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Obama hypocritical on war with Libya
Chicago Sun-Times ^ | Mar 23, 2011 | Jacob Sullum

Posted on 03/24/2011 6:31:10 AM PDT by KeyLargo

Obama hypocritical on war with Libya

JACOB SULLUM

jsullum@reason.com

Last Modified: Mar 23, 2011 02:12AM

In December 2007, the Boston Globe asked 12 presidential candidates about military action aimed at stopping Iran from building nuclear weapons. “In what circumstances, if any,” the Globe asked, “would the president have constitutional authority to bomb Iran without seeking a use-of-force authorization from Congress?”

Here is how Barack Obama responded: “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.”

According to Obama’s own standard, then, he violated the Constitution when he ordered a military attack against Libya. Worse, he did so in service of a dangerously open-ended rationale for military intervention that is completely unmoored from national defense.

In a letter to congressional leaders on Monday, Obama sought to justify his unilateral action by citing the March 17 U.N. Security Council resolution authorizing member states to “take all necessary measures . . . to protect civilians and civilian populated areas under threat of attack” by forces loyal to Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi. When Obama announced the U.S. air strikes against Libya on Saturday, he likewise sought legal refuge in other countries, saying, “The writ of the international community must be enforced.”

Nonsense, says Louis Fisher, a former senior specialist on separation of powers at the Congressional Research Service, who literally wrote the book on war powers.

“It’s impossible for Congress to take its war powers and give [them] to the U.N.,” Fisher told the Wall Street Journal. “Other than defensive actions — and there’s no defensive actions here — this has to be done by Congress.”

Even if Obama had bothered to obey the Constitution by seeking congressional approval, intervening in Libya’s civil war would take the U.S. military in the wrong direction at a time when fiscal realities dictate that America retire from its job as global policeman. As Obama conceded on Monday, “Our military is already very stretched and carries large burdens all around the world” — precisely because it is required to do much more than defend the United States.

The U.S., with 5 percent of Earth’s population and no enemies on its borders, spends about as much on “defense” as the rest of the world combined. If you want to know why, consider how casually our commanders in chief order American service members to risk their lives for purposes that have nothing to do with national security.

Obama claims “we cannot stand idly by when a tyrant tells his people that there will be no mercy.”

Yes, we can, and we often do.

There is no moral consistency, and little rhyme or reason, to the U.S. government’s decisions about which brutal dictators to challenge, which to leave alone and which to support as allies. The regimes that endorsed the war with Libya — supposedly justified by outrage over “gross and systematic violation of human rights” — include quite a few, such as Gabon, Syria and Saudi Arabia, that are guilty of the same crimes.

In any case, American taxpayers have a right to expect that the money they are compelled to contribute to this nation’s defense will be used for that purpose. American military personnel have a right to expect that their missions will have something to do with protecting U.S. security, the function they have agreed to serve.

Obama’s humanitarian justification for waging war against Gadhafi’s regime harks back to George H.W. Bush’s 1992 intervention in Somalia’s civil war, which ended so ignominiously that his own son, running for president in 2000, repudiated “nation building,” calling for a more “humble” foreign policy guided by “what’s in the best interest of the United States.”

He ended up interpreting that interest so broadly that it justified an aggressive nation-building campaign in the Middle East.

As a presidential candidate, Obama condemned his predecessor’s “war of choice” in Iraq. As president, he not only continues to wage that war, but endorses a justification for military action that promises one war of choice after another.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: hypocrite; libya; obama; war

1 posted on 03/24/2011 6:31:18 AM PDT by KeyLargo
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To: KeyLargo
There is no moral consistency, and little rhyme or reason, to the U.S. government’s decisions about which brutal dictators to challenge, which to leave alone and which to support as allies.

Ah, but with Barry, there is. Any action that helps reestablish a caliphate will be taken, and any action that hinders the reestablishment of a caliphate will not.

2 posted on 03/24/2011 6:37:34 AM PDT by WPaCon (Obama: pansy progressive, mad Mohammedan, or totalitarian tyrant? Or all three?)
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To: KeyLargo
obamachick
3 posted on 03/24/2011 6:39:08 AM PDT by FrankR (The Evil Are Powerless If The Good Are Unafraid! - R. Reagan)
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To: KeyLargo

This was the Commie/Marxist/Socialist/Progressive/Dummies chance to make the case for the U.N. to become the world police force.

Security by committe is NOT security.

Ginormous failure.
Get the U.N out of the U.S and the U.S out of the U.N.


4 posted on 03/24/2011 6:40:25 AM PDT by Marty62 (Marty60)
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To: KeyLargo

“As a presidential candidate, Obama condemned his predecessor’s “war of choice” in Iraq. As president, he not only continues to wage that war, but endorses a justification for military action that promises one war of choice after another.”

This is the money quote. If we accept Obama’s stated rationale, then Obama implicitly has taken on the prerogative of taking unilateral military action against any number of African nations who are brutalizing their people, North Korea, Cuba and many nations in the Middle East. Indeed, if we were to rank-order countries by the total amount of harm being inflicted on citizens by their own government, it’s unlikely Libya even would have made the Top Ten list.

This is an unprecedented claim of presidential power: as it did during Vietnam and other past conflicts, Congress should be DEMANDING that the president adhere to the Constitution; instead, most are meekly sitting on their hands.


5 posted on 03/24/2011 6:41:23 AM PDT by DrC
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To: KeyLargo

Obama Hypocritical? So what else is new???

What did you expect from a inexperienced, lazy, narcissistic, do nothing community organizer, whose only philosophlical teachings was thru Marxist-Leninist commie child molesters. He was brought into this world (maybe??) by a skank of a mother who liked to sleep with Muslim and Commie sympathizers.

His whole life is a lie and a fraud and someday this will all come to light...

Meanwhile my Country suffers and the Press looks the other way.


6 posted on 03/24/2011 6:46:17 AM PDT by wetgundog (" Extremism in the Defense of Liberty is no Vice")
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To: Marty62

Just as when any of the left’s big government spending programs fails to produce the promised results, they demand more money -

whenever their centralizing of authority fails to produce the promised utopia, they demand that authority become even more centralized.

Meanwhile, the State grows, and the individual and his freedom diminishes.


7 posted on 03/24/2011 6:51:27 AM PDT by MrB (The difference between a Humanist and a Satanist - the latter knows whom he's working for)
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To: DrC
"Congress should be DEMANDING that the president adhere to the Constitution; instead, most are meekly sitting on their hands."
8 posted on 03/24/2011 7:03:19 AM PDT by KeyLargo
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To: KeyLargo

It’s painful to see 0bama’s critics seizing on his hypocrisy — that being the primary sin in the arrested liberal mentality, the eternal whine of the adolescent. However, if it washes the pixie dust from a some 0bamanist eyes, it serves the purpose.


9 posted on 03/24/2011 7:06:22 AM PDT by 668 - Neighbor of the Beast (Public education is WELFARE.)
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To: wetgundog

10 posted on 03/24/2011 7:08:09 AM PDT by KeyLargo
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