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No.

389 December 13, 2000

Arrogance of Power Reborn


The Imperial Presidency and Foreign Policy in
the Clinton Years
by Gene Healy

Executive Summary

In his classic 1973 book The Imperial Presidency, officials likewise insist that the Anti–Ballistic
historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. warned that the Missile Treaty is still in effect even though one of
American political system was threatened by “a the contractual parties (the Soviet Union) no longer
conception of presidential power so spacious and exists. The administration has attempted to imple-
peremptory as to imply a radical transformation of ment provisions of the Kyoto Protocol on the envi-
the traditional polity.” America’s rise to global ronment while continuing to refuse even to submit
dominance and Cold War leadership, Schlesinger the treaty to the Senate for ratification. Those
explained, had dangerously concentrated power in actions demonstrate that President Clinton has
the presidency, transforming the Framers’ energetic routinely abused the treaty power.
but constitutionally constrained chief executive In addition to the abuse of the treaty power, the
into a sort of elected emperor with virtually president has repeatedly usurped the congressional
unchecked authority in the international arena. war power. In Haiti, Iraq, Sudan, and Bosnia, the
As William Jefferson Clinton came to power in Clinton administration displayed its contempt for
January 1993, there was some reason to hope that the constitutional process and asserted a unilateral
the imperial presidency would be scaled back. power to wage war without congressional approval.
Clinton, after all, was the first post–Cold War pres- The most flagrant example was the 78-day air war
ident and a member of a political party that had in conducted against Serbia in 1999 despite Con-
the wake of the Vietnam War striven to restrain gress’s adamant refusal to approve the action.
presidential aggrandizement in foreign policy. As we approach the end of President Clinton’s
Such hopes proved illusory. Throughout his second term, the imperial presidency is as uncon-
administration, President Clinton has adopted a strained and as menacing as it has been at any
view of his executive power that is positively time since the Vietnam War. Bold congressional
Nixonian in its breadth and audacity. The adminis- action is needed to reclaim legislative authority
tration insists that the Comprehensive Test Ban over the war power and the treaty power. Only
Treaty still binds the United States under interna- then will America have an executive branch that
tional law, even though the Senate explicitly comports with republican principles of govern-
declined to ratify that agreement. Administration ment and the original constitutional design.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________

Gene Healy is a graduate of the University of Chicago Law School and an attorney practicing in Washington, D.C.
During the Cold was a rather conventional Southern hawk
War, executive Introduction and a reliable supporter of presidential pre-
rogative in foreign affairs. As chairman of the
war making in Odd as it might now seem, opponents of Foreign Relations Committee, he even
Korea, Vietnam, the imperial presidency had reasons for cau- helped President Lyndon B. Johnson shep-
tious optimism upon William Jefferson herd through Congress the Gulf of Tonkin
and elsewhere Clinton’s accession to the presidency in Resolution, which Johnson then treated as a
had been ration- January 1993. The first Democrat elected to declaration of war on North Vietnam, licens-
alized as neces- the nation’s highest office in 12 years, the new ing whatever military action the president
president belonged to a political party that deemed necessary.
sary to contain an had since Watergate and the Vietnam War By 1966, when then–Georgetown under-
enemy of sought to rein in the executive’s ability to con- graduate Bill Clinton came to work for
duct foreign policy without congressional Fulbright, the senator had utterly broken with
unprecedented authorization and oversight. The imperial the administration’s war policy.3 Angered by
strength and presidency’s major raison d’être had vanished what he saw as presidential deceit about
menace. with the collapse of Soviet Communism in Vietnam, Fulbright had concluded that the
1989–91. During the Cold War, executive war conflict in Vietnam was “a civil war—one that
making in Korea, Vietnam, and elsewhere had we really had no business getting involved
been rationalized as necessary to contain an with.”4 Fulbright’s reexamination of the
enemy of unprecedented strength and men- Vietnam War led him to a broader critique of
ace: the Soviet Union. That enemy had van- America’s increasingly imperialistic foreign
ished by the time President Clinton took policy. As he wrote to President Johnson:
office. In addition, various factors in the new “Greece, Rome, Spain, England, Germany and
president’s personal and political background others lost their preeminence because of a fail-
suggested that one might expect a retrench- ure to recognize their limitations, or, as I call it,
ment of the Caesar principle in foreign affairs. the arrogance of power. . . . My hope is that this
Clinton had come of age, literally and country, presently the greatest and most
politically, during the Vietnam War, a war powerful in the world, may learn by the mis-
that he had vehemently opposed. In his takes of its predecessors.”5 In his book of the
youthful letter to Arkansas ROTC comman- same name, Fulbright later described the
der Col. Eugene Holmes, Clinton explained: “arrogance of power” as “the morality of
“I worked for two years in a very minor posi- absolute self-assurance, fired by the crusad-
tion on the Senate Foreign Relations ing spirit.”6 That hubristic certitude com-
Committee. I did it for the experience and the bined with imperial overreach, Fulbright
salary but also for the opportunity, however argued, brought with it a contempt for con-
small, of working every day against a war I stitutional process and republican forms of
opposed and despised with a depth of feeling government. If America’s slide toward empire
I had reserved soley [sic] for racism in continued, Fulbright warned:
America.”1 As Clinton later explained, his
opposition to American involvement in Whatever lip service might be paid to
Vietnam rested in part on the fact that it was traditional forms, our Government
an “undeclared war.”2 would soon become what it is
Moreover, as the letter to Holmes indicat- already a long way toward becoming:
ed, the new president had begun his political an elective dictatorship, more or less
career by working for Sen. J. William complete over foreign policy and
Fulbright (D-Ark.), chairman of the Senate over those vast and expanding areas
Foreign Relations Committee and the imper- of our domestic life which in one way
ial presidency’s most forceful critic during or another are related to or depen-
the Vietnam era. Early in his career, Fulbright dent upon the military establish-

2
ment. If, in short, America is to The Clinton administration’s view that the
become an empire, there is very little executive’s authority to conduct foreign rela-
chance that it can avoid becoming a tions is unilateral and expansive has been par-
virtual dictatorship as well.7 ticularly pronounced with respect to the treaty
power. The administration has announced
Upon Fulbright’s death in 1995, President that the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty,
Clinton reflected on the time he’d spent as a which was voted down by the Senate, is bind-
young man working for the senator: “If it ing on the United States. The administration
hadn’t been for him, I don’t think I’d be here asserts that the Anti–Ballistic Missile Treaty
today.”8 But whatever influence Fulbright remains in force, despite the fact that the other
may have had on the upward trajectory of his signatory to that treaty, the Soviet Union, has
young protégé’s political career, as president, vanished and the Senate has not ratified ABM
Clinton seems to have absorbed little of agreements with the Soviet Union’s successor
Fulbright’s critique of the modern presiden- states. And the administration refuses to sub-
cy. Whereas Fulbright advocated a constitu- mit the Kyoto agreement on the reduction of
tionally constrained chief executive, Clinton greenhouse gases to the Senate for ratifica-
asserted a presidential prerogative to wage tion, choosing instead to explore the possibili-
war without congressional authorization. ty of implementing that agreement without By the end of the
Whereas Fulbright viewed the Senate as an the advice and consent of the Senate. Such Clinton era, the
equal partner in the treaty-making process, imperious unilateralism is a far cry from what imperial presi-
Clinton refused to accept the Constitution’s the Framers of the Constitution had in mind.
mandate that no treaty is binding without They wholeheartedly rejected the idea that dency is stronger
the approval of two-thirds of the senators only the executive branch could “speak for the and more menac-
present.9 In this, Clinton, more than any United States.” Instead, they viewed the Senate
president in the post-Vietnam era, resembled and the president as partners in the formation
ing than it has
Fulbright’s aggrandizing adversaries: Lyndon of binding agreements with other countries. been at any time
Johnson and Richard M. Nixon. As a review since the Vietnam
of the administration’s record will show, by
the end of the Clinton era, the imperial pres- The Treaty Power: War.
idency is stronger and more menacing than it The Original
has been at any time since the Vietnam War.
Recoiling from a forceful denunciation of
Understanding
the United Nations earlier this year by Sen. Article II, section 2, of the Constitution
Jesse Helms (R-N.C.), Secretary of State provides that the president “shall have Power,
Madeleine Albright told the UN Security by and with the Advice and Consent of the
Council on January 24: “Let me be clear. Only Senate, to make Treaties, provided two thirds
the president and the executive branch can of the Senators present concur; and he shall
speak for the United States.”1 0 That, in nominate, and by and with the Advice and
essence, is the Clinton administration’s view Consent of the Senate, shall appoint
of the president’s role in the foreign relations Ambassadors.” Section 3 also empowers the
arena: the executive alone determines president “to receive Ambassadors.” Thus, in
America’s international commitments and the arena of diplomatic relations, the presi-
diplomatic posture with respect to other dent has three powers, only one of which is
nations. And, although dissenting views unilateral: the power to receive ambas-
from particular senators—or even the Senate sadors.1 1 In the making of treaties and the
itself—are perhaps to be tolerated, those appointment of ambassadors, he shares
views certainly can have no impact on the power with the Senate, and the Senate’s
president’s unilateral authority to “speak for power here is more than ministerial or per-
the United States.” functory. As constitutional historian Raoul

