The U.S. Supreme Court is AWOL on
Iraq
February 1 2005
Counterbias.com
by Gene C. Gerard
In December, the Supreme Court opted not to
hear the civil suit Clair Callan Vs. President George W. Bush. The
plaintiff in the suit is a senior citizen and former Congressman
from Nebraska. The case has slowly made its way through the lower
courts, which have rejected it on the grounds that they have no
jurisdiction to hear the suit, or that Mr. Callan does not have a
lawful cause of action. The suit alleges that the president violated
American law by invading Iraq. Specifically at issue is compliance
with the War Powers Act.
In 1973, a post-Vietnam War Congress wanted to ensure that no future
president could send troops into battle without just cause and
congressional oversight. Consequently, it passed a law, known as the
War Powers Act, which permits the president to introduce the
military into combat “where imminent involvement in hostilities is
clearly indicated by the circumstances.” Congress was very
determined that this requirement be met before sending troops
overseas, as is evidenced by the fact that this verbiage appears in
the act four times. The act further stipulates that the president
has 60 days to obtain from Congress a declaration of war, or
specific approval for the continued use of the military, otherwise
the troops must be withdrawn.
This civil suit accuses the president of failing to meet the
requirements of the act. Although Congress in 2002 did give the
president approval to use the military against Iraq, the suit
alleges that “imminent involvement” by the military was not “clearly
indicated by the circumstances.” Leading up to the war, and
subsequent to it, President Bush used phrases such as “a gathering
threat” to describe the necessity of military action. In fact, in
his State of the Union address in 2003, he remarked that “Some have
said we must not act until the threat is imminent…If this threat is
permitted to fully and suddenly emerge, all actions, all words, and
all recriminations would come too late.” As such, this case clearly
has merit.
The civil suit may well be valid in another respect. The Congress
that passed the War Powers Act was concerned with the lack of an
exit strategy in Vietnam. In an effort to prevent any future
administration from entering into a war without a plan to extricate
American forces from it, the act requires that the president
periodically report on the “estimated scope and duration of the
hostilities or involvement” to Congress. The White House has found
this conspicuously difficult to do since invading Iraq. The
administration’s justification for not including the on-going cost
of the war in Iraq and Afghanistan in its budget has been that it
cannot predict how many forces will ultimately be needed, how much
money will be spent, or how long this military action will last. The
president has said repeatedly that he does not know when the troops
will get to come home, only that they will not stay longer than
necessary. Given that, this would seem to be a further violation of
the act.
Not surprisingly, most presidents have tried to ignore the War
Powers Act, and have seen it as an infringement of the powers of the
executive branch. In fact, President Nixon attempted to veto the
act. When criticized, presidents have typically cited Article II,
Section 2 of the Constitution which stipulates that “The president
shall be Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy of the United
States.” President Reagan ignored the act when he undertook military
action in Grenada, Lebanon, Libya, Central America, and the Persian
Gulf. President Bush said the act didn’t apply to military
engagements in Panama, and initially, the Gulf War. President
Clinton did much the same with regard to military deployments in
Haiti, Somalia, Bosnia, and Iraq.
Bush is not the first president to face litigation over the act. In
1991, 52 members of Congress filed a lawsuit in federal court
against President Bush, accusing him of failing to meet the
requirements of the War Powers Act as he prepared for the Gulf War.
While the court admitted that the case was legitimate, it ultimately
decided that it could not render a verdict since Congress had not
decided if a declaration of war was necessary. Although Bush
initially maintained that the act did not apply, he ultimately
sought and received congressional approval. In the civil suit
Campbell Vs. Clinton, 17 members of Congress sued President Clinton
for engaging in the bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999 in violation of
the act. In this instance, the court ruled that since Congress had
neither approved of nor blocked continuation of the military
campaign in Yugoslavia, there was not a constitutional impasse, and
therefore there was no need to issue a ruling.
What makes this current civil suit so urgent is the scope and
complexity of the military’s involvement in Iraq. Currently, there
are approximately 140,000 American troops serving there. They face
the most aggressive insurgency of any conflict since the war in
Vietnam. And the Pentagon is actively constructing twelve permanent
military bases in Iraq.
In failing to accept and hear the civil suit, the Supreme Court has
abdicated its constitutional role. This was an opportunity for the
justices to settle a cumbersome, thirty year-old legal, political,
and military question that has divided the legislative and executive
branches. As President Clinton was defending his use of the military
in 1999, a senior White House official remarked that “The whole War
Powers Act is a very vague and hazy area. It’s never been tested to
the Supreme Court level.” More importantly, the Court could have
provided some semblance of legitimacy in the invasion of Iraq, by
validating the president’s use of the military. Or, it could have
provided a way out of the war, by finding that military action, in
this instance, was unlawful.