Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Trump news on Youtube Jan 31 2018

In Washington at 9 P.M. local time, U.S. President Donald Trump started his first State of the

Union address.

We have Lee Jeong-yeon here to fill us in on the details.

Jeong-yeon, I understand Trump is expected to mention North Korea in his speech today.

What can you tell us about that?

Hi Mark, yes President Trump started his first annual remarks to Congress and the American

people today on Capitol Hill.

The speech is not yet finished, but from exerpts from the speech released by the White House,

he is expected to say, "complacency he said, and I quote, "complacency and concessions

only invite aggression and provocations.

I will not repeat the mistakes of the past administrations that got us into this dangerous

position"... hinting a strong stance on the regime.

Okay, now aside from North Korea, what were some other key points from the speech we should

know about?

He mainly stressed 'unity' and 'reconciliation' of different parties to come together 'for

the people', covering diverse issues from immigration to the economy.

Regarding immigration, he said he would push for 'immigration policies that focus on the

best interests of American workers and American families'.

He touched upon his proposal on a way to provide citizenship to the more than 1 million unregistered

immigrants in the U.S., which includes the approximately 700-thousand young immigrants

in the soon-to-expire DACA program.

In return he hopes to secure billions of dollars to build the proposed border wall with Mexico.

He took credit for the record-low unemployment rate and rising wages after 'years of stagnation,'

and claimed that 2-point-4 million new jobs were created since his election.

He also said the U.S. has enacted the biggest tax cuts and reforms in American history that

he says will provide 'tremendous relief for the middle class and small businesses.'

However, critics point out may not be true, as bigger tax cuts were seen by his predecessors

Presidents Reagan, Truman, and Obama.

Back to you Mark.

For more infomation >> State of the Union: Donald Trump delivers his first address - Duration: 2:23.

-------------------------------------------

"¡Trump habla de separación y no de unidad familiar!" | Un Nuevo Día | Telemundo - Duration: 4:43.

For more infomation >> "¡Trump habla de separación y no de unidad familiar!" | Un Nuevo Día | Telemundo - Duration: 4:43.

-------------------------------------------

BREAKING!! Trump Just Announced What He's Doing With The FISA MEMO! - BreakingNews24 - Duration: 34:51.

For more infomation >> BREAKING!! Trump Just Announced What He's Doing With The FISA MEMO! - BreakingNews24 - Duration: 34:51.

-------------------------------------------

Rob Reiner Responds To Trump's SOTU Address, Exposes Why The Left Is Losing - Duration: 4:45.

For more infomation >> Rob Reiner Responds To Trump's SOTU Address, Exposes Why The Left Is Losing - Duration: 4:45.

-------------------------------------------

Trump Kept 2 Special SOTU Guests A Complete Secret — Room Exploded When He Announced Them - Duration: 4:23.

Trump Kept 2 Special SOTU Guests A Complete Secret — Room Exploded When He Announced

Them On Tuesday night, President Donald Trump delivered

his first State of the Union address.

One of the most important traditions surrounding this annual speech is the special guests invited

to attend by the president himself.

This year, Trump kept two of his SOTU guests a complete secret, and the whole room exploded

when he announced them.

President Trump had previously announced fifteen special guests who would be in attendance

on Tuesday night.

They included hard-working Americans, military members, and the parents of two young girls

who were savagely murdered by MS-13 gang members However, there were two guests who Trump kept

a secret all along: Otto Warmbier's parents.

Warmbier was a U.S. student at the University of Virginia when he went to North Korea as

a tourist in 2016.

He was accused of sneaking onto a restricted floor in the hotel where he was staying and

stealing a propaganda poster.

He later admitted to it and pleaded to be released.

However, North Korea sentenced him to 15 years of hard labor.

After 17 months, Warmbier was released, but suffered serious injuries to his brain and

was "systematically tortured and intentionally injured by Kim Jong [Un] … Kim, and his

regime.

This was no accident," according to his father, Fred.