3
Berger put it: “The Framers borrowed the “the sole and absolute representative of the
words ‘advice and consent’ from parliamen- nation in all foreign transactions,” the
tary practice. They were words of art, reach- American president would merely share in
ing deep into history, which were descriptive the treaty power, needing to secure the advice
of participation in lawmaking.” He continues, and consent of the Senate. Thus, “there is no
“When . . . those words were employed in the comparison between the intended power of
‘treaty’ phrase, they connoted full participa- the President and the actual power of the
tion in the making of a treaty, as the history British sovereign. The one can perform alone
of the treaty clause clearly demonstrates.”1 2 what the other can only do with the concur-
Berger’s argument is borne out by James rence of a branch of the legislature.” In
Madison’s notes of the Constitutional Con- Federalist 75, Hamilton elaborated on the
vention. Indeed, the convention’s Committee rationale for dividing the treaty power
of Detail initially recommended that the between two branches of the federal govern-
Senate alone “shall have the power to make ment: “However proper or safe it may be in
treaties.” When that proposal was initially governments where the executive magistrate
put forward, Madison suggested to the con- is an hereditary monarch, to commit to him
vention that “it was proper that the president the entire power of making treaties, it would
should be an agent in Treaties.”1 3 That is, the be utterly unsafe and improper to intrust
president should play a role, but not an that power to an elective magistrate of four
exclusive or even a dominant role, in the years duration.” Why “unsafe and improp-
making of treaties. That recommendation er”? The answer lies in the Framers’ cautious,
was eventually adopted and approved by the skeptical view of human nature; Hamilton
convention. continues, “The history of human conduct
Discerning the intent of a multimember does not warrant that exalted opinion of
body, of course, is always a messy business. human virtue which would make it wise in a
Moreover, the people, through their state leg- nation to commit interests of so delicate and
islatures, ratified not Madison’s notes of the momentous a kind, as those which concern
convention but rather the document that the its intercourse with the rest of the world, to
convention generated. For those and other the sole disposal of a magistrate created and
reasons, originalist constitutional scholars circumstanced as would be a President of the
rightly give the greatest interpretive weight to United States.”
The executive the text of the Constitution.14 But if the text
is ambiguous, Thomas Jefferson’s advice is
power to make apt: the meaning of a constitutional provi- The Treaty Power: The
treaties as inter- sion can best be discerned “in the explana- Clinton Administration’s
tions of those who advocated it” upon which
preted by the the ratifiers relied.1 5 In that respect, the
Understanding
Clinton adminis- Federalist Papers, as highly public explications Despite the clarity of the constitutional
tration resembles of the Constitution’s meaning, are invalu- text and the historical record, the executive
able—especially because they were written by power to make treaties as interpreted by the
the monarchical Framers. The discussions of the treaty power Clinton administration has more in com-
view that the in the Federalist Papers unequivocally demon- mon with the monarchical view that the
Federalist Papers strate that the president does not have uni- Federalist Papers argued against than it has
lateral power to bind the United States to with the limited and divided power that the
argued against. agreements with foreign governments. Framers envisioned. The former perspec-
In Federalist 69 Alexander Hamilton refut- tive—manifestly unconstitutional—is reflect-
ed the argument that the treaty power con- ed unmistakably in the administration’s
ferred monarchical powers on the office of actions with regard to the Comprehensive
the president. Whereas the British king was Test Ban Treaty.

4
The CTBT Perhaps the administration rests its extrava- Astoundingly, the
Signed by the president in 1996, the gant claim, as other aggrandizing adminis- administration
CTBT would, if ratified, bind the United trations have rested similar claims in the
States to refrain indefinitely from under- past, on Article II’s stipulation that “the exec- asserted that,
ground testing of nuclear weapons. (Above- utive Power shall be vested in a President.” despite the
ground testing has been banned by treaty But if the grant of “executive power” in
since 1963.) The following year President Article II were broad enough to do what
Senate’s rejection
Clinton sent the treaty to the Senate for rati- Albright suggests, then the treaty power’s of the CTBT, the
fication, where it stalled for two years in the requirement of advice, consent, and ratifica- treaty still had
Foreign Relations Committee—primarily tion would be mere surplusage—nullified at
because of the vehement opposition of the the will of the president. the force of law.
chairman, Senator Helms. But by 1999, when Certainly the president is well within his
Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.) constitutional authority to maintain a mora-
scheduled a vote on the CTBT, the adminis- torium on underground nuclear testing. It is
tration, fearing that the treaty did not have entirely proper and advisable that he do so.
the votes, strenuously opposed bringing it to No one would suggest that the failure of the
the floor. The administration’s fears were CTBT requires the United States to resume
accurate. On October 13, 1999, the CTBT testing. But the proposition that the presi-
was voted down; at 51 to 48, it failed even to dent has the authority to bind the United
gain a simple majority, much less the two- States to international agreements in perpe-
thirds required by Article II for ratification. tuity and unilaterally can find no constitu-
And yet—astoundingly—the administra- tional warrant. Such a broad conception of
tion asserted that, despite the Senate’s rejec- presidential power would be “utterly unsafe
tion of the CTBT, the treaty still had the force and improper.”
of law. In a letter dated October 18, 1999,
Secretary of State Albright wrote to a host of The ABM Treaty
foreign ministers of other signatory nations The president’s handling of the ABM
to say that, “despite this setback, I want to Treaty, signed with the former USSR and rat-
assure you that the United States will contin- ified by the Senate in 1972, further showcas-
ue to act in accordance with its obligations as es this administration’s disturbingly broad
a signatory under international law.”1 6 conception of executive power in foreign
Secretary Albright was mistaken: the affairs. That treaty was designed to codify the
United States has no obligations as a signa- logic of mutual assured destruction and to
tory to the treaty. Under the Constitution, prevent the arms race between the superpow-
the United States has no obligation to abide ers from escalating because of the potentially
by a treaty that the Senate has rejected. destabilizing impact of defensive systems.
International law cannot penetrate the The ABM Treaty barred either signatory
sphere of U.S. sovereignty except through the nation from deploying a national missile
processes delineated in the Constitution. As defense (NMD) system. In the post–Cold
the Supreme Court noted in Reid v. Covert, a War era, however, the strategic environment
1957 case discussing the limitations of the undergirding the need for the ABM Treaty
treaty power: “The United States is entirely a has fundamentally changed. Moreover, the
creature of the Constitution. Its power and other signatory to the agreement, the Soviet
authority have no other source.”1 7 Union, no longer exists. Yet, despite that fact,
What possible constitutional source can the president continues to insist that the
the administration rely on for Secretary treaty remains binding on the United States.
Albright’s proposition that the president can As a matter of international law, the ABM
bind the United States to international agree- Treaty is no longer binding on the United
ments that the Senate decisively rejected? States. It became void because of the impos-

