be regarded
95 See S. Rigell et al. Letter to the President of the United States, August 28, 2013.
96 See https://www.congress.gov/bill/113th-congress/house-joint-resolution/124. See also fn. 6 p. XXXX (2).
e support was continued in the Defence bill for the fiscal year 2015.
97 For more details on some of the proposals, see Poplin’s comments in the Lawfare blog: http://www.
lawfareblog.com/2014/09/some-of-the-would-be-isis-aumfs/. See also the proposals by Representative
Adam Schiff (D-CA) (Sept. 15, 2014) and Senator Tim Kaine (Sept. 17, 2014). http://www.lawfareblog.
com/2014/09/rep-adam-schiffs-isis-aumf/ http://www.lawfareblog.com/2014/09/senator-kaines-isis-
aumf/. Senator Rand Paul has also proposed a new AUMF against ISIL, as well as a declaration of war. See
Messinger, 2014.
98 Kaine’s opinion in e Washington Post, June 24, 2014.
99 See e.g. R. Chesney et al. A Statutory Framework for Next-Generation Terrorist reats. Jean Perkins Task
Force on National Security and Law, Congressional Research Service Library of Congress, Hoover Institution,
Stanford University 2013; D. L. Kriner, Obama’s Authorization Paradox: Syria and Congress’s Continued
Relevance in Military Affairs. Presidential Studies Quarterly, vol. 44, no. 2, 2014.
100 Kriner, 2014, 324.
101 e declarations of war also take the form of a resolution.
102 Kriner, 2014, 312.
25
as a change in the practice of war powers, but rather as an act of finding the best political
option under the circumstances.
103
Relying on a quantitative approach, Kriner has claimed that the most significant
examples of the use of force since 1945 indicate that numerous actions taken by Congress
do have an effect on the course of US military interventions.
104
Measures that were
mentioned include proposing and voting on legislative procedures to limit the use of
the armed forces (even if they are not enacted), conducting hearings and investigations
at the committee level, and commenting publicly for or against the use of the armed
forces.
105
Items that could be added to the list vis-à-vis the overall influence of the US
Congress include, for example, the power of the purse and the appropriation process, the
repealing and/or amending of legislation, constitutional amendments, and institutional
or procedural changes (as, for example, Lindsay 1992 & 1994 has emphasized). In
addition, in terms of the structural aspect, Congress has the power “to regulate the
military, and to create the structure of the executive bureaucracy, including security-
related bureaus”, as pointed out by Mariah Zeisberg.
106
Further, many of the powers of
the branches of government become “war powers” when they are used in this context.
107
As mentioned, the measures taken may be indirect rather than direct, however. In
respect of the less obvious aspects of congressional influence, Kriner gives the following
example: “Rather than legislatively barring the president from deploying troops abroad
or cutting off funds for their continued use once deployed, members of Congress most
often seek to constrain the commander-in-chief by ratcheting up the political costs of
pursuing his preferred military policy course”.
108
What the members of Congress have
emphasized, however, is the aspect of educating the public in the debates on the floor
regarding the use of US military force (see Senator Kaine’s argument on p. 23).
Concluding remarks
The debates conducted on the powers exerted between the branches of government in
exceptional situations is one way of studying the tension between domestic and foreign
policy, and exploring the ways in which domestic actors have an impact on foreign
policy and vice versa. The growth of the powers of the executive branch of government
in foreign policy has been considered by questioning the constitutional framework of the
separation of powers, and checks and balances. The powers have taken different forms,
however. For example, the US Congress has not actually declared war since 1942, but it
has authorized the President to use military force, for example after 9/11, and against
Iraq by enacting resolutions.
109
Further, as the quotes by the members of Congress show,
103 Ibid. 309.
104 Ibid. 311.
105 Kriner, 2014.
106 Zeisberg, 2013, 6.
107 Ibid. 50.
108 Kriner, 2014, 324–325.
109 See the AUMF of 2001 and the AUMF of 2002.
26
particularly during the debate in the Senate when considering the Syria resolution, the
President will usually benefit from seeking congressional support.
110
The debates on war powers demonstrate that, despite the increase in the powers of
the President, the members of Congress still consider that collective judgment should
also apply in respect of decision-making on war. The purely legalistic interpretation of
war powers is problematic because the powers are interpreted and defined in different
political contexts. The changing nature of war and conflicts, and therefore the debates on
the concepts, such as war itself and the related powers, indicate that the debate on the
congressional role in the decision-making processes is likely to continue. As indicated
by Senator John McCain during the introduction of the War Powers Consultation Act
of 2014, there is a need to have a debate in Congress on the future of Congress’s war
powers, what is constituted by war, and therefore the possibilities for congressional
involvement in the decision-making process. The introduction of the bill should have
marked the beginning of this debate rather than the end (see McCain’s argument on p.
18). What was also indicated in this paper is that the role of Congress in foreign policy,
and particularly vis-à-vis decision-making on war, can be looked at from very different
perspectives other than through the legislative record alone. That said, the congressional
debates (followed by votes) are considered essential by the congressional members in
securing Congress’s role in the decision-making process concerning the introduction of
US armed forces into hostilities.
110 See Kriner, 2014.
27
CONGRESSIONAL DEBATES
111
A bill to repeal the War Powers Resolution and to provide for proper war powers
consultation, and for other purposes; to the Committee on Foreign Relations (S. 1939).
Congressional Record (Senate) January 16, 2014, S441-442.
Authorization of the Use of United States Armed Forces Against Iraq (S.J.Res. 45).
Congressional Record (Senate) October 10, 2002, S10233-S10342.