[Source: IJR] "Otto's wonderful parents, Fred and Cindy

Warmbier, are with us tonight — along with Otto's brother and sister, Austin and Greta.

Incredible people," said President Trump."You are powerful witnesses to a menace that threatens

our world, and your strength truly inspires us all.

Thank you very much.

Tonight, we pledge to honor Otto's memory with total American resolve," he added.It

was a beautiful gesture to include the Warmbiers in this year's SOTU, as they have endured

so much and continue to grieve the horrifying loss of their son and brother, whose death

could not have been any more brutal.

Indeed, when Otto was finally returned to U.S. soil, he was a complete vegetable as

a result of the torture he had endured at the hands of the North Koreans.

"He was on his deathbed when he came home to us," Fred Warmbier told CNN.

"That's why they released him," added Cindy.

"They didn't want him to die on their soil."

When Otto was finally returned to the U.S., he had a number of inexplicable injuries.

His bottom teeth appeared to have been "rearranged," he had a large scar running the length of

his right foot, and his hands and legs were described as "totally deformed."

In total, Otto Warmbier spent 17 months in North Korea before being released.

He was taken by a medical aircraft to the US.

After his arrival, doctors at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center said his condition

was severe, and that he suffered extensive loss of tissue in all regions of his brain.

The North Korean government initially attributed Warmbier's condition to botulism.

However, when the Warmbiers met Otto at the airport in Ohio, they found their child suffering

from something inconsistent with a toxin-fueled illness.

[Source: CNN] If any family deserved to be honored by the

president on Tuesday, it was the Warmbiers.

President Donald Trump asked the nation to pray for them as they continue to grieve the

loss of their beloved Otto, as they are still taking things one day at a time.Please share

this report to offer the Warmbiers your deepest sympathies and so that others might keep them

in prayer, as well.

They've gone through the unimaginable, and it's something the left would much rather

we forget as President Trump deals with Kim Jong Un and his regime.

For more infomation >> Trump Kept 2 Special SOTU Guests A Complete Secret — Room Exploded When He Announced Them - Duration: 4:23.

-------------------------------------------

¿De qué habló Trump en el Estado de la Nación? | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:34.

For more infomation >> ¿De qué habló Trump en el Estado de la Nación? | Noticiero | Telemundo - Duration: 0:34.

-------------------------------------------

America Gave Trump High Marks For State Of The Union Speech - Duration: 2:30.

For more infomation >> America Gave Trump High Marks For State Of The Union Speech - Duration: 2:30.

-------------------------------------------

Melania Trump CLEARLY Despises Donald And Showed It At State Of The Union Address - Duration: 3:50.

During Donald Trump's State of the Union address Tuesday night, pretty much every republican

in that room really enjoyed everything that the President had to say.

And I say pretty much every republican because Melania Trump was having none of it.

Recent reports have shown us that Melania Trump is absolutely furious with her husband

over the Stormy Daniels, the adult film actress, the allegations of the affair that the two

had shortly after Melania gave birth to Barron and her anger and pretty much hatred for the

President of the United States was on full display during the State of the Union.

Take a look at this clip and see Melania's reaction when Donald Trump starts talking

about family and faith and God.

In America, we know that faith and family, not government and bureaucracy, are the center

of American life.

The motto is "In God we Trust".

All right, so several things to point out before we even get to Melania's like stoned

face, I hate you, so much reaction to her husband.

Steve Mnuchin, in that clip, looked like he was more excited than he's ever been in his

whole life and his body didn't even understand how to convey happiness.

Just that wooden plastered smile on his face, clapping like a child.

And then speaking of children, poor little Barron sitting there clapping his poor little

heart out for his father who's lying to the American public all night, but that kid's

just happy to be there, happy to see his dad up on stage and, wow, so much enthusiasm for

this guy who doesn't understand that his dad is destroying this country.

And then, of course, there's Melania.

