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What Rand Paul Misses: Congress, not the Constitution, should curtail the president’s war powers.
National Review ^ | 03/09/2013 | Andrew McCarthy

Posted on 03/09/2013 5:03:48 AM PST by SeekAndFind

It was Wednesday, shortly before Senator Rand Paul’s bravura 13-hour filibuster, the Jimmy Stewart star turn in Paul’s crusade to have the Constitution ban a bogeyman of his own making: the killing of American citizens on American soil by America’s armed forces — a scandal that clearly cries out for action, having occurred exactly zero times in the 20 years since jihadists commenced hostilities by bombing the World Trade Center.

At a hearing of the Judiciary Committee, Senator Ted Cruz was grilling Attorney General Eric Holder. Cruz seemed beside himself — in the theatrical spirit of the day — over Holder’s refusal to concede that the imaginary use of lethal force conjured up by Paul would be, under any and all circumstances, unconstitutional. The attorney general preferred the fuzzier term “inappropriate” — at least until Senator Cruz finally browbeat him into saying that by “inappropriate” he meant “unconstitutional.”

Fuzzy was better. To be sure, Cruz is an accomplished constitutional scholar and a favorite of mine, and I can say neither of those things about the attorney general. Yet my sympathies were with Holder. I found myself wishing he’d stood by his equivocal guns.

I need to be careful here. To cross Paul admirers can mean being cast into the neocon darkness, along with all those other cogs in the military-industrial complex who dream of a global American empire — and that’s even when the offense is not compounded by suggesting that Eric Holder might have been right about something. So let me say outright: I am against using our armed forces to kill our citizens in our homeland.

That puts me in the same camp as about 99.9 percent of Americans. In part, that owes to our natural, patriotic predilection. But there’s another part of the explanation — just as important, but less well noticed: After 20 years, we understand the particular conflict we are in. We can confidently say that, in the war authorized by Congress a dozen years ago, we do not need to use lethal military force inside our country.

You see, there is a right way to do what Senator Paul says he wants to do, a way that does not involve messing around with the Constitution in a manner we will come to regret. Contrary to Senator Paul’s assertions, and those of senators Cruz and Mike Lee, who lent their voices and scholarly heft to Paul’s filibuster, the Constitution does not prohibit the use of lethal force in the United States against American citizens who collude with the enemy.

American history and jurisprudence teach that American citizens who join the enemy may be treated as the enemy: captured without warrant, detained indefinitely without trial, interrogated without counsel, accused of war crimes without grand-jury proceedings, tried by military commission without the protections of civilian due process, and executed promptly after conviction. That is because these measures are permissible under the laws of war, and the Constitution accommodates the laws of war — they are the rule of law when Congress has authorized warfare.

Under the laws of war, enemy combatants may be subjected to lethal force — that’s usually the idea. It makes no sense to conclude that the Constitution abides all the aforementioned departures from peacetime due process but prohibits the killing of American enemy combatants . . . particularly when the proponents of this novel claim are quick to concede that the government is free to use lethal force against American enemy combatants once they leave our territory.

The Constitution enables the government to marshal all the might necessary, under any conceivable circumstances, to quell threats to the United States. The Framers, with a humility that contrasts sharply with our certitude, understood that some threats could be existential in nature. While the senators busied themselves during the Paul filibuster with Alice in Wonderland and “Stand with Rand” tweets, it might have been worthwhile for someone to read Hamilton’s trenchant observation (from Federalist 23) that

it is impossible to foresee or define the extent and variety of national exigencies, or the correspondent extent and variety of the means which may be necessary to satisfy them. The circumstances that endanger the safety of nations are infinite; and for this reason no constitutional shackles can wisely be imposed on the power to which the care of it is committed.

Heedlessly, Senator Paul and his supporters figure they have a handle on the infinite. We can safely assume, they tell us, that the Constitution bars attacks in the U.S. on Americans who — if you can follow this — appear to be non-combatants, even if they may be working with the enemy, as long as they are not engaged in “imminent” violence.

Really? Let’s imagine something that, unlike Senator Paul’s speculations, is actually foreseeable — a scenario based on the way our enemies function, as remote from the Washington debate as that may be. Let’s suppose we have an American scholar of Islam fulfilling the role of the Blind Sheikh — i.e., a jurist schooled in sharia with sufficient academic depth to be qualified to issue fatwas approving terrorist attacks.

Ostensibly, our American sheikh might be sitting passively in a mosque, a café, or an apartment. He certainly doesn’t look like an enemy combatant — especially if, as was the case with the Blind Sheikh, various maladies render him incapable of building a bomb, carrying out an assassination, or doing most things of use to a jihadist cell. Yet in the enemy’s doctrine, attacks cannot happen until he green-lights them. Senator Paul says he’s fine with lethal force against imminent threats. So, when does our sheikh get imminent? When the phone rings? When some other innocent-looking young man comes into the café, sits down at his table, and starts whispering in his ear?