Authorizing the Limited and Specified Use of the United States Armed Forces Against
Syria – Motion to Proceed (S.J.Res. 21). Congressional Record (Senate), September 9,
2013, S6273-S6284.
Authorizing the Limited and Specified Use of the United States Armed Forces Against
Syria – Motion to Proceed (S.J.Res. 21). Congressional Record (Senate), September 10,
2013, S6301-S6319, S6330.
Further Consideration of H.Res. 114 Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq
Resolution of 2002. Congressional Record (House) October 8, 2002, H7268-H7301.
Presidential Leadership (Senator Durbin). Congressional Record (Senate), September 10,
2013, S6304-S6305.
Providing for Consideration of H.Res. 292. Regarding Deployment of United States Armed
Forces in Libya, and Providing for Consideration of H.Con.Res. 51 Libya War Powers
Resolution. Congressional Record (House), June 3, 2011, H3990-H3998.
Regarding Deployment of United States Armed Forces in Libya. Congressional Record
(House), June 3, 2011, H3998-H4021.
Support for the Sovereignty, integrity, democracy, and economic stability of Ukraine
Act of 2014 – motion to proceed. Congressional Record (Senate), March 24, 2014,
S1679-S1689.
111 Congressional debates are available online since 1995 via Federal Digital Systems at http://www.gpo.gov/
fdsys/search/home.action. For other references to access legislative proceedings and records (substance
/ votes), see omas Library of Congress at http://thomas.loc.gov/ and Govtrack.US at https://www.
govtrack.us/.
28
REFERENCED CONGRESSIONAL AND LEGISLATIVE MATERIALS
H.Con.Res. 31 Expressing the sense of Congress that the President is required to obtain
in advance specific statutory authorization for the use of United States Armed Forces in
response to civil unrest in Libya. (112th Congress) https://www.congress.gov/bill/112th-
congress/house-concurrent-resolution/31
H.Con.Res. 32 Expressing the sense of Congress that the President should adhere to the
War Powers Resolution and obtain specific statutory authorization for the use of United
States Armed Forces in Libya. (112th Congress) https://www.congress.gov/bill/112th-
congress/house-concurrent-resolution/32.
H.Con.Res. 51 Directing the President, pursuant to section 5(c) of the War Powers
Resolution, to remove the United States Armed Forces from Libya. (112th Congress)
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c112:H.CON.RES.51:
H.J.Res. 114 (P.L. 107-243) Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution
of 2002. (107th Congress) https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/107/hjres114
H.J.Res. 114 (P.L. 107-243) Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq Resolution
of 2002. (107th Congress) http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/PLAW-107publ243/html/
PLAW-107publ243.htm
H.J.Res. 542 (P.L.93-148) The War Powers Resolution of 1973. (93th Congress) US Code 50
Chapter 33 §1541-§1548. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/50/chapter-33
H.R. 198 Repeal of the Authorization for use of military force. (113th Congress) http://
thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d113:h.r.00198:
H.R. 3884 (P.L.94-418) The National Emergencies Act of 1976. (94th Congress) US Code
50 Chapter 34 §1601-§1651. http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/50/chapter-34
H.R. 4435 National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015. http://thomas.loc.
gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d113:h.r.04435:
H.R. 2859 Repeal of the Authorization for Use of Military Force. (112th Congress) http://
thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c112:H.R.2859.IH:/
H.R. 5859 (P.L.113-272) To impose sanctions with respect to the Russian Federation,
to provide additional assistance to Ukraine, and for other purposes. (113th Congress)
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d113:h.r.5859:
H.Res. 294 Providing for consideration of the resolution (H. Res. 292) declaring that the
President shall not deploy, establish, or maintain the presence of units and members of
the United States Armed Forces on the ground in Libya, and for other purposes. (112th
Congress) https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/112/hres294/text
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (P.L.95-223). (95th Congress) http://
legcounsel.house.gov/Comps/International%20Emergency%20Economic%20
Powers%20Act.pdf
29
S.J.Res. 18 A joint resolution prohibiting the deployment, establishment, or maintenance
of a presence of units and members the United States Armed Forces on the ground in
Libya, and for other purposes. (112th Congress) https://www.congress.gov/bill/112th-
congress/senate-joint-resolution/18
S.J.Res. 23 (P.L.107-40) Authorization for the Use of Military Force. (107th Congress)
http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d107:s.j.res.00023:
S.J.Res. 23 (P.L.107-40) Authorization for the Use of Military Force. (107th Congress)
https://www.govtrack.us/congress/bills/107/sjres23
S.Res. 85 Whereas Muammar Gaddafi and his regime have engaged in gross and
systematic violations of human rights, including violent attacks on protesters demanding
democratic reforms. (112th Congress). http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c112:S.
RES.85
S.J.Res. “To Authorize the limited and specified use of the United States Armed Forces
against Syria”. (113th Congress) Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. http://www.
foreign.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/DAV13973.pdf
The United States House of Representatives. Committee on Foreign Affairs,
Subcommittee on International Organizations, Human Rights, and Oversight: War
Powers for the 21st Century: The Constitutional Perspective (H. HRG. 110-902), April 10,
2008.
The United States House of Representatives. Committee on Foreign
Affairs, Subcommittee on International Organizations, Human Rights, and Oversight:
War Powers for the 21st Century: The Executive Branch Perspective. (H.HRG. 110-168),
April 28, 2008. http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-110hhrg41989/html/CHRG-
110hhrg41989.htm
The United States Senate, Committee on Judiciary. Exercising Congress’s Constitutional
Power to End a War. (S. HRG. 110-902), January 30, 2007. https://fas.org/irp/
congress/2007_hr/endwar.pdf
30
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