5
sibility of performance when the other signa- unconcerned by, the contradiction implicit
tory to the agreement, the Soviet Union, dis- in those two statements. If new agreements
solved into 15 successor states in 1991. When are necessary to preserve the ABM Treaty’s
a signatory nation to an international agree- substance, how could the Senate’s rejection
ment dissolves, its treaty obligations dissolve of the new agreements be legally ineffectual?
with it unless there is a successor state that In a response letter, Gilman and Helms
(1) succeeds to its predecessor’s international declared that, “if it is unclear as a matter of
legal personality and (2) can perform its law whether Russia or any other country that
treaty obligations according to the agree- emerged from the Soviet Union is today
ment’s original terms. In a comprehensive bound by the ABM Treaty, then it also
memorandum of law from the Washington, should be unclear whether the United States
D.C., law firm of Hunton & Williams, the is so bound.”20 As Gilman and Helms saw it,
authors make a compelling case that the without Senate ratification of the multilater-
obligations enshrined in the ABM Treaty are al agreements, the ABM Treaty would pose
particular to the Soviet Union and cannot be no obstacle to the development of an NMD
carried out by Russia, the other former Soviet system. To date, the president has not sub-
republics, or any combination thereof.1 8 mitted the September agreements to the
The ABM Treaty The Clinton administration implicitly rec- Senate for ratification.
is no longer in ognized that fact when it attempted in 1997 to Is NMD a good idea? There are reasons to
force. If President renegotiate the ABM Treaty with several of the believe it isn’t. It might end up at best an enor-
Soviet Union’s successor states. In New York, mous, ineffectual boondoggle or at worst a
Clinton wants to on September 26, 1997, Secretary Albright dangerously destabilizing initiative. Despite
replace it with a signed a series of agreements with Russia, the expenditure of more than $60 billion on
Ukraine, Belarus, and Kazakhstan that pur- the development of NMD technology, it is far
series of multilat- port to multilateralize the ABM Treaty, from clear that NMD is technologically feasi-
eral agreements, extending its obligations to the republics that ble.2 1 Given new developments in the technol-
he needs to secure made up the former Soviet Union. In a letter ogy of terror, even a functioning NMD might
to Rep. Benjamin A. Gilman (R-N.Y.), chair- be a sort of 21st-century Maginot Line, pro-
the advice and man of the House Committee on viding a false sense of security but easily
consent of the International Relations, explaining the bypassed. More disturbing still is the fact that
Senate. September agreements, President Clinton many of NMD’s most vocal proponents view
admitted that “neither a simple recognition of it as a sort of offensive weapon—a means of
Russia as the sole ABM successor (which perpetuating America’s role as global police-
would have ignored several former Soviet man.22 Since that role is a major source of ter-
states with significant ABM interests) nor a rorist and rogue state enmity toward the
simple recognition of all [New Independent United States,23 NMD may exacerbate the very
States] as full ABM Treaty successors would problem it seeks to solve.
have preserved fully the original purpose and Ultimately, whether NMD is a good idea
substance of the Treaty, as approved by the is quite beside the point. The ABM Treaty is
Senate in 1972.”19 The president indicated his no longer in force. If President Clinton wants
intention to submit the September agree- to replace it with a series of multilateral
ments to the Senate for ratification, in accor- agreements, he needs to secure the advice and
dance with the Constitution; but, he contin- consent of the Senate. His attempt to bypass
ued, “If however, the Senate were to fail to act the Senate on such an important matter is
or to disagree and disapprove the agreements, presumptuous and unconstitutional.
succession arrangements will simply remain
unsettled. The ABM Treaty itself would clearly The Kyoto Protocol
remain in force.” As with the CTBT and the ABM Treaty, the
The president seemed oblivious to, or administration’s actions with respect to the

6
Kyoto Protocol, an international agreement George Mason University law professor
aimed at the reduction of greenhouse gases, William H. Lash III cites a number of mea-
suggest a dangerous disregard for the constitu- sures taken by the administration with the
tional requirements attendant to treaty mak- hope of “creeping towards Kyoto.” According
ing. The Kyoto Protocol, the negotiations for to Lash, starting in October 1997
which concluded on December 10, 1997, was
devised as a means of implementing the UN the EPA targeted $6.3 billion over a
Framework Convention on Climate Change, five-year period to reduce green-
which the Senate ratified in 1992. The Kyoto house gas emissions by providing
Protocol is problematic for many reasons, not incentives to consumers and busi-
the least of which are the unresolved scientific nesses. In the FY 1999 budget, $3.6
questions about global warming, and the billion in tax credits over five years
extent of human responsibility for that phe- are directed towards Kyoto compli-
nomenon, as well as the diminishing likelihood ance goals. . . . Such market distort-
that developing nations—which produce an ing subsidies are designed to pro-
increasingly large share of carbon dioxide emis- mote the agenda of the unratified
sions—will agree to it. Mindful of those con- treaty by shifting market behavior.2 5
cerns, in July 1997 the Senate passed—by a 95-0
vote—the Byrd-Hagel resolution, which Rep. David McIntosh (R-Ind.), chairman
expressed reservations about the yet unsigned of the House Subcommittee on National
Kyoto agreement. In its resolution, the Senate Economic Growth, Natural Resources, and
declared that it would not ratify any agreement Regulatory Affairs, worries that stronger
that imposed excessive costs on the U.S. econo- measures may be on their way. McIntosh has
my and that did not include restrictions on asserted that he has reviewed not yet publicly
developing nations. Ignoring the concerns available documents from the administra-
expressed in the Byrd-Hagel resolution, the tion’s Council on Environmental Quality
administration in December 1997 acceded to that show that the administration is contem-
an agreement that, if approved by the Senate, plating the implementation of the Kyoto
would bind the United States to reducing CO2 agreement “through the backdoor.”
emissions to 7 percent below 1990 levels by According to McIntosh, the contemplated
2012. On November 12, 1998, nearly a year measures include (1) annual increases on fuel
after the Kyoto Protocol was negotiated, economy standards for cars, (2) fees and taxes
administration representatives signed it. on less fuel efficient cars, (3) heightened per-
Pursuant to the terms of the UN formance standards for power facilities, and The administra-
Framework Convention on Climate Change, (4) a host of taxes targeted at reducing car-
out of which the Kyoto Protocol emerged, no bon dioxide emissions.2 6
tion has explored
protocol would become legally binding on a Indeed, the EPA has asserted that it is ways to imple-
signatory state until ratified. Thus, according empowered to take such measures even in the ment the Kyoto
to the agreement and, more important, absence of Senate ratification of the Kyoto
according to Article II of the Constitution, Protocol. In congressional testimony given Protocol outside
ratification by the Senate is a precondition March 11, 1998, EPA administrator Carol the constitutional
for such an agreement to be legally binding.24 Browner claimed that the EPA already had the
To date, despite repeated entreaties by authority to regulate carbon dioxide emis-
process.
Senators Helms and Lott and others, the sions. Challenged by members of Congress
administration has refused to submit the about the basis for her assertion, Browner had
Kyoto Protocol to the Senate for ratification. then–EPA general counsel Jonathan Z.
Instead, the administration has explored Cannon produce a legal opinion on the sub-
ways to implement the agreement outside ject. The Cannon memo asserts that the Clean
the constitutional process. Air Act—a statute aimed at reducing “air pol-

7
The president lutant[s]”—can be read broadly enough to Rights Commission, is openly homosexual.
seized on the allow the EPA to regulate CO2. Cannon That fact raised the ire of conservative reli-
defined “air pollutant” as “any physical, chem- gious groups, such as the Family Research
recess appoint- ical, biological, or radioactive substance or Council, which claimed that Hormel had
ments clause to matter that is emitted into or otherwise enters been involved with groups critical of the
the ambient air.”2 7 Catholic Church. Though Hormel’s nomina-
do an end run Does the Clean Air Act allow regulation of tion was approved by the Senate Foreign
around the ratifi- a ubiquitous gas that is not only benign but Relations Committee, the Senate leadership
cation process. also essential to life on earth? Common sense refused to bring the nomination to the floor.
would say no as would normal tools of statu- Whatever the merits, or lack thereof, of the
tory interpretation, administrative law, and Christian Right’s opposition to Hormel’s
the Constitution’s nondelegation doctrine.28 appointment, one thing was clear beyond
The EPA’s interpretation of its own authority cavil: Hormel could not and did not garner
is more staggering even than the FDA’s ratification by the Senate. But President
attempt to regulate cigarettes as a “medical Clinton was not about to let a constitutional
device” and would be likely to fail in the command stand in the way of social progress.
courts for the same reason. The president seized on the recess appoint-
Thankfully, to date, the administration’s ments clause to do an end run around the rat-
ability to implement the Kyoto Protocol with- ification process. On June 4, 1999, while
out ratification has been constrained by con- Congress was in recess, President Clinton gave
gressional resistance. Representative McIntosh Hormel the job that the Senate had denied
has held hearings on the matter, and Sen. Thad him. As Press Secretary Joe Lockhart put it:
Cochran (R-Miss.) has striven to block funds “This came down to a couple of senators who
for energy efficiency programs aimed at reduc- thought [Hormel] shouldn’t be ambassador
ing CO2. However, the administration’s sweep- to Luxembourg because he’s gay. And the
ing assertion of authority demonstrates that President thinks that’s wrong and discrimina-
continual vigilance is necessary. tory, and that’s why he moved ahead.”2 9
The Constitution’s recess appointments
clause, which appears in Article II, section 2,
The Unauthorized reads: “The President shall have Power to fill
Appointment of up all Vacancies that may happen during the
Recess of the Senate, by granting Commis-
Amb. James Hormel sions which shall expire at the End of their
In its treatment of the CTBT, the ABM next Session.” As congressional scholar Ilona
Treaty, and the Kyoto Protocol, the Clinton Nickels notes, the original rationale behind
administration has shown itself ominously the recess appointments clause was to circum-
dismissive of the constitutional requirement vent “a practical problem,” namely, that “the
for senatorial advice and consent. But with early Senate would routinely be in recess from
the appointment of Amb. James Hormel, a March through December.”3 0 The clause was
matter of comparatively minor diplomatic emphatically not designed to allow the presi-
significance, that dismissiveness manifested dent to bypass the Senate with regard to nom-
itself in even stronger form: as outright con- inations that did not survive the confirmation
tempt for the Senate’s constitutional role. process. In fact, before President George
In October 1997 President Clinton nomi- Washington made the first recess appoint-
nated James Hormel, heir to the Hormel food ments, he wrote to the Senate leadership ask-
fortune and a major Democratic contributor, ing for its permission.31
to be ambassador to Luxembourg. Hormel, a But such solicitude for the Senate and
former dean of the University of Chicago Law respect for the Constitution are not the
School and delegate to the UN Human Clinton administration’s style. With the