Melania's expression looked like she hated every single thing about that man that was

speaking and clapping very loudly for himself at the podium.

She didn't want to be there.

In fact, she didn't even ride with the President to the State of the Union address.

They took two separate cars and it's not even like they left an hour apart, they went at

the same time, they were just in different cars 'cause she doesn't want to be around

him anymore.

I will be shocked if Melania Trump does not file for divorce before the end of Donald

Trump's first term as President of the United States.

She hates him and she may not be saying that publicly but the fact that she literally does

not want to be around him, canceled things on their trip to Switzerland so she didn't

have to be near him, didn't ride in the same car with him and then refused to give the

standing ovation that every other republican in that room was giving, that speaks volumes

about how this woman feels about the man that she married.

She can not stand him and I seriously doubt those two will be together by the 2020 elections.

Maybe not even by the 2018 midterms.

For more infomation >> Melania Trump CLEARLY Despises Donald And Showed It At State Of The Union Address - Duration: 3:50.

-------------------------------------------

State of the Union: Donald Trump delivers his first address - Duration: 1:56.

At the Capitol in Washington, U.S. President Donald Trump gave his first State of the Union

address on Tuesday local time.

For more, we have Lee Jeong-yeon on the line.

Jeong-yeon, during the long and mostly on-script speech made by President Trump, can you tell

us more about the part where he mentions North Korea?

Hi Jiyeon, yes President Trump gave his first annual remarks to Congress and the U.S. public

today on Capitol Hill.

He said "maximum pressure" will be placed on the North Korean regime as he referred

to its "cruel dictatorship" and its "reckless pursuit of nuclear missiles" that could threaten

the U.S..

He said "Complacency and concessions only invite aggression and provocations.

I will not repeat the mistakes of the past administrations that got us into this dangerous

position."

Trump narrated the incident with Otto Warmbier and his death as well as the story of the

North Korean defector Ji Seong-ho who was present at the address.

Aside from comments on the regime, he mainly stressed 'unity' and 'reconciliation' of different

parties to come together 'for the people.'

Immigration was a key issue.

He said he would push for policies that focus on the 'best interests of American workers

and American families,' by crafting a bipartisan approach to immigration reform.

He mentioned the 'four pillars' plan.

This includes a pathway to provide citizenship to 1-point-8 million unregistered immigrants

in the U.S., securing the border with Mexico, and ending the visa lottery as well as chain

migration.

He also took credit for the record-low unemployment rate and rising wages in the country after

'years of stagnation,' and claimed that 2-point-4 million new jobs were created since his election.

He also said the U.S. has enacted the biggest tax cuts and reforms in its history that he

says will provide 'tremendous relief for the middle class and small businesses.'

Back to you.

Thanks Jeong-yeon for that report.

For more infomation >> State of the Union: Donald Trump delivers his first address - Duration: 1:56.

-------------------------------------------

Trump Calls For Unity During State Of The Union - Duration: 2:46.

For more infomation >> Trump Calls For Unity During State Of The Union - Duration: 2:46.

-------------------------------------------

President Trump Decreases the Debt to GDP Ratio in His First Yea - Duration: 2:37.

President Trump Decreases the Debt to GDP Ratio in His First Year in Office � First

Time in More than 50 Years!

The higher a country�s debt to GDP ratio, the less healthy the country�s economy.

With the GDP numbers released yesterday, President Trump�s policies have officially decreased

the Debt to GDP ratio by 1.2% in the President�s first year in office.

In contrast, President Obama increased the US Debt to GDP ratio his first year in office

by 14.5%.

Obama increased the rate a total of 37% over his 8 years in office.

Since his inauguration President Trump has focused his efforts on the security of the

country and on the prosperity of its economy.

The results of his actions are taking shape.

The US GDP has increased each quarter in 2017 with the 4th Quarter GDP increasing to $19.739

trillion � the highest GDP for any country in world history.

On the other hand, the President has curtailed US spending.

