Obama Tests Limits of Power in Syrian Conflict
By CHARLIE SAVAGE
President Obama’s approach to Syria is likely to create an important
precedent in the often murky legal question of when presidents or
nations may lawfully use military force.
By CHARLIE SAVAGE
Published: September 8, 2013
WASHINGTON — In asking Congress to authorize an attack on Syria over
claims it used chemical weapons, President Obama has chosen to involve
lawmakers in deciding whether to undertake a military intervention that
in some respects resembles the limited types that many presidents —
Ronald Reagan in Grenada, Bill Clinton in Kosovo and even Mr. Obama in
Libya — have launched on their own.
Sergey Guneev/Host Photo Agency, via Getty Images
President Obama’s strategy ensures that no matter
what happens, the crisis is likely to create an important precedent.
Multimedia
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After Bold Step on Syria, French Leader Finds Himself Dismissed as Lackey (September 9, 2013)
On another level, the proposed strike is unlike anything that has come
before — an attack inside the territory of a sovereign country, without
its consent, without a self-defense rationale and without the
authorization of the United Nations Security Council or even the
participation of a multilateral treaty alliance like NATO, and for the
purpose of punishing an alleged war crime that has already occurred
rather than preventing an imminent disaster.
The contrasting moves, ceding more of a political role to Congress
domestically while expanding national war powers on the international
stage, underscore the complexity of Mr. Obama’s approach to the Syrian
crisis. His administration pressed its case on Sunday, saying it had won
Saudi backing for a strike, even as the Syrian president warned he
would retaliate.
Mr. Obama’s strategy ensures that no matter what happens, the crisis is
likely to create an important precedent in the often murky legal
question of when presidents or nations may lawfully use military force.
Kathryn Ruemmler, the White House counsel, said the president believed a
strike would be lawful, both in international law and domestic law,
even if neither the Security Council nor Congress approved it. But the
novel circumstances, she said, led Mr. Obama to seek Congressional
concurrence to bolster its legitimacy.
The move is right, said Walter Dellinger, who led the Justice
Department’s Office of Legal Counsel in the Clinton administration,
because the proposed attack is not “covered by any of the previous
precedents for the unilateral use of executive power.”
“That doesn’t mean it couldn’t become another precedent,” Mr. Dellinger
added. “But when the president is going beyond where any previous
president has gone, it seems appropriate to determine whether Congress
concurs.”
Disputes about whether and when a president or nation may launch an act
of war can be hazy because courts generally do not issue definitive
answers about such matters. Instead presidents, and countries, create
precedents that over time can become generally accepted as a gloss on
what written domestic laws and international treaties permit. Against
that backdrop, many legal scholars say Mr. Obama is proposing to violate
international law. But others contend that the question is ambiguous,
and some suggest that the United States could establish a precedent
creating new international law if it strikes.
The United States has used its armed forces abroad dozens of times
without Security Council approval, but typically has invoked
self-defense; when Mr. Reagan invaded Grenada in 1983, for example, he
cited a need to protect Americans on the island along with the request
of neighboring countries. The most notable precedent for the Syria
crisis was Mr. Clinton’s 1999 bombing of Kosovo, but that was undertaken
as part of NATO and in response to a time-urgent problem: stopping a
massacre of civilians.
By contrast, the United States would carry out strikes on Syria largely
alone, and to punish an offense that has already occurred. That crime,
moreover, is defined by two treaties banning chemical weapons, only one of which Syria signed, that contain no enforcement provisions. Such a strike has never happened before.
Attempts to deal with the novelty of the crisis in international law
have become entangled in the separate domestic law question of whether
the president could order strikes on Syria without Congressional
permission.
Seeking the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination, Mr. Obama embraced a
limited view of a president’s power to initiate war without Congress,
telling The Boston Globe
that “the president does not have power under the Constitution to
unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not
involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation.”
But by the 2011 conflict in Libya he abandoned his campaign view of
presidential war powers as too limited. While the NATO intervention was
authorized for international law purposes by the Security Council, in
domestic law Congress did not authorize Mr. Obama to participate. But
Mr. Obama’s Office of Legal Counsel argued
that it was lawful for him to unilaterally order American forces to
bomb Libya because of national interests in preserving regional
stability and in supporting the “credibility and effectiveness” of the
Security Council.
In recent weeks, administration lawyers decided that it was within Mr.
Obama’s constitutional authority to carry out a strike on Syria as well,
even without permission from Congress or the Security Council, because
of the “important national interests” of limiting regional instability
and of enforcing the norm against using chemical weapons, Ms. Ruemmler
said.
But even if he could act alone, that left the question of whether he
should. The lack of a historical analogue and traditional factors that
have justified such operations, she said, contributed to his decision to
go to Congress.
“The president believed that it was important to enhance the legitimacy
of any action that would be taken by the executive,” Ms. Ruemmler said,
“to seek Congressional approval of that action and have it be seen,
again as a matter of legitimacy both domestically and internationally,
that there was a unified American response to the horrendous violation
of the international norm against chemical weapons use.”
At a news conference
last week, Mr. Obama argued that the United States should “get out of
the habit” of having the president “stretch the boundaries of his
authority as far as he can” while lawmakers “snipe” from the sidelines.
But he also explained his decision in terms of very special
circumstances: humanitarian interventions where there is no immediate
pressure to act and the United Nations is blocked.
Jack Goldsmith, a head of the Office of Legal Counsel in the Bush
administration, said the limited criteria cited by Mr. Obama mean his
move might not apply to more traditional future interventions. The more
important precedent, he said, may concern international law and what he
portrayed as Mr. Obama’s dismissive attitude toward whether or not
having permission from the Security Council should stop humanitarian
interventions.
Mr. Obama has in recent days repeatedly portrayed the Security Council system as incapable of performing its function of “enforcing international norms and international law,” and as so paralyzed by the veto power wielded by Russia that it is instead acting as a “barrier” to that goal.
Mr. Goldsmith said that in the Kosovo campaign, the Clinton
administration shied away from arguing that it was consistent with
international law to carry out a military attack not authorized by the
Security Council purely for humanitarian reasons. Its fear was that such
a doctrine could be misused by other nations, loosening constraints on
war.
In his 2009 Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech,
Mr. Obama said all nations “must adhere to standards that govern the
use of force.” But he also argued that humanitarian grounds justified
military force and cited “the Balkans,” leaving ambiguous whether he
meant Bosnia, which had some Security Council approval; Kosovo, which did not; or both.
Ms. Ruemmler said that while an attack on Syria “may not fit under a
traditionally recognized legal basis under international law,” the
administration believed that given the novel factors and circumstances,
such an action would nevertheless be “justified and legitimate under
international law” and so not prohibited.
Still, she acknowledged that it was “more controversial for the
president to act alone in these circumstances” than for him to do so
with Congressional backing.
Steven G. Bradbury, a head of the Office of Legal Counsel in the Bush
administration, said it would be “politically difficult” to order
strikes if Congress refused to approve them. But he predicted future
presidents would not feel legally constrained to echo Mr. Obama’s
request. “Every overseas situation, every set of exigent circumstances,
is a little different, so I don’t really buy that it’s going to tie
future presidents’ hands very much,” he said.
But Harold H. Bruff, a University of Colorado law professor who is one of the authors of a casebook on the separation of powers,
argued that the episode would have enduring political ramifications.
“I’m sure that Obama or some later president will argue later that they
can still choose whether or not to go to Congress,” he said. “But it
does raise the political cost of a future president not going to
Congress because the precedent will be cited against him or her.”
COPY http://www.nytimes.com
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