The Obama Regime Gives Itself Permission To Wage Unlimited War 
Posted by William Grigg <mailto:[email protected]>  on April 8, 2011 01:00 AM 

The United States Constitution, as the Obama Regime pretends to understand
it
<http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/04/07/justice-memo-upholds-libya-st
rikes/?partner=rss&emc=rss> , is a most peculiar document, one that is
actually enhanced by the criminal actions of public officials who brazenly
violate its most explicit provisions. Most people would assume that such
actions would tarnish the Constitution. As the administration tells it,
however, decades of persistent presidential contempt for the Constitution
have conferred an "historical gloss" on the document, just as decades of
determined obfuscation of its unambiguous and easily understood war powers
provisions have "clarified" their meaning.

Caroline D. Krass
<http://www.martindale.com/Caroline-D-Krass/8091-lawyer.htm> , a minor
functionary in the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, was
assigned to play the role of the Obama administration's John Yoo - that is,
the sophist responsible for composing a spurious but serviceable legal
rationale for the exercise of dictatorial powers by the president. The
resulting memo
<http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/world/20110401-authority-military
-use-in-libya.pdf>  - dated, appropriately, April 1 - claims that Obama
needed no congressional authorization of any kind to commit aggressive war
against Libya, since in his holy and indisputable judgment the possibility
of "regional instability" and injury to the "credibility and effectiveness
of the United Nations Security Council" posed threats to our national
security that demanded a military response. Accordingly, Krass concluded,
Obama could initiate war with Libya "as Commander in Chief and Chief
Executive and pursuant to his foreign affairs powers . even without prior
specific congressional approval.'

The actual text of the Constitution, and the well-articulated intent of the
Framers to deny the president unilateral powers of this kind, are
inconsequential, according to Krass, who cites an earlier OLC opinion
claiming that a "pattern of executive conduct, made under claim of right,
extended over many decades and engaged in by Presidents of both parties,
evidences the existence of broad constitutional power." It does no such
thing, of course, any more than the persistence of armed robbery in defiance
of laws against theft "evidences the existence of a broad right to steal
property at gunpoint" (which is, of course, the defining activity of the
institutionalized affliction called "government").

Krass's memo does offer a pretty detailed description of the devious
dialectic in which presidents have usurped war powers, and congress has
abdicated its authority, yielding the present post-constitutional synthesis
in which any elected dictator can wage war anywhere for as long as he or she
pleases. The only "possible constitutionally-based limit" on the president's
supposed authority to wage war, she insists, would involve "a planned
military engagement that constitutes a `war' within the meaning of the
Declaration of War Clause.." This is to say that from the Regime's
perspective, there is a vague, and not terribly important, possibility that
the Declaration of War Clause might actually impose a hypothetical limit on
presidential war powers. However, the memo goes on to assert that "the
historical practice of even intensive military action [such as] . some two
months of bombing in Yugoslavia in 1999 - without specific prior
congressional approval" effectively nullifies that constitutional
limitation.

The compelling "national interest" claimed in the OLC memo is two-fold:
First, preventing a "humanitarian catastrophe" that "could" have ensued in
Benghazi (a claim
<http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2011-04-03/news/ct-oped-0403-chapman-201
10403_1_rwandan-genocide-moammar-gadhafi-massacre> that was as much a
cynical fiction as Bill Clinton's lie that hundreds of thousands of Kosovo
Albanians were facing annihilation, or the Bush administration's
fabrications about Saddam's WMD); and second, "maintaining the credibility
of the United Nations Security Council and the effectiveness of its actions
to promote international peace and security." Both of those objectives are
best served, we are supposed to believe, by flinging Tomahawk cruise
missiles at population centers in  a country that posed no threat to us.

Of particular interest in this connection is Krass's statement that "the
United States government has recognized that `[t]he continued existence of
the United Nations as an effective international organization is a paramount
United States interest.'" That phrase, which was cited by the first Bush
administration to justify the UN-
<http://www.justice.gov/olc/presiden.8.htm> "authorized" December 1992
invasion of Somalia, originated in a 1950 State Department Bulletin entitled
<http://www.archive.org/stream/departmentofstat2350unit/departmentofstat2350
unit_djvu.txt> Authority of the President to Repel the Attack in Korea. The
term "paramount," of course, is a synonym for "supreme"; this means that
Krass and her predecessors defined preservation of the UN as the supreme
foreign policy interest of the United States government.

As was recently pointed out
<http://www.lewrockwell.com/grigg/grigg-w201.html>  in LRC,  the United
Nations was never intended to be a peace organization. From the beginning,
as Simon Tisdall of the
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/jan/13/un-origins-military-pur
pose> Guardian of London observes, the UN
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/jan/13/un-origins-military-pur
pose> 's "primary purpose was as a war-fighting machine." When Congress
enacted the United Nations Participation Act in December 1945
<http://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/decad031.asp> , it effectively
repudiated its constitutional role in declaring war, deferring instead to a
new arrangement in which the president can deploy troops anywhere in the
world in compliance with our supposed "obligations" to the UN and the
international system it administers.

Granted, the UN war-making
<http://www.ufppc.org/us-a-world-news-mainmenu-35/10276-commentary-war-in-li
bya-plainly-unconstitutional-michael-lind.html>   system hasn't operated in
strict accordance with its charter - but this is just another case in which
the text of a supposedly binding document has been transcended by the
"historical gloss" placed on it by policymakers who recognize no limits on
the powers they exercise. Whenever such people find their ambitions
constricted by the terms of a constitution or charter, they will simply
write themselves an elaborate permission slip - festooned with specious
citations - authorizing them to do whatever they damn well please.

-- 

 



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