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- From: dfo@tko.vtt.fi (Foxvog Douglas)
- Subject: Re: raid started
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.083105.4317@ousrvr.oulu.fi>
- Sender: news@ousrvr.oulu.fi
- Organization: VTT
- References: <1j212fINN980@menudo.uh.edu> <1993Jan16.110625.4392@ousrvr.oulu.fi> <1jf8eeINNdj6@menudo.uh.edu>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 08:31:05 GMT
- Lines: 153
-
- In article <1jf8eeINNdj6@menudo.uh.edu> HADCRJAM@admin.uh.edu (MILLER, JIMMY A.) writes:
- >In <1993Jan16.110625.4392@ousrvr.oulu.fi> dfo@tko.vtt.fi writes:
- >
- >> In article <1j212fINN980@menudo.uh.edu> HADCRJAM@admin.uh.edu (MILLER, JIMMY A.) writes:
- >> >It has demanded that the UN use Iraqi aircraft to fly in and out.
- >> >Iraqis have gone into territory ceded to Kuwait
- >> >and removed military
- >> >weapons, which 1) is against the cease-fire agreement and 2) the Security
- >> >Council has demanded the return of said missiles, which has not been done.
-
- >> The demand came after the removal. Iraq is not banned from having
- >> Silkworm missiles under UN resolutions, just nuclear, chemical, and
- >> biological weapons.
-
- > To my knwoledge, the resolutions and the ceae-fire agreement did not allow
- >Iraq to return to the area to recover their weapons, merely non-military/non-
- >weapon equipment. And the weapons have not been returned as demanded by the
- >UN.
-
- The territory was Iraqi until Nov. or Dec. at which time the UN decided
- to give it to Kuwait. Iraq was given until a certain time to remove its
- goods from the land that was being taken from it. Iraq has not agreed
- to the loss of this land but attempted to remove its property before the
- deadline. They had problems getting "permission" to go in (to what they
- considered their own land) to obtain their goods, and with the deadline
- approaching and the threat of loss of the goods they went in anyway.
-
- The cease-fire agreement has nothing to do with this as the territory
- was taken from Iraq long after that agreement. I do not have the text
- of the resolution taking this territory from Iraq and giving it to
- Kuwait, so i cannot address whether that resolution (assuming it was a
- resolution) specifically banned Iraq from removing its military supplies
- from the region. Iraq acquiesced in the UN's holding of its military
- supplies pending resolution of other matters, but the situation changed
- when they were threatened with permanent loss of the property.
-
- What sort of demand came from the UN to return the weapons? Was it yet
- another SC resolution? Even if it was, only resolutions passed before
- the Nov 1990 resolution permitting use of force can be enforced by the
- US (or other nations) militarily.
-
- >> >I am unaware of any UN resolutions regarding no fly zxones, either for or
- >> >against WRT Iraq. BUT if Iraq has submitted to the no-fly zone (however
- >> >unwillingly and imperfectly, moving SAMs into it is a threatening gesture
- >> >at the very least.
-
- >> It may be considered threatening, but it isn't banned. Missiles on the
- >> ground certainly do not violate a ban on airplanes in the air.
-
- Also, Iraq has never submitted to the no-fly zone; it specifically
- claims that they are illegal.
-
- > Yes, but given the fact that the Coalition (US) patrols the zone to insure
- >it is complied with, the movement of SAM's into it is a threatening gesture.
-
- Threatening gestures are not banned.
-
- >SAM's are used to shoot down aircraft. The Marsh Arabs have no air force of
- >their own, so who do you think the missiles were intended for? Certainly
- >it is not in keeping with the slew of resolutions passed WRT Iraq since
- >August 1990.
-
- Specify a resolution that it violates.
-
- >> >> Secondly, how can Bush go ahead and wage war on another country without
- >> >> consulting the people of the U.S. ? That's against the constitution if
- >> >> you ask me.
-
- >> > The president may have US forces in a combat situation for up to 30(?) days
- >> >before Congress must be consulted. This is part of the War Powers act, the
-
- >> FALSE!!! The War Powers act specifically grants NO power to the
- >> President, it only puts limitations upon him/her. It leaves up in the
- >> air the constitutionality of whether the President could act before that
- >> time.
-
- > I did not state the act GAVE the president this power.
-
- That the president may have US forces in combat for a specified period
- before Congress must be consulted is NOT part of the War Powers act, as
- you falsely claimed. The War Powers act requires the President to
- notify Congress of certain actions and at certain times, and
- specifically bans the use of military forces in certain conditions (such
- as without specific Congressional authorization after a given period of
- time). The only part of your statement that is part of the War Powers
- act is that "Congress must be consulted."
-
- >The president has the
- >power to order the military to do anything he damn well pleases.
-
- Not at all. There are many laws regulating the armed forces. Whether
- the president has the power to send the troops to war (unless the US is
- attacked) is a constitutional question that is undecided despite the
- Constitution's specific granting of the War power to Congress. If you
- wish to discuss this the discussion belongs in alt.politics.constitution.usa .
-
- >The congress
- >may intervene via its power of the purse, impeach the president, any number of
- >things to halt his orders.
-
- True
-
- >It is allowed to interfere in this manner because
- >of the ablity to declare war.
-
- These have nothing to do with the war power. Congress has these rights
- because they are granted them specifically (the third point has to do
- with Congress's responsibility for making laws for the regulation of the
- armed forces.
-
- >> >constitutionality of which is somewhat questionable. Anyway, the original
- >> >resolution passed by Congree authorizing force may still hold. AND on top
- >> >of that, support for being tough on Saddam is quite strong, with most of
- >> >Congress and Clinton himself agreeing with Bush's handling of the affair.
-
- >> Again, that does not absolve the President of Constitutional requirements.
-
- > These are more than a little fuzzy, especially in light of Congressional
- >approval of force vs. Iraq to support the UN resloutions, back in December
- >1990.
-
- January 1991 was the date of the Congressional authorization. Nov. 1991
- was the date of the UN resolution permitting all necessary means.
-
- >Constitutionally, this is not a problem, especially given the
- >attitude of the congress WRT Iraq.
-
- The attitude of Congress or the public (of support for being "tough")
- has NOTHING to do with the Constitutionality of the actions taken.
- Unconstitutional actions can be, and often have been, widely supported.
-
- >> > This is a punitive strike/raid, not an invasion. Plebiscites are not re-
- >> >quired whenever a gun is cocked.
-
- >> No, but the gun was fired, and Congress represents the US people;
- >> plebliscites are never required in the US.
-
- > Then it is the mission of the congress to register any protests or force the
- >president to desist. It has not and is not likely to do so due to the fact
- >that these actions are widely regarded as the right thing and even long
- >overdue. The president is well aware of these facts.
-
- I would also hope that our president would follow the Constitution as he
- swore to do, not just follow the prevailing winds of opinion. Let him
- ask Congress for a declaration of war. If Congress grants it, then
- there is no question of his right to fight.
-
- >Jammer Jim Miller
- >Texas A&M University '89 and '91
-
- --
- doug foxvog
- dfo@tko.vtt.fi
-