The House's nonbinding resolution
against the Bush Administration's new strategy for Iraq is only the
first skirmish in what is likely to be a bitter struggle over the
future of U.S. policy in Iraq. Democrats in the House engineered a
246 to 182 vote by crafting a resolution that enabled House members
to take a cost-free symbolic stand against President Bush's "new
way forward" without taking responsibility for proposing a coherent
alternative policy. This resolution, a rare rebuke to the nation's
commander in chief in a time of war, is the first step in what will
be a protracted campaign to hamstring President Bush's Middle East
policy and undermine his constitutional authority as commander in
chief. At stake is not only the fate of Iraq but also the outcome
of the war against terrorism and of U.S. efforts to contain Iran,
as well as the ability of future American presidents to fight and
win wars.
House Democrats already have signaled that they intend to escalate
their efforts to block the Administration's plans in Iraq by
placing restrictions on the funds and resources needed to implement
the Administration's new counterinsurgency strategy. Representative
John Murtha (D-PA), chairman of the House Appropriations
Subcommittee on Defense, has indicated that he will seek to attach
conditions to the $93 billion supplemental defense appropriation
due to be voted on next month that will make it impossible for the
Administration to follow through with its promising new strategy.
Murtha intends to legislatively impose restrictions on the
deployment of military units to Iraq by stipulating that they must
meet certain requirements for equipment, training, and time between
deployments. By cynically masking his proposals as efforts to
enhance military readiness, Representative Murtha seeks to sabotage
the surge strategy.
Democrats hope to sidestep the charge that they are undermining
the troops during wartime by imposing restrictions by legislative
fiat, rather than direct cuts to funding. But blocking
reinforcements would put the lives of the troops already deployed
in Iraq at greater risk. And those troops now in Iraq are likely to
face extended deployments if Congress delays the deployment of
their replacements. This kind of congressional micromanagement not
only undermines the flexibility of the forces available to military
commanders and reduces the overall effectiveness of the war effort,
but it also impinges on the President's powers as commander in
chief. Such legislation could provoke a constitutional clash over
presidential war powers.
If the Democratic-controlled Congress does succeed in choking off
the troop reinforcements and resources needed to implement the Bush
Administration's Iraq strategy, then it must assume responsibility
for the resulting disaster.
By undercutting the Administration's Iraq policy, Congress risks
fatally undermining the Iraqi government, allowing Iraq to slide
into a much more bloody sectarian civil war, and handing Iran,
Syria, and al-Qaeda a major victory. A rush-to-exit strategy also
risks abandoning Iraqis to a humanitarian catastrophe far worse
than the murderous ethnic cleansing in the Balkans that led to two
U.S. interventions there in the 1990s and even worse than the
tragic bloodletting in Darfur today. Pulling the plug on the war in
Iraq also will help create the conditions for many future wars. A
defeat in Iraq will increase the likelihood that future U.S.
military interventions will be needed to combat a resurgent
al-Qaeda, contain spillover effects that threaten Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, and Jordan, and confront an increasingly aggressive
Iran.
James Phillips is
Research Fellow for Middle Eastern Affairs in the Douglas and Sarah
Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies, a division of the
Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Institute for International
Studies, at The Heritage Foundation.
Report Middle East
House Iraq Vote Spells Trouble Ahead for War Effort
February 17, 2007 2 min read
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James Phillips
Former Visiting Fellow, Allison Center
James Phillips was a Visiting Fellow for Middle Eastern affairs at The Heritage Foundation.
Authors
James Phillips
Former Visiting Fellow, Allison Center
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