The result is that the US Debt to GDP ratio decreased in 2017 from 105% to 104%.

No President in more than 50 years has decreased the Debt to GDP ratio in his first year in

office by more than 1%.

The last President to do so was Nixon in 1969.

Presidents Reagan and George W. Bush decreased the Debt to GDP ratio in their first years

in office but by less than 1%.

President Trump has the stock market at all time highs, jobs at all time highs and the

debt to GDP ratio decreasing.

As a result America is moving in the right direction for the first time in at

least a decade.

For more infomation >> President Trump Decreases the Debt to GDP Ratio in His First Yea - Duration: 2:37.

-------------------------------------------

President Trump Decreases the Debt to GDP – First Time in More than 50 Years! - BreakingNews24 - Duration: 23:17.

President Trump Decreases the Debt to GDP Ratio in His First Year in Office – First

Time in More than 50 Years!

The higher a country's debt to GDP ratio, the less healthy the country's economy.

With the GDP numbers released yesterday, President Trump's policies have officially decreased

the Debt to GDP ratio by 1.2% in the President's first year in office.

In contrast, President Obama increased the US Debt to GDP ratio his first year in office

by 14.5%.

Obama increased the rate a total of 37% over his 8 years in office.

Since his inauguration President Trump has focused his efforts on the security of the

country and on the prosperity of its economy.

The results of his actions are taking shape.

The US GDP has increased each quarter in 2017 with the 4th Quarter GDP increasing to $19.739

trillion – the highest GDP for any country in world history.

On the other hand, the President has curtailed US spending.

The result is that the US Debt to GDP ratio decreased in 2017 from 105% to 104%.

No President in more than 50 years has decreased the Debt to GDP ratio in his first year in

office by more than 1%.

The last President to do so was Nixon in 1969.

Presidents Reagan and George W. Bush decreased the Debt to GDP ratio in their first years

in office but by less than 1%.

President Trump has the stock market at all time highs, jobs at all time highs and the

debt to GDP ratio decreasing.

As a result America is moving in the right direction for the first time in at least

a decade.

For more infomation >> President Trump Decreases the Debt to GDP – First Time in More than 50 Years! - BreakingNews24 - Duration: 23:17.

-------------------------------------------

Trump to tout strong economy in State of the Union address debut - Duration: 1:55.

Now for a look at stories making headlines around the world and we start with President

Trump's first State of the Union address.

The highly anticipated speech to Congress and millions of Americans is slated for Tuesday

night, Washington time.... or 11AM this morning, Korea time

For more on this and other news we turn to our Ro Aram…

Aram… what can we expect from Trump's debut State of the Union address?

Well Semin… on Monday, White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said the economy will be "front

and center," and Trump will likely take credit for the U.S. economic gains in the past year.

The trend of lower unemployment and higher growth began under his predecessor, but Trump

argues the tax overhaul he signed into law late last year has boosted business confidence

and will lead companies to reinvest in the United States.

Furthermore, Trump will likely mention plans to rebuild America's infrastructure and continue

his demands for renegotiating or scrapping trade deals with other nations.

He is also expected to push for bipartisan congressional action on immigration reform

with a possible deal with the Democrats.

At the heart of his proposal is overturning a decision to scrap the so-called DACA program,

in which around 700-thousand young illegal immigrants, known as Dreamers, were protected

from deportation.

Trump, in return, is hoping to secure billions of dollars for his proposed border wall with

Mexico, as well as cuts to legal immigration levels.

If the issue is touched upon, then it would be interesting to see the reactions from dozens

of Democratic lawmakers who are bringing Dreamers as their guests to watch the address.

The general goal of Trump's maiden State of the Union address will be to rally support

as he struggles with record low approval rating and battles a probe into his campaign's alleged

ties with Russia.

For more infomation >> Trump to tout strong economy in State of the Union address debut - Duration: 1:55.

-------------------------------------------

Trump highlights North Korea and America first policy in State of the Union Address - Duration: 2:13.