8
Hormel appointment, President Clinton be made by the most broadly representative
repeated the tactics he used to appoint Bill body: the legislature. That, of course, is where
Lann Lee to the post of assistant attorney our Constitution lodges the power to declare
general for civil rights after the Senate’s war. As Madison put it, “In no part of the con-
refusal to confirm him in 1998. In Lee’s case, stitution is more wisdom to be found, than in
the president misused the Vacancies Act (a the clause which confides the question of war
federal statute designed to allow temporary or peace to the legislature, and not to the exec-
appointments pending Senate confirmation) utive department.”3 4
and the recess appointments clause to allow That the power to initiate hostilities
Lee to serve for the rest of the administra- belongs to Congress and Congress alone is
tion’s tenure, despite concerns over his sup- evident from the intent of the Constitution’s
port of racial quotas that led the Senate to Framers, the text of the Constitution, and
refuse its consent. The president chose an the contemporary understanding of those
interesting turn of phrase to describe his who ratified the Constitution.3 5
decision to bypass the Senate on the Lee
appointment: “I have done my best to work The Framers’ Intent
with the United States Senate in an entirely In the Constitution as the Framers
constitutional way. But we had to get some- designed it, the president lacks the authority
In a democratic
body into the Civil Rights Division, . . . so I to initiate military action. In the Framers’ republic, it is
decided we needed to go on and do what I view, absent a congressional declaration of essential that the
thought was right for the country.”3 2 That war, the president’s war powers would be
brazen formulation sums up the administra- purely reactive; if the territory of the United decision to go to
tion’s attitude toward the rule of law: the States or U.S. forces were attacked, the presi- war be made by
Constitution certainly has its place, but it dent could respond. Barring that, he could
takes second place to what the president not act without congressional authorization.
the most broadly
thinks is “right for the country.” And if the Madison’s notes of the deliberations at the representative
president’s objective can’t be achieved in a Constitutional Convention amply demon- body: the
manner that’s “entirely constitutional,” well strate that.
then, blame senatorial partisanship, invoke On August 17, 1787, the Convention con- legislature.
“progress,” and, as Lockhart put it, “move sidered the recommendation of the
ahead.” The president’s shameful handling Committee of Detail that the legislature be
of the Hormel appointment demonstrates vested with the sole power “to make war.”
that, in the arena of foreign affairs, the Only one delegate, South Carolina’s Pierce
Clinton administration is constrained not by Butler, spoke in favor of granting that
constitutional processes but by what it can- authority to the executive. His proposal was
not get away with.3 3 not warmly received. “Mr. [Elbridge] Gerry
[of Massachusetts] never expected to hear in
a republic a motion to empower the
The War Power: The Executive alone to declare war.” For his part,
Original Understanding George Mason of Virginia “was agst. giving
the power of war to the Executive, because
Over the past eight years, President not to be trusted with it. . . . He was for clog-
Clinton’s disdain for constitutional processes ging rather than facilitating war.”36
has manifested itself in his abuse of authority However, the delegates did take seriously the
as commander in chief of the U.S. armed objection, raised by Charles Pinckney of South
forces. In affairs of state, no more momentous Carolina, that the House of Representatives was
decision can be made than the decision to go too large and unwieldy, and met too infre-
to war. For that reason, in a democratic repub- quently, to supervise all the details attendant to
lic, it is essential that the decision to go to war the conduct of a war. For this reason, “Mr.

9
M[adison] and Mr. Gerry moved to insert body: the legislature. Similarly, with the mili-
‘declare,’ striking out ‘make’ war; leaving to the tia clause, Congress is empowered to decide
Executive the power to repel sudden attacks.” when domestic unrest has reached the point
Roger Sherman of Connecticut “thought [the at which military action is required.
proposal] stood very well. The Executive shd. be By way of contrast, the grant of authority
able to repel and not to commence war.”3 7The to the executive in the commander in chief
motion passed. clause is entirely supervisory and reactive.
The president commands the Army and the
The Constitutional Text Navy, should Congress choose to create
The document that emerged from the them, and leads them into battle, should
Convention reflects an important, but limited, Congress choose to declare war. He com-
role for the president in war making. The con- mands the militia to suppress rebellions,
stitutional text vests the bulk of the powers should the militia be “called into the actual
associated with military action with Congress. Service of the United States.” In this, as
Among the enumerated powers granted Hamilton noted in Federalist 69, the president
Congress in Article I, section 8, of the acts as no more than the “first General” of
Constitution are the powers “to declare War, the United States.3 9
grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make
Rules concerning Captures on Land and Contemporary Understanding
Water.” Other important war-making powers The generation that ratified the
include the power “to raise and support Armies, Constitution understood that Congress
but no Appropriation of Money to that Use alone can authorize the nation to go to war.
shall be for a longer Term than two years” and As Constitutional Convention delegate
the power “to provide for calling forth the James Wilson explained to the Pennsylvania
Militia to execute the Laws of the Union, sup- ratifying convention: “This system [if adopt-
press Insurrections and repel invasions.” ed] will not hurry us into war; it is calculated
In contrast, the grant of war-related pow- to guard against it. It will not be in the power
That the power to ers to the executive is exceedingly slender: of a single man, or a single body of men, to
“The President shall be Commander in Chief involve us in such distress; for the important
initiate hostilities of the Army and Navy of the United States, power in declaring war is vested in the legis-
belongs to and of the Militia of the several States, when lature at large.”4 0 Hamilton, himself a propo-
called into the actual Service of the United nent of a strong executive, reassured New
Congress and States.”38 Yorkers that the president, however strong he
Congress alone is Significantly, several of the enumerated might be, would not have the monarchical
evident from the powers allocated to Congress involve the power to unilaterally lead the nation to war:
decision to initiate military action. Viewed in Though the president’s authority as com-
intent of the that light, the marque and reprisal clause and mander in chief of the armed forces would be
Constitution’s the militia clause inform our understanding “nominally the same as the king of Great
Framers, the text of Congress’s authority to declare war. For Britain, [it would be] in substance much infe-
example, a letter of marque and reprisal is a rior to it. It would amount to nothing more
of the Consti- legal device (long fallen into disuse) empow- than the supreme command and direction of
tution, and the ering private citizens to take offensive action the military and naval forces . . . while that of
against foreign governments. Since military the British king extends to the declaring of
contemporary attacks carried out by American citizens war and to the raising and regulating of fleets
understanding of might well be considered acts of war by for- and armies.”41
those who eign powers, and accordingly could embroil Two early judicial decisions well illustrate
the United States in hostilities, the the original understanding that Congress, and
ratified the Constitution vests the important decision to only Congress, could initiate hostilities by
Constitution. grant that power in the most deliberative declaring war. In Talbot v. Seeman, Chief Justice

10
John Marshall declared that, “the whole powers party that has striven since that war to regain Clinton has
of war being, by the Constitution of the United congressional control of foreign policy, repeatedly and
States, vested in Congress, the acts of that body President Clinton might have been expected
alone can be resorted to as our guides.”42 to have hewn closer to the original under- brazenly violated
Marshall’s view is strong evidence of contempo- standing of the war power than had previous the original
raneous understanding, given that he had been presidents. Instead, he has repeatedly and
a participant in the Virginia Ratifying brazenly violated the original understanding,
understanding of
Convention. The views of Supreme Court asserting an unchecked, unilateral presidential the war power,
Justice William Paterson, who had served as a authority to wage war. As constitutional schol- asserting an
New Jersey delegate to the Constitutional ar Louis Fisher has noted: “The Clinton
Convention are also authoritative. In United Administration [has taken] the position that unchecked, uni-
States v. Smith (1806), Paterson unequivocally whenever the president decides something is lateral presiden-
held that, under the Constitution, Congress in the national interest, he can do it. That’s an
holds sole authority over the question of war extraordinary definition. I don’t know of any
tial authority to
and peace. In Smith, the defendant, U.S. Army president in the past who has talked that wage war.
colonel William S. Smith, stood accused of vio- way.”4 5 Those are strong words; however, as a
lating a federal statute by aiding a rogue expe- review of President Clinton’s conduct as com-
dition against the Spanish province of Caracas. mander in chief will show, the administra-
In his defense, Colonel Smith attempted to call tion’s record bears them out entirely.
the secretary of state and the secretary of the
Navy to show that the expedition “was begun, Early Interventions
prepared and set on foot with the knowledge This section begins by surveying two of
and approbation of the president of the United President Clinton’s earliest unauthorized
States.” Justice Paterson, riding circuit, held military operations: Haiti and Bosnia. They
that the secretaries could resist the subpoenas, were preludes to Clinton’s undeclared war in
their testimony being irrelevant: “The president Kosovo and his surprise missile strikes on
of the United States cannot control the statute, Sudan, Afghanistan, and Iraq during the
nor dispense with its execution, and still less can yearlong impeachment crisis. The Kosovo
he authorize a person to do what the law for- intervention represents the broadest post-
bids. . . . Does he possess the power of making Vietnam assertion of executive war-making
war? That power is exclusively vested in authority, while the “anti-terrorism” strikes
Congress.”43 on Sudan, Afghanistan, and Iraq represent
the most disturbing exercise of that authori-
ty. For those reasons, each deserves special
The War Power: The attention.
Clinton Administration’s Haiti. The administration’s 1994 incur-
sion into Haiti gave Americans an early
Understanding glimpse of President Clinton’s approach to
On matters of war and peace, then, the war making and constitutionalism. Unlike
Constitution could hardly be clearer. George the Somalia intervention, which Clinton had
Washington, who presided over the inherited from his predecessor, George
Constitutional Convention, put the matter Bush,46 the Haiti entanglement was entirely
succinctly: “The Constitution vests the power Clinton’s project.
of declaring war in Congress; therefore no In September 1991, Haitian military lead-
expedition of importance can be undertaken ers overthrew Haitian president Jean-Bertrand
until after Congress shall have deliberated Aristide. Under sustained international pres-
upon the subject, and authorized such a mea- sure, including a UN embargo, junta leader
sure.”4 4 As a man who came of age during the Raoul Cedras on July 30, 1993, signed the
Vietnam War, and as a member of a political Governors Island agreement, which was to