Now, after 20 years, it is probably safe to say there is no need to have our armed forces on alert for this contingency. If the executive branch has enough intel to know who and where this sheikh is, the FBI can arrest him, just as the FBI arrested José Padilla as he disembarked from a plane in Chicago in 2002 — every bit the enemy combatant, though not yet acting on his mass-murder plot. That is how war power has always worked under the Constitution: Having the technical law-of-war justification to kill José Padilla does not require you to kill him. You do what is sensible under the circumstances.

In the ongoing conflict, the enemy does not have fortifications inside our territory that would enable its operatives to keep the police at bay. As long as we catch them in time, our enemies can be safely taken into custody. And if we catch them on the precipice of deadly action, ordinary law-enforcement principles allow for the use of lethal force to stop them.

But that may not always be the case. We could have enemies with much greater capabilities, enemies including traitorous Americans. The fact that we do not appear to need lethal military force in the homeland in this conflict does not mean we will never need it.

So leave the Constitution alone. The Constitution does not tell us what should or must be done in a particular situation. It tells us the outer limits of what is legitimate in all threat situations. To shackle our power to meet a threat, as Hamilton explained, is to put us in peril.

The goal, according to Senator Paul, is to shackle the president. That is done by trimming his sails in the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF), not by trimming his constitutional power.

Senator Paul has the controversy he sought because the Obama administration arrogantly claimed nigh-limitless power to kill anyone, anywhere, at the president’s whim. There is no reason to believe the president actually intends to abuse such power — he has not done so to this point and, as National Review’s Editors point out, “the day an administration starts killing Americans with drones at cafés — to borrow one of Rand Paul’s hypotheticals — is the day impeachment proceedings begin.” So, assuming the administration is simply trying to protect the president’s institutional turf, it has made the error of conflating the theoretically limitless power the Constitution could potentially vest in the president if a threat were dire enough with the finite authorization Congress has actually given the president for the use of force in this conflict.

Senators Paul and Cruz have suggested that the constitutional claim they’ve posited — viz., presidents are not empowered to kill Americans on American soil absent an imminent threat of violence — is “easy,” “clear,” and “obvious.” I respectfully disagree. It is none of those things. What is easy, clear, and obvious is that if we do not need certain troublesome authorities to fight a war successfully, Congress can withhold them.

Why does it make a difference whether this curtailment comes from the AUMF rather than the Constitution? Because, absent a sudden-attack situation, the Constitution makes Congress the master of what force is lawfully authorized, while our tradition holds that the courts are masters of what the Constitution means.

Since 2004, courts have made themselves a part of the national-security equation to an unprecedented degree. When challenged to construe constitutional doctrines, they seek to impose logic. Senator Paul’s proposal of a Constitution-based no-lethal-force exception to the principle that an American who joins the enemy may be treated like the enemy is not logical.

To iron out the inconsistencies, the courts may well conclude that if Americans are not to be treated as enemy combatants for purposes of lethal force, they should not be treated as enemy combatants for purposes of capture, detention, interrogation, and military war-crimes trials. Furthermore, if they follow the trajectory of the Supreme Court’s 2008 Boumediene decision, courts may well conclude that any core constitutional protections extended to American citizens must also be extended to alien enemy combatants. That would be the end of the law-of-war approach to counterterrorism.

Is that Senator Paul’s objective? I do not know. Many of his libertarian supporters would welcome it. Most Americans would disagree, recognizing that the war paradigm has been instrumental in preventing a reprise of 9/11.

I do know this: If all the senator really has in mind is some curtailment of presidential overreach, the right way to do that is to limit the AUMF. If his ambition is greater, if he believes the country would be better off ending the war paradigm and returning to peacetime due process, the forthright way to do that is to repeal the AUMF. That would be a terrible mistake, but one we could withstand, however painfully. What we might not be able to withstand is the shackling of constitutional powers we may someday need to sustain the United States.

— Andrew C. McCarthy is a senior fellow at the National Review Institute and the executive director of the Philadelphia Freedom Center.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: drones; randpaul; warpowers
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To: SeekAndFind

Presumably the Constitution does limit the president’s war-making power.


41 posted on 03/09/2013 8:28:20 AM PST by x
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From McCarthy's article, "Heedlessly, Senator Paul and his supporters figure they have a handle on the infinite.

National Review showed its colors when it dove into the tank for Romney and McCarthy jumps in to join McCain and Graham in bashing Senator Paul.

42 posted on 03/09/2013 8:43:30 AM PST by greyfoxx39 (Thanks Mitt.)
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To: PaleoBob

Uh-oh. Lincoln = Stalin? Even though slavery requires a police state to exist and “ targets entire segments “ of the population for abrogation of their rights ? I suspect you know the Constitution much better than I; where does it say that slaves need to be of African descent? Suppose you had been uno of the octos born to OctoMom— could she have sold you into slavery under the Constitution that Lincoln supposedly tore up?