Trump's address not only sent a message to Americans but also to the global population.

Kim Mok-yeon zooms in on the part of his speech that holds extra-significance for South Korea.

"North Korea and trade."

These two topics were the major concerns of many South Koreans in President Trump's long-awaited

speech.

The U.S. President spoke of numerous concerns surrounding the U.S., and talked in depth

about North Korea.

He mentioned North Korea's heightened level of threat to the U.S., Washington's maximum

pressure on the regime, and its determination not to repeat the past mistakes of previous

administrations.

This time around, Trump's tone was milder than his past speech at the UN General Assembly

where he gave a stern warning to North Korea.

An expert says that this could be a possible sign of the easing of tensions between the

two Koreas ahead of the PyeongChang Winter Olympics.

"Due to the PyeongChang Olympics, signs of cooperation have been observed between the

two Koreas.

I think the ultimate goal of the U.S. is not focused on the cooperation itself, but the

possibility that South Korea could bring North Korea back to talks for denuclearization through

dialogue."

The expert however added that Washington's firm stance against North Korea's nuclear

and missile provocations remains unchanged, saying that if the denuclearization of the

regime cannot be reached through peaceful talks, President Trump will be ready to achieve

that goal through heightened military pressure.

When it comes to trade, Trump just used five sentences, short but strong, to shed light

on his "America first policy."

An economic expert says Trump's declaration of an end to the era of economic surrender,

and his expectations towards fair and reciprocal trade relationships seem to consider the existing

free trade deal with South Korea as "bad".

"By saying 'fixing bad deals', I think he referred to trade agreements that benefited

other nations more than the U.S. such the NAFTA and the KORUS FTA.

He even hinted of scrapping the old and negotiating totally new deals when things don't go well."

The expert said that Trump's remarks on protecting American workers could also deal a big blow

to South Korea, as the U.S. leader is likely referring to keeping jobs and wages for its

nationals especially in the manufacturing sector, where South Korea is seen as a competitor.

Kim Mok-yeon, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> Trump highlights North Korea and America first policy in State of the Union Address - Duration: 2:13.

-------------------------------------------

Trump Gives 1st State Of The Union Address - Duration: 5:12.

For more infomation >> Trump Gives 1st State Of The Union Address - Duration: 5:12.

-------------------------------------------

President Trump delivers first State of the Union - Duration: 3:33.

For more infomation >> President Trump delivers first State of the Union - Duration: 3:33.

-------------------------------------------

Amy Schumer & Celebs Trash Trump In Fake SOTU, Sarah Destroys Them With Nasty Surprise - Duration: 5:39.

For more infomation >> Amy Schumer & Celebs Trash Trump In Fake SOTU, Sarah Destroys Them With Nasty Surprise - Duration: 5:39.

-------------------------------------------

Donald Trump habló de inmigración y destacó sus logros | Un Nuevo Día | Telemundo - Duration: 2:55.

For more infomation >> Donald Trump habló de inmigración y destacó sus logros | Un Nuevo Día | Telemundo - Duration: 2:55.

-------------------------------------------

State of the Union: Donald Trump delivers his first address - Duration: 2:16.

Over in Washington the highlight of the day was President Donald Trump's first State of

the Union address.

The U.S. leader covered a diverse range of issues from North Korea to immigration policies.

Lee Jeong-yeon shares with us his remarks.

U.S. President Donald Trump delivered his maiden State of the Union speech to Congress

on Tuesday.

He said "maximum pressure" will be placed on North Korea as he referred to the regime's

"cruel dictatorship" and its "reckless pursuit of nuclear missiles" that could threaten the

U.S..

"Complacency and concessions only invite aggression and provocations.

I will not repeat the mistakes of the past administrations that got us into this dangerous

position."

He also narrated the incident with the late Otto Warmbier, whose family was present at

the address, as well as the story of the North Korean defector Ji Seong-ho who was also in

the audience.