11
allow Aristide to resume the presidency by proposal by then–Senate Minority Leader
October 30 of that year. President Clinton Robert Dole (R-Kan.) to restrict the presi-
offered to send 350 troops to Haiti to help dent’s ability to invade Haiti without con-
ease the transition by “professionalizing” the gressional approval, Clinton admonished: “I
Haitian military and building infrastructure. would strenuously oppose such attempts to
The first detachment of troops landed suc- encroach on the president’s foreign policy
cessfully, but the second was blocked on powers. . . . The president must make the ulti-
October 12, 1993, by a group of armed civil- mate decision” about whether to use U.S.
ians apparently backed by the Cedras regime. armed forces.48
The next day, in response to the Cedras In odd contrast with his apparent view
regime’s apparent determination not to com- that congressional authorization of an inva-
ply with the Governors Island agreement, the sion was optional, President Clinton seemed
UN Security Council voted to restore eco- to view UN approval as a necessary prerequi-
nomic sanctions against Haiti. Shortly there- site. He sought and obtained authorization
after, President Clinton informed Congress for an invasion from the UN Security
that U.S. naval forces had begun enforcing Council on July 31, 1994. However, Clinton
the UN embargo. That was, in itself, an act of refused to seek authorization from Congress.
In odd contrast war, which the Constitution reserves to In a news conference on August 2, 1994,
with his apparent Congress exclusively. Clinton implicitly rec- President Clinton said, “I have not agreed
view that congres- ognized that when, in an October 14 press that I was constitutionally mandated to get
conference, he refused to use the word [congressional approval].”4 9
sional authoriza- “blockade” to describe the actions that would By early September, Clinton stood ready
tion of an be carried out by the Navy: to launch a 20,000-troop invasion. In a heat-
ed September 15 address to the nation, he
invasion was Q: Would you support a blockade? denounced the Cedras regime for “executing
optional, Clinton Clinton: I strongly support enforc- children, raping women, and killing priests.”
seemed to view ing the sanctions and— Clinton announced that he had called up the
Q: Wait, wait, wait— military reserves and ordered two aircraft car-
UN approval as a Clinton: I want to answer that. I sup- riers to the vicinity. “Your time is up,”
necessary port strongly enforcing these sanc- Clinton declared, “leave now, or we will force
prerequisite. tions. you from power.”50
Q: Is that a yes or a no? In the weeks leading up to the planned
Clinton: Well, the word blockade is a invasion, opinion polls showed that any-
term of art in international law where from 60 to 73 percent of Americans
which is associated with a declara- opposed such action.5 1 Those poll results
tion of war, so I . . . I have to be care- undoubtedly contributed heavily to
ful in using that word.4 7 Clinton’s refusal to seek congressional
authorization for the invasion. As Legal Times
The belief that acts of war become such only columnist Stuart Taylor noted on September
when the president so identifies them is a 19, in a column written as the zero hour
recurring theme in the Clinton administra- approached, if Clinton invaded, “it would be
tion’s foreign policy. the first time a president has launched an
Clinton did order a blockade and, when invasion without seeking congressional con-
met with further intransigence, stepped up sent solely because he couldn’t get it.”5 2
his rhetorical attack on the Haitian junta, As it turned out, forcible entry was made
threatening a U.S. invasion. Clinton also unnecessary, and large-scale violence averted,
warned Congress against interfering with by last-minute diplomatic efforts. The
what he saw as his authority to decide administration sent a negotiating team led
whether to commit troops. In response to a by former president Jimmy Carter, Sen. Sam

12
Nunn (D-Ga.), and Gen. Colin Powell. The restrain executive war making, expressly
delegation secured the Cedras clique’s agree- states that it must not be “construed as
ment to step down, and American troops granting any authority to the President with
entered without opposition. respect to the introduction of United States
But the violence to the Constitution had Armed Forces into hostilities.” Furthermore,
already been done by Clinton’s assertion that Congress could not delegate away its author-
he was not “constitutionally mandated” to get ity to declare war any more than it could
congressional approval for a 20,000-troop properly delegate away its power to tax.
invasion of a tiny island nation that represent- Finally, the third rationale, that a planned
ed no threat, imminent or otherwise, to 20,000-troop invasion was not a “war” in the
America’s security. Indeed, his assertion of constitutional sense, was baseless. Dellinger’s
unilateral presidential war-making authority argument rested largely on the idea that the
lacked even the constitutional fig leaf of the planned invasion was to be undertaken at the
need for surprise with which Presidents “request of the recognized democratically
Reagan and Bush had justified their respective elected government.” As a group of law pro-
invasions of Grenada and Panama. fessors including Yale’s Bruce Ackerman and
Clinton offered no justification for his Harvard’s Laurence Tribe dryly noted in a
view that the president could commit U.S. response letter, “Presumably, at the outset of
forces to war without so much as a by-your- World War II, General [Charles] de Gaulle
leave to Congress. That unenviable task fell could not have nullified the Constitution’s
to Walter Dellinger, then head of the Justice requirement of congressional approval by
Department’s Office of Legal Counsel. After ‘inviting’ the United States to invade occu-
the crisis had passed, and peaceful deploy- pied France.”5 3
ment of U.S. forces had begun, Dellinger con- But the Dellinger letter, issued when the
cocted a series of post hoc rationales for the Clinton presidency was comparatively young
planned invasion of Haiti. In response to a and timid, rested on far narrower grounds
request from Senator Dole and others, than would be asserted for military interven-
Dellinger, on September 27, 1994, released a tions later on.
letter attempting to legally justify the Bosnia. Armed conflict in the fragmenting
planned undeclared war in Haiti. multiethnic state of Yugoslavia heated up dur-
The Dellinger letter gave three grounds ing Bill Clinton’s first campaign for president.
for the president’s ignoring the constitution- In April 1992, civil war erupted in the break-
al mandate to secure a declaration of war: away republic of Bosnia-Herzegovina, and
first, the president had received prior con- insurgent Serbian forces seized more than 70 Clinton’s asser-
gressional authorization in the form of a percent of the nascent state’s territory. The
defense appropriations bill; second, the War bloody conflict was accompanied by extensive
tion of unilateral
Powers Resolution granted the president the civilian casualties and “ethnic cleansing.” presidential war-
authority unilaterally to carry out military In August 1992, the UN Security Council making authority
actions of short duration; and third, the adopted a resolution calling on all nations to
planned invasion was not a “war” in the con- take “all measures necessary” to deliver lacked even the
stitutional sense. humanitarian relief to Sarajevo, the Bosnian constitutional fig
Each rationale was specious. First, the capital. In the early days of the Clinton
appropriations bill in question had expired administration, U.S. planes participated in
leaf of the need
before the president’s action and did not that effort, airlifting nonmilitary relief sup- for surprise.
authorize the president to engage U.S. forces plies to Muslims surrounded by Serbian
in hostilities. Nor could an appropriations forces in Bosnia. From this point forward,
bill substitute for the constitutional prereq- U.S. involvement gradually escalated toward
uisite of a declaration of war. Second, the actual hostilities, despite the lack of congres-
War Powers Resolution, passed in 1973 to sional authorization.