43 posted on 03/09/2013 8:55:44 AM PST by gusopol3
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To: SeekAndFind

There are probably 40% of the population who would be thrilled if obama hit a Tea Party rally with a drone.

This writer is naive if he doesn’t believe mccain and most politicians from both parties want the Tea Party destroyed by any means neccessary. I use the Tea Party as one example.

The founding fathers had no idea how easy it would become in the future to fix elections.

The founding fathers had no idea that a majority of congress would be filled with the type of people we have today.

The founding fathers never thought we’d be a war with a religion on our side of the earth . And they sure never dreamed the populace would become so stupid that they’d elect one of the enemy president.


44 posted on 03/09/2013 8:58:59 AM PST by Terry Mross (How long before America is gone?)
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To: Jim Noble

The highjacker would be engaged in an attack on the country. The passengers would simply be collateral damage.


45 posted on 03/09/2013 9:01:18 AM PST by Terry Mross (How long before America is gone?)
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To: MamaTexan

You are clearly wrong on every point that you are trying to make.

Yes, a TREATY does OBLIGATE the United States to defend another country, if that is stated in said Treaty. The Treaty itself, once ratified, is Congressional authority to use military force, but Congress can clearly revoke said Treaty or refuse to fund a military effort taken by any President.

The Constitution is NOT a text book, or a complete guide to how all issues should be resolved. It is not intended to spell out every single action the government can or can not take.

Some things are specifically allowed, some things are specifically prohibited. Congress is given BROAD power to IMPLEMENT the Constitutional framework for our form of government.

Yes, you are CRAZY, and you have very very few people, alive today, who share your nutty views.


46 posted on 03/09/2013 10:59:58 AM PST by Kansas58
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To: SeekAndFind
Rep. Gowdy a month ealier
47 posted on 03/09/2013 12:24:34 PM PST by cornelis
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To: Louis Foxwell

Count on the power going out nationwide within a few weeks of that happening on a large scale. A tyranny (even a popular “tyranny of the majority”), will not have the power to run its toys and murder patriots wholesale, if the power is shut off. And the power can be shut off anytime. The power flows through the transmission lines only while the social contract (read, “The Constitution”) is still largely in effect.


48 posted on 03/09/2013 4:58:30 PM PST by Travis McGee (www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com)
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To: gusopol3

Uh-oh. Lincoln = Stalin? Even though slavery requires a police state to exist and “ targets entire segments “ of the population for abrogation of their rights ? I suspect you know the Constitution much better than I; where does it say that slaves need to be of African descent? Suppose you had been uno of the octos born to OctoMom— could she have sold you into slavery under the Constitution that Lincoln supposedly tore up?


Lincoln might have agonized at great length and depth and blah blah blah before doing it (and thus merited statues and academy award performances for having done so), but he waged war on half the nation he was elected to lead and killed more Americans than any American ever did before or after.

That’s just a fact.

Once the leader of a nation starts (or started) killing his own citizens in great numbers, he enters the same realm of Lenin, Stalin, Mao, Saddam, Ho, Ceaucescu, etc. —

During the 20th century more than 170 million people were killed by their own government. Most of these killings were “justified” in some way or another as worthy acts by the government that carried out the killings. Stalin used to sign the death sentence certificates AFTER killing the people and it always accused them of serious “crimes,” some of which might have risen to the level of abiding slavery.

Of course slavery in the South was a bad thing, but it was also based on a plantation system that was as doomed to fail as one of Stalin’s five-year plans for that matter. There are many bad things done in America and yet only one president has waged outright war on half of us. In most cases, presidents rely on legal, civil means for changing the things they don’t like—and a failing system shouldn’t be all that tough to replace via clever politics and such.

The Constitution guaranteed rights to the States including the right to be utterly stupid and vile in their various practices. (To wit: My state allows men to marry other men, an abomination.)

No southern state would have ratified the Constitution as it was perceived by Lincoln. Most wouldn’t even ratify it today knowing how easily distorted it is — and slavery wouldn’t even enter into that calculation.

This whole “Lincoln freed the slaves” thing is all fine and good but where did he get that authority in the first place? It was really no better than one of those Stalin death sentence certificates.

Just ask yourself this question—There is a candidate for president who, if elected in 2016, will wage war on every state west of the Mississippi because he has A REALLY GOOD REASON to do it. (Just ask him.) Are you going to vote for him?

As for octos and unos, I’m assuming that’s some sort of rap music thing?? I don’t know any of that.

In any case, I realize my view of Lincoln is a minority view. And that most people think he was a saint.


49 posted on 03/09/2013 6:34:03 PM PST by PaleoBob
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