Aside from comments on the regime, he mainly stressed 'unity' and 'reconciliation' of different

parties to come together 'for the people.'

Immigration took a pivotal portion of his speech.

He said he would push for policies that focus on the 'best interests of American workers

and American families,' by crafting a bipartisan approach to immigration reform.

He mentioned the 'four pillars' plan.

This includes a pathway to provide citizenship to 1-point-8 million unregistered immigrants

in the U.S., building a wall on the Southern border with Mexico, abolishing the visa lottery

to move towards a 'merit-based immigration system,' and ending chain migration to protect

the nuclear family.

He also took credit for the record-low unemployment rate and rising wages after 'years of stagnation,'

and claimed that 2-point-4 million new jobs were created since his election.

Trump called on the Congress to produce a bill that generates at least 1-point-5 trillion

U.S. dollars for investment on new infrastructure... to 'permanently fix the infrastructure deficit.'

He also said the U.S. has enacted the biggest tax cuts and reforms in its history, a move

that, according to Trump, will provide 'tremendous relief for the middle class and small businesses.'

Lee Jeong-yeon, Arirang News

For more infomation >> State of the Union: Donald Trump delivers his first address - Duration: 2:16.

-------------------------------------------

While Congress 'Sits on the Sidelines,' President Trump Is Makin - Duration: 14:11.

While

Congress �Sits on the Sidelines,� President Trump Is Making Some Tough Decisions

Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis told a Senate committee in October that a 16-year-old law

authorizing military force against al-Qaida and its enablers still provided a firm legal

basis for military action against the Islamic State group.

At the time, Syrian Defense Forces had just recaptured the city of Raqqa, which for three

years had been the capital of the terror group�s �caliphate.� It was the beginning of the

end for the terror organization in Syria.

Fast forward three months, and the group is a shadow of its former self, with a few hundred

hard-core militants desperately holding on to slivers of territory in Syria�s Middle

Euphrates Valley.

Smashed by U.S.-backed Kurdish militia and forces loyal to the Syrian regime, the once-fearsome

terror group now controls less than two percent of the territory it occupied at the height

of its power, according to the U.S. coalition to defeat the Islamic State.

Though it still retains the ability to carry out guerrilla-style attacks, the group is

no longer an existential threat to either the Syrian or Iraqi governments.

After such impressive success, Washington is looking at what comes next in Syria.

Far from withdrawing the roughly 2,000 U.S. troops deployed on Syrian soil, as Syrian

President Bashar al-Assad has demanded, President Donald Trump�s administration is preparing

for a long-term presence there

U.S. military commanders have taken care to describe the Syria deployment as part of a

broader counter-terrorism mission that falls under the rubric of the 2001 Authorization

for the Use of Military Force, the same law Mattis testified about in October.

After U.S. airstrikes wiped out 150 Islamic State fighters in eastern Syria last week,

coalition commander Maj. Gen. James Jarrard said the troops had to stay because the anti-terror

mission in Syria was �far from over.�

�We cannot take our focus off our mission, and we must not lose our momentum in taking

these terrorists off the battlefield and preventing them from resurfacing somewhere else,� Jarrad

said.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has offered a much more expansive vision for the U.S.

military effort in Syria.

Speaking at Stanford�s Hoover Institution on Jan. 17, Tillerson outlined five �end

states� the Trump administration desires in Syria, only one of which has even a tenuous

connection the 2001 AUMF

So what is the administration�s plan for Syria?

As Tillerson explained, the U.S. is going to eradicate Islamic State and al-Qaida fighters

wherever they remain in the country.

Then, Washington will usher in a �stable, unified, independent Syria� under a government

led by someone other than Assad.

At the same time, U.S. forces will counter Iranian influence in Syria, denying Tehran

a land bridge through Syrian territory into Lebanon.

While tackling the Iranian problem, the U.S. military will also make Syria safe for returning

refugees and internally displaced persons.

And finally, Washington will guarantee, once and for all, that Syria is free of weapons

of mass destruction.

In his remarks at Hoover, Tillerson denied the administration�s vision amounts to �nation-building�

or �reconstruction.� But the plan includes the kind of strategic objectives Washington

pursued, and is still pursuing, in its long-term interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq.

A notable difference is that Congress specifically authorized both of those wars, but has not

done so for Syria.

Most of official Washington has shrugged at this state of affairs, but a small contingent

of skeptics is raising questions about the uncomfortable reality that American troops

are deployed, uninvited and without congressional or United Nations authorization, to a sovereign

country that has not attacked the U.S. or its allies.

Daniel DePetris, a fellow at the realist-oriented Defense Priorities think tank, is one such

voice arguing that the Trump administration�s plan for Syria distorts the 2001 AUMF beyond

recognition.

Former President Barack Obama�s administration stretched the authorization when it began

the fight against the Islamic State group in Syria, and now the Trump administration

is doing so to a greater degree with its ambitious post-Islamic State project, he says.

�Mattis and Tillerson�s interpretation of the 2001 AUMF is a continuation of the

same legal justification the Obama administration used upon announcing the counter-ISIS military

campaign to the nation,� he told The Daily Caller News Foundation in an email.

�The problem is this is an overly broad argument made by those in the executive branch

who would always prefer more authority to wage war.�

Congress passed the 2001 AUMF just a few days after the 9/11 attacks, giving the president

the green light to use �all necessary and appropriate forces� against individuals

and countries involved in the attack.

In the nearly 17 years since, U.S. administrations have relied on the law � along with a generous

interpretation of executive authority to make war � to provide legal cover for worldwide

military intervention without input from Congress.

Constitutional questions

The text of the 2001 AUMF empowers the president to all use �all necessary and appropriate

force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized,

committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001.� It

also authorizes military force against any country or organization that harbored the

9/11 attackers.

That definition certainly applies to al-Qaida, which carried out the attacks, and the Taliban

regime of Afghanistan that hosted Osama bin Laden and his group�s top commanders.

U.S. officials have also lumped in al-Qaida�s �associated� or �affiliated� forces,

making the AUMF the legal basis for operations against groups such as al-Shabaab in Somalia

and al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb in North Africa.

In short, the 2001 AUMF has been the glue holding together the various iterations of

the global war on terror under former President George W. Bush, Obama and Trump.

The kind of Iran-centric mission outlined by Tillerson at the Hoover Institution stretches

the 17-year-old authorization to the breaking point, DePetris argues.

Denying Iran its objectives in Syria would �involve plunging American troops into a

completely different mission, something far more complex than driving the Islamic State

group from Raqqa, Deir ez-Zor, or Kobani,� he wrote Jan. 23 in Real Clear Defense, referring

to former Islamic State strongholds in Syria.

�The mission, in fact, would be so different that it would require a whole new authorization

from Congress before the strategy could be carried out.�

Absent a new congressional authorization or U.N. resolution, the U.S. war in Syria amounts

to an illegal occupation, according to realist foreign policy scholar Daniel Larison.

He wrote Jan. 17 in The American Conservative:

�According to Tillerson, U.S. forces will remain in Syria on an open-ended mission to

ensure that the recognized government of the country does not establish control over its

own territory.

To call this policy deranged would be too generous.

The U.S. has no business in having a military presence in another country without its government�s

permission, and it has no right to maintain that presence for the explicit purpose of

preventing that government from exercising control inside its own internationally recognized

borders.�

Supporters of the U.S. military intervention in Syria have countered that the president�s

war-making authority under Article II of the Constitution gives Trump all the legal cover

he needs for an anti-terror campaign there, however broadly defined.

Going back to at least former President Bill Clinton�s administration, executive branch

lawyers have argued the president can order a unilateral strike he believes doing so is

in the interest of national security.

Trump invoked this broad authority in April, when he ordered a cruise missile strike against

a Syrian military base in response to Assad�s use of chemical weapons.

Whether Trump can claim the same authority to launch a long-term intervention without

Congressional approval is a murkier question.

The War Powers Act of 1973, passed over then-President Richard Nixon�s veto, says a president can

only deploy U.S. troops into a conflict if he has an approval from Congress or if the

U.S. itself has been attacked.

But the law muddies the issue by requiring the president to pull back troops after 60

days if the engagement was not authorized by lawmakers, suggesting that a shorter unilateral

deployment would be permitted.

In any case, U.S. soldiers have been in Syria for far longer than 60 days, and no U.N. resolution

or act of Congress has authorized what the Trump administration is now proposing to do

there.

�This is a violation of our U.S. Constitution, which should be enough reason for it not to

occur,� DePetris said of the plan.

Congress on the sidelines Larison, DePetris and other intervention skeptics

blame Congress for letting three consecutive presidents assume what amounts to unlimited

power to decide when and where to commit U.S. forces.

Lawmakers prefer to leave such politically fraught decisions to the executive, abandoning

their constitutional duties, DePetris argues.

�The legislative branch has atrophied from far too many years of silence on matters of

war and peace, enabling the Bush, Obama, and now Trump administrations to wage war without

authorization or proper oversight,� he told TheDCNF.

�Congress� role is just as the Constitution outlined: authorize an armed conflict before

the first U.S. troops are deployed in theater and the first bombs are dropped.�

A divided Congress in 2013 � with Democratic majority in the Senate and Republican majority

in the House � declined to give Obama an authorization to intervene in Syria.

Concerned with backlash from a war-weary public and unable to agree on the scope of an authorization,

lawmakers never held a full vote.

Instead, they left Obama to conduct military operations in Syria on the back of the 2001

AUMF, as Trump is doing now.

Content to rely on the existing authorization for any military action with a conceivable

nexus to counter-terrorism, Trump has not asked for a fresh AUMF to underpin his Syria

plan.

And, aside from a few foreign policy dissidents, lawmakers in his own party are in no hurry

to press for one.

One such outlier, GOP Rep. Walter Jones of North Carolina, speaks of the situation with

open disgust.

The absence of debate on Syria amounts to an abdication to the executive branch of Congress�

Article I power to declare war, Jones told TheDCNF.

�Here we are again as a Congress, sitting in the stands, watching a failed foreign policy

develop, and we don�t even debate it,� he said in a phone interview.

�I�m talking about a policy debate, I�m not talking about an amendment debate, I�m

not talking about a speech.�

�We have foregone our constitutional responsibility as a Congress,� he added.

Nor has Washington�s think tank archipelago raised much concern about possible constitutional

deficiencies in Trump�s Syria strategy.

Big names in the bipartisan foreign policy community such as Brookings Institution, American

Enterprise Institute, and Center for a New American Security have produced dozens of

analyses about how to bring about a post-Islamic State, post-Assad Syrian state.

There has been much less discussion about whether such a mission is a violation of U.S.

or international law.

With the foreign policy establishment and the administration largely silent about the

need for a new AUMF, a handful of lawmakers have taken up the cause.

On the Democratic side, Sens. Ben Cardin of Maryland, Cory Booker of New Jersey, and Chris

Murphy of Connecticut, all members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, have in

recent weeks pushed for a new war authorization.

A contingent of intervention skeptics in the Republican party, among them Jones, Rep. Thomas

Massie and Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, and Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, have also argued that

Trump needs congressional approval for further military action in Syria.

They are viewed with suspicion by a hawkish Republican foreign policy establishment with

a hefty appetite for military intervention.

At the end of the day, lawmakers are unlikely revisit the AUMF unless American voters get

�riled up� over the prospect of another open-ended war in the Middle East, Jones says.

�They�re not feeling pressure from the people of America,� he said, adding that

public indifference has made it easy for lawmakers to �sit on the sidelines and let the administration

get blood on its hands, not Congress.�

No comments:

Post a Comment