13
It was President On March 31, 1993, the Security Council lined above were significant, and the presi-
Clinton’s war on declared a ban on military flights over dent’s refusal to seek prior congressional
Bosnia. On April 12, 1993, Clinton allowed authorization flagrant and unlawful, it was
Serbia in 1999 U.S. planes operating under NATO com- President Clinton’s war on Serbia in 1999
that brought into mand to enforce the Security Council ban. that brought into boldest relief this adminis-
Shortly thereafter, U.S. troops entered tration’s staggering view of executive war-
boldest relief this Macedonia as part of a UN peacekeeping making authority. For that reason, the
administration’s force whose stated purpose was to prevent administration’s conduct during that war
staggering view of the war from spreading. bears detailed examination.
On January 11, 1994, at the NATO sum- Throughout 1998 and early 1999, the
executive war- mit in Brussels, alliance leaders threatened United States and its NATO allies applied
making authority. airstrikes against Serbian positions around strong diplomatic pressure against the Federal
Sarajevo. That threat was soon carried out, Republic of Yugoslavia (Serbia and
with U.S. planes shooting down several Montenegro), seeking resolution to civil con-
Serbian fighters and bombing Serbian posi- flict in the formerly autonomous region of
tions around Gorazde and a Serbian airfield Kosovo. Despite their efforts, in January 1999
in Croatia. that conflict heated up, with Yugoslav forces
Clinton made no attempt to secure congres- killing several dozen Kosovar Albanians.
sional authorization for those attacks. Instead, Shortly thereafter, peace negotiations began in
he reported U.S. military involvement as a fait Rambouillet, France. The Serbian government
accompli to Congress, noting that U.S. forces refused to sign the Rambouillet Accords,
“participate in these actions pursuant to [his] which would have allowed an international
constitutional authority to conduct U.S. for- force with diplomatic immunity to operate
eign relations and as Commander in Chief.”5 4 unimpeded throughout all of Yugoslavia. On
In mid-1995 NATO launched another series March 24, after the failure of a last-ditch effort
of airstrikes against Bosnian Serb targets, and by Amb. Richard Holbrooke to secure Serbian
corresponding Croatian and Muslim forces’ agreement to Rambouillet, President Clinton
gains helped spur negotiations toward a peace announced that U.S. armed forces, operating
accord. The resulting Dayton Accords provided in conjunction with NATO, had begun
for a multinational peacekeeping force in airstrikes and missile strikes against
Bosnia that would contain a large number of Yugoslavia. Two days later, President Clinton,
American soldiers. Prior to the implementation in letters to the Speaker of the House and the
of the accords, the U.S. House of Representa- president pro tem of the Senate, justified his
tives voted against the deployment of U.S. actions with a familiar refrain: U.S. armed
forces, while the Senate voted against a resolu- forces were ordered into battle “pursuant to
tion opposing the deployment. [the president’s] constitutional authority to
Again, Clinton treated congressional conduct U.S. foreign relations and as
approval as nonobligatory. On December 15, Commander-in-Chief and Chief Executive.”
1995, he ordered the deployment of 22,000 The air war carried out over Serbia from
U.S. ground troops to Bosnia. As he March 24, 1999, to June 10, 1999, represent-
explained in a letter to Congress, the decision ed the largest commitment of American
was taken pursuant to his “constitutional fighting men and materiel since the Persian
authority to conduct the foreign relations of Gulf War. The U.S.-led NATO air forces flew
the United States and as Commander in a total of 37,465 sorties during the conflict,
Chief and Chief Executive.”55 an average of 486 missions per day.56 And yet,
throughout the conflict, administration offi-
The Clinton Administration’s War on cials steadfastly refused to admit that the
Serbia president had unilaterally engaged the
Although the foreign interventions out- United States in war.

14
It Depends on What Your Definition of “War” Is. But it was perhaps White House
The president’s evasive answers during his spokesman Joe Lockhart, his verbal agility
1998 grand jury testimony have entered popu- honed by the crucible of impeachment, who
lar consciousness as paradigms of lawyerly provided the most enlightening insights into
language games—especially his statement: “It the Clinton administration’s definition of
depends on what the definition of ‘is’ is.” As “war.” The existence or nonexistence of
the war against the regime of Serbian presi- “war,” it seems, turns entirely on the intent of
dent Slobodan Milosevic went on, the presi- the aggressor. Lockhart offered a definition
dent’s cabinet secretaries and spokespeople of “war” as subjective in its own right as
played similar language games on far weighti- Clinton’s definition of sexual relations
er matters of war and peace. Cruise missiles before the Starr grand jury:
and cluster bombs rained down on Serbia, yet
administration officials assiduously avoided Q: Does this situation constitute
calling the war a war. Euphemism and evasive- war?
ness were the order of the day for Clinton Lockhart: No. And we believe that
appointees charged with explaining American the United States objectives here are
involvement in Serbia. Thus, Secretary of not offensive or aggressive in aim,
Defense William Cohen, in a press conference and constitute the limited use of
Cruise missiles
on April 1, 1999, refused to use the “W” word force to meet clear objectives. We cer- and cluster
in referring to the three American soldiers cap- tainly do not consider ourselves to be bombs rained
tured by the Serbs: at war with Serbia or its people.5 9
down on Serbia,
Q: Do you consider them prisoners In an earlier press conference, Lockhart yet administra-
of war? explained how the administration had arrived
Cohen: At this point their status is at its oddly subjective definition of war:
tion officials
that of being illegally detained, and assiduously
so they are illegal detainees at this Q: Is the President ready to call this a avoided calling
point. low-grade war?
Lockhart: No. Next question. the war a war.
Gen. Henry Shelton also followed the admin- Q: Why not?
istration’s line even when discussing the pos- Lockhart: Because we view it as a
sibility of American casualties: “There is no conflict.
such thing as a risk-free military operation.”5 7 Q: How can you say that it’s not war?
Rep. Tom Campbell (R-Calif.) described Lockhart: Because it doesn’t meet
his frustration in attempting to secure a the definition as we define it.60
straight answer from administration officials
about the legal status of U.S. operations in That does Lewis Carroll one better; in
Serbia and Kosovo. Campbell asked Secretary Through the Looking Glass, Carroll had Humpty
of State Albright: Dumpty declare that, “when I use a word, it
means what I choose it to mean.” The
“Well, if this isn’t war, what is it?” Clinton administration’s view is that actions
And she said, “It’s an armed con- mean what the administration decides they
flict.” So I asked [Assistant] Secretary mean; cruise missiles, cluster bombs, and
[of State Barbara] Larkin, “Well, civilian casualties don’t constitute war until
what’s the difference?” She couldn’t someone in power lets the magic word slip.
tell me, but she said her attorney From the Clinton administration’s stand-
would. So the attorney finally said, point, there was a compelling policy rationale
“It becomes war when you call it behind the verbal legerdemain of Lockhart,
war.”5 8 Albright, Cohen, and others. The administra-

15
tion clearly recognized that there were legal Hyde that would have repealed the War
consequences to calling a war a war. Powers Resolution. In endorsing the measure,
Representative Campbell recognized that as then-Speaker Newt Gingrich urged the House
well, which is why he attempted to force the Republicans to “increase the power of
issue on the floor of the House and in feder- President Clinton. . . . I want to strengthen the
al court.6 1 current Democratic President because he is
Campbell v. Clinton. On April 28, 1999, the President of the United States.”64
House voted no on declaring war, 427 to 2; Campbell, however, was not interested in
no on authorizing the use of ground troops, “increas[ing] the power of President Clinton”;
249 to 180; and no on authorizing the presi- he wanted to restrain the president’s ability
dent to continue airstrikes, 213 to 213. unilaterally to wage war. As Campbell put it, “I
Reacting to the votes, National Security came of age during Vietnam; [like that war,]
Council spokesman David Leavy said: “The this war is unconstitutional and I should do
House is obviously struggling to find its everything I can to stop an unconstitutional
voice. It voted ‘No’ on declaring war, ‘No’ on war as early as I can.”65
sending in ground troops, and it tied on Unfortunately, Representative Campbell’s
whether to support an air campaign. They lawsuit ran aground against judicial timidity.
sent a mixed message as to what their stance On June 8, 1999, Judge Paul L. Friedman of the
is. But we’ve got to press ahead. There’s broad U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia
support for this campaign among the dismissed Campbell v. Clinton, holding that the
American people, so we sort of just blew by” plaintiffs lacked standing. That decision was
the House votes.6 2 For the record, as Leavy affirmed on appeal by the D.C. Circuit Court of
must know, a tie vote means that the mea- Appeals on February 18, 2000.
sure failed to pass; thus, the House’s message As is often the case in interbranch disputes,
was far from “mixed.” But his statement is the court in Campbell v. Clinton was loath to
indicative of this administration’s view of step between Congress and the president to
constitutional constraints: they’re optional, resolve the disputed issue. Generally speaking,
to be “[blown] by” when inconvenient. there is a sound practical reason for that reluc-
Two days after that series of rejections for tance. Advised by a Western dignitary to go
the administration, Campbell and 16 other easy on Eastern bloc Catholics because of the
members of Congress filed suit against the influence of the pope, Joseph Stalin is said to
president under the War Powers Resolution.63 have replied, “The Pope! How many divisions
That resolution, passed in 1973 over President has he got?” Analogously, the exercise of judi-
The Clinton Richard Nixon’s veto, attempts to institution- cial review has always been tempered by the
alize a mechanism for restraining executive possibility that the political branches might
administration’s war making. In essence, it provides that, if the refuse to obey the Court, giving a version of
view is that cruise president introduces U.S. armed forces into Stalin’s answer: “How many divisions does the
missiles, cluster hostilities or “situations where imminent Supreme Court have?” The judiciary’s power is
involvement in hostilities is clearly indicated thus limited not only by the Constitution but
bombs, and civil- by the circumstances,” he must remove those also by real-world conditions quite apart from
ian casualties forces within 60 days absent a congressional the text of the document. Accordingly, federal
declaration of war, specific statutory autho- courts have developed various judicial escape
don’t constitute rization for the action, or a situation in which hatches, such as the political question doctrine
war until Congress is physically unable to meet because and heightened scrutiny for standing, that
someone in of an armed attack on the United States. Until allow them to husband their power by avoid-
1999 the War Powers Resolution had never ing the resolution of interbranch fights.
power lets the found much favor with Republican conserva- But that sort of timidity was not necessary
magic word slip. tives. In fact, on June 7, 1995, the House had here. The plaintiffs were not asking Judge
voted down a bill introduced by Rep. Henry Friedman to issue an injunction grounding

16
the bombers or ordering the troops home; humanitarian crusades. The New York Times, During the war
rather, they were seeking a declaratory judg- the paper that had been such a thorn in the over Kosovo and
ment that the president did not have the side of the Nixon administration during the
authority to wage war on Serbia absent con- Vietnam War, hardly saw fit to mention the months lead-
gressional authorization. Campbell and his President Clinton’s violation of the War ing up to it,
fellow plaintiffs would then use that decision Powers Resolution and the Constitution in
to motivate Congress to take action. waging war against Serbia.6 7 And, despite an
American liberals
Nonetheless, Judge Friedman sought to editorial expressing concern at the lack of largely aban-
avoid the issue by holding that the plaintiffs’ justification for the earlier Sudan airstrikes, doned their tradi-
injury was “not sufficiently concrete or partic- the Washington Post relegated its most detailed
ularized” legally to entitle them to bring suit. coverage of the first “Wag the Dog” bombing tional opposition
Citing Raines v. Byrd, a 1997 case in which the to its “Style” section, next to horoscopes, to presidential
Supreme Court denied legislative standing to comics, and celebrity puff pieces.68 wars.
challenge the line-item veto act, Friedman That moral climb-down occurred in
held that the plaintiffs were required to Congress as well. Of the House Democratic
demonstrate that there was a “true ‘constitu- caucus, only Gene Taylor (D-Miss.) voted to
tional impasse’ or ‘actual confrontation’ declare war; everyone else who supported the
between the legislative and executive branch- president’s action and voted against the dec-
es” before the plaintiffs could garner stand- laration in effect declared that the president
ing. For example, “If Congress had directed can bomb other countries without a declara-
the President to remove forces from their tion of war. Among those congressmen were
positions and he had refused to do so . . . that such anti-war stalwarts as John Conyers (D-
likely would have constituted an actual con- Mich.), Charles Rangel (D-N.Y.), Bernie
frontation sufficient to confer standing on Sanders (I-Vt.), and Henry Gonzalez (D-Tex.).
legislative plaintiffs.” But in seeking to avoid The fact that Conyers and Gonzalez support-
the constitutional issue, Friedman actually ed the war was particularly ironic. Less than
resolved it and resolved it incorrectly. If 10 years previously, Representative Gonzalez
Congress is required to act (over the president’s had introduced a resolution to impeach
veto?) to stop the president from waging war, George Bush for waging the Persian Gulf
then it does not have the power “to declare War without a declaration, even though,
War”; rather, it has a limited ability to veto unlike President Clinton, Bush had at least
the president’s power to declare war. That secured a joint resolution supporting his
turns the constitutional war power on its actions.69 For his part, Representative Conyers
head. had introduced an article of impeachment
The Collapse of the Anti-War Left. The judicia- against Richard Nixon for the secret bombing
ry was not alone in shirking its civic duty dur- of Cambodia. That article, which did not
ing the constitutional crisis brought about make it into the final articles of impeachment,
by President Clinton’s undeclared wars. The read in part: “On and subsequent to March 17,
political left had long been the most depend- 1969, [President Nixon] authorized, ordered,
able source of anti-war sentiment and oppo- and ratified the concealment from the
sition to the imperial presidency. But during Congress of the facts and the submission to
the war over Kosovo and the months leading the Congress of false and misleading state-
up to it, American liberals largely abandoned ments concerning the existence, scope and
their traditional opposition to presidential nature of American bombing operations in
wars.6 6 Cambodia in derogation of the power of the
Liberal-leaning newspapers that had Congress to declare war.” (Emphasis added.)
helped turn public sentiment against the war When is unauthorized war making not an
in Vietnam showed little interest in challeng- impeachable offense? For Conyers and
ing the Clinton administration’s purportedly Gonzalez and many of their liberal Democratic

17
colleagues, the answer, apparently, is this: vail. In that respect, the bombing was of a
when you like the president who is waging piece with the August 1998 “anti-terror”
the war. attacks on Sudan and Afghanistan, which
came three days after the president’s grand
jury testimony and in the midst of a media
Why Executive Usurpation firestorm over his televised nonapology.
Matters Given the chronology, many Americans
could not help but wonder whether the pres-
The Clinton administration has espoused ident was applying a literal version of
a view of executive war-making authority Clausewitz’s dictum that war is the continu-
that is as unconditional and unconstrained ation of politics by other means. And indeed,
as that claimed by any president in American the closer we look at those actions, the hard-
history. In the Haiti campaign, the adminis- er it becomes to put that suspicion aside.
tration asserted the authority to carry out a
large-scale invasion without a prior declara- Sudan and Afghanistan
tion of war, despite the fact that exigent cir- On August 20, 1998, without warning,
cumstances, such as the need for surprise, American armed forces fired Tomahawk cruise
In Kosovo, the were not present.70 In Kosovo, the adminis- missiles at targets in Sudan and Afghanistan.
administration tration asserted the authority to wage the As its justification, the Clinton administration
asserted the largest and most destructive military cam- stated that it had “convincing evidence” that
paign since the Gulf War, despite Congress’s the targeted sites—a pharmaceutical factory in
authority to wage outright refusal to grant such authority. Sudan and terrorist “training facilities” in
the largest and For some commentators, it’s not immedi- Afghanistan—were linked to Osama Bin Laden,
ately clear why that should be troubling. The an Islamic terrorist the administration believed
most destructive policy reasons that proponents of an unfet- was behind the August 7 bombings of the
military cam- tered executive invoked during the Cold War American embassies in Nairobi, Kenya; and
paign since the can be said to have survived that war’s Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
demise. The chief executive is still, as propo- The administration declined to share that
Gulf War, despite nents of presidential prerogative like to point “convincing evidence” with the public. Little
Congress’s out- out, the highest national officer elected by is known about the administration’s justifi-
right refusal to the nation as a whole and is better situated cations for selecting the Afghan targets. But
than is Congress to respond quickly to inter- when questions were raised about the bomb-
grant such national crises. ing of the target in Sudan, the administra-
authority. But when the Framers gave Congress the tion was forced to back off rather quickly
authority to declare war, they did not focus from several assertions of fact on which it
solely on considerations of expediency. They had based the attack.7 2 First, the Clinton
also took human nature and the dangers of administration claimed that the factory
unchecked power into account. In his destroyed in Sudan did not produce any
“Helvidius” letters, arguing with Hamilton, medicines; rather, it was a heavily guarded
Madison stated his view that, had the power chemical weapons plant. It soon became
to declare war been vested in the executive, clear, however, that the factory made
“the trust and the temptation would be too painkillers and other drugs and repackaged
great for any one man.”7 1 Two Clinton imported pharmaceuticals for resale in
administration interventions, smaller in Sudan. It was in fact the major producer of
scale than, and prior to, the war in Serbia medicine in that Third World country and
illustrate Madison’s point. was visited regularly by foreign dignitaries
President Clinton’s eve-of-impeachment and representatives of the World Health
decision to bomb Iraq came shortly after he Organization. Westerners intimately familiar
learned that he did not have the votes to pre- with the plant, including a British engineer

18
who served as technical manager during the its determination to ensure that the inspec-
plant’s construction, emphatically denied tions would continue. In this effort it had the
that it was used for the manufacture of support of the international community to
chemical weapons. take military action. The UN Security Council
Second, the administration claimed that a voted to condemn Saddam’s actions.
soil sample collected outside the factory con- Surprisingly, even Russia and China withdrew
tained EMPTA, a chemical precursor to nerve their opposition to the use of force to restore
gas. Independent tests conducted by the arms inspections. Thus, by mid-November,
chair of the chemistry department at Boston the stage was set for punitive airstrikes on Iraq.
University confirmed that no nerve-gas pre- (Of course, the president did lack a declaration
cursors were present in the soil around the of war, but by this point there was no reason to
factory. As the report put it, “To the practical expect him to take that constitutional com-
limits of scientific detection, there was no mand any more seriously than he had previ-
EMPTA” in soil samples taken from around ously.) However, just as the airstrikes were
the factory.7 3 To date, the CIA has refused to about to take place, President Clinton reversed
release or subject to independent testing the course and called a halt to military action.
sample it claims to have relied on. A little over a month later, it was becoming
Finally, Secretary of Defense Cohen increasingly clear that, despite Republican
asserted that Osama Bin Laden was finan- losses in the midterm elections, the president
cially linked to the plant, but the available was not going to be able to avoid impeach-
evidence fails to establish that the plant’s ment. At that point, the administration seized
owner, Salah Idris, had any connection with on a report by UNSCOM chairman Richard
Bin Laden. Idris’s property had been Butler that the Saddam regime was not fully
destroyed—and his assets seized—on that pre- complying with UN arms inspections. As the
text. When Idris filed suit, however, the U.S. House prepared to debate impeachment, and
government summarily issued an order the Security Council was about to meet to dis-
unfreezing his assets instead of coming for- cuss the UNSCOM report, President Clinton
ward with its evidence in open court.7 4 ordered airstrikes on Iraq. Whereas in
November the president had enjoyed the sup-
Iraq: Operation Desert Fox port of the UN Security Council, including
The course of the Clinton administration Russia and China, and the tacit, if not consti-
has been punctuated by fairly regular bomb- tutionally expressed, support of Congress, by
ings of Iraq, some of which, like the June December he had support from none of those
1993 missile attack on Baghdad in retalia- sources. When questions
tion for an alleged Iraqi plot to assassinate What made it imperative that airstrikes be
former president Bush, have been widely launched precisely on December 16? As with
were raised about
reported in the press, others of which have Sudan and Afghanistan, the administration’s the bombing of
taken place below the media radar screen. In explanations left much to be desired. The the target in
the former category is President Clinton’s central complaint mentioned in the Butler
eve-of-impeachment missile strike on Iraq. report, and highlighted by the president in Sudan, the
The timing and circumstances of that attack his airstrike announcement, was that, when administration
are every bit as suspicious as those surround- UN weapons inspectors showed up at the rul-
ing the strikes on Sudan and Afghanistan. ing Baath Party headquarters in Baghdad to
was forced to
In late October 1998, Saddam Hussein search for ballistic missile components, the back off from
announced that he would no longer cooperate Iraqis would allow only four inspectors to several assertions
with ongoing UN Special Commission enter.7 5 Because of such intransigence, the
(UNSCOM) arms inspections for chemical, president explained, “We had to act, and act of fact on which
biological, and other weapons of mass now.” Why? Because “without a strong it had based the
destruction. The administration announced inspections system, Iraq would be free to attack.

19
Did Clinton think retain and begin to rebuild its chemical, bio- power.”8 0 And in the Chicago Tribune, colum-
the Muslim world logical, and nuclear weapons programs—in nist Stephen Chapman called speculation
months, not years.” And given that “the about the president’s motives “preposter-
would be offend- Muslim holy month of Ramadan” would ous,” a hallucination from “Oliver Stone
ed if bombing begin that weekend, “for us to initiate mili- land.”81 But the Framers didn’t think that
tary action during Ramadan would be pro- such suspicions were irrational. Indeed, the
were “initiated” foundly offensive to the Muslim world.”7 6 Framers designed a Constitution to prevent
during Ramadan At least two things about that explanation such “paranoid fantasies” from becoming a
but untroubled strike one as curious. First, the bombing did reality.
not conclude until Saturday, December 19,
by the fact that it after the start of Ramadan. Did Clinton
continued into the think the Muslim world would be profound- What Is to Be Done?
holy month? ly offended if bombing were “initiated” dur-
ing Ramadan but untroubled by the fact that How can Congress reclaim what the
it continued into the holy month? Second, and Constitution grants it: the power to declare
more important, if continuation of the UN war? The War Powers Resolution offers little
inspections regime was essential to prevent hope. Since its inception, it has run aground
the development of Iraqi weapons of mass on presidential intransigence and judicial
destruction “in months, not years,” why then unwillingness to enforce it. Moreover, by
did the administration pursue a policy allowing the president the ability unilaterally
designed to put an end to any weapons to place U.S. forces into hostilities for at least
inspections whatsoever? For an entire year, as 60 days, the act cedes more power to him
a direct result of the December airstrikes, not than the Constitution allows. But there are
only were there no international arms con- two constitutional measures available to a
trol inspections in Iraq, there was no plan in Congress determined to recapture authority
place for resuming such inspections. In over the war power. One was suggested most
December 1999, the UN Security Council recently by former White House counsel
finally created a new arms inspection com- Abner Mikva, a dedicated supporter of the
mission, but it still remains unclear whether president: bold use of the appropriations
Iraq will allow the inspectors to enter.7 7 power. As Mikva wrote in Legal Times early in
The frailty of the president’s rationale for the Kosovo conflict: “If Congress doesn’t
bombing, coupled with the timing of the act, wish the president to engage in a particular
inevitably gives rise to suspicion. That suspi- military initiative, it simply cuts off the funds
cion was described most succinctly by Scott he needs to do so. This is how the English
Ritter, the former UNSCOM arms inspector Parliament used to control the military
who had quit over what he described as the adventures of English kings, and it works
administration’s lack of seriousness about equally well under our system. Congress, not
UNSCOM’s mission: “You have no choice the president, has the key to the Treasury.”8 2
but to interpret this as ‘Wag the Dog.’”7 8 The other avenue open to Congress is the
Pundits across the political spectrum impeachment power. In a justly celebrated
rejected the “Wag the Dog” scenario as dis- 1990 law review article, Stanford law profes-
tressingly cynical. In an op-ed, “Hard Faces of sor John Hart Ely argues that impeachment
Partisanship,” Washington Post columnist is the proper remedy for unauthorized war
David Broder professed to be shocked that making: “A serious and willful violation of
Senate Majority Leader Lott would question the separation of powers [such as an unde-
the timing of President Clinton’s attack on clared war] constitutes an impeachable ‘high
Iraq.7 9 William Safire could not “bring crime or misdemeanor.’”8 3 Of President
[him]self to think” that a U.S. president Nixon’s secret bombing in Cambodia, Ely
would “stoop to risking lives to cling to concluded:

20
I’d have impeached him for it. Surely the more so. But an aspirant savior of the
it would have been a more worthy Constitution might choose firmer ground
ground than the combination of a than a narrow interpretation of that docu-
third-rate burglary and a style the ment’s impeachment clause. The entire nation
stylish couldn’t stomach. As Con- can—and did—debate for a year about whether
gressman William Hungate put it: “high crimes and misdemeanors” include per-
“It’s kind of hard to live with yourself jury and obstruction of justice. But when it
when you impeach a guy for tapping comes to the treaty power and the war power,
telephones and not for making war the Constitution itself cuts off much of the
without authorization.”8 4 debate: treaties are void without the ratifica-
tion of the Senate, and wars are illegal without
With the notable exception of a congressional declaration. Article II, section
Representative Campbell and a handful of 2, and Article I, section 8, will bear no other
others in Congress, the possibility of such interpretation. But during the last eight years,
congressional profiles in courage is hardly neither provision has gotten much deference
apparent in Congress as currently constitut- from the president who “saved” the Constitution.
ed. Congress burned once for shutting down The men who midwifed the birth of the
the federal government will be loath to cut national government rejected executive abso-
Congressional
off appropriations when U.S. troops are in lutism in foreign affairs. They knew too much courage of the
harm’s way. And after the dramatic failure to of history and of human nature to do other- kind needed to
remove the president from office, Congress wise. When Hamilton wrote in the Federalist
in the future is likely to balk at the prospect Papers that “the history of human conduct does reclaim the war
of impeaching a president for abuse of his not warrant that exalted opinion of human power will not be
authority as commander in chief. virtue” that would allow Americans to entrust
Congressional courage of the kind needed one man with the power to control the nation’s
forthcoming
to reclaim the war power will not be forth- foreign affairs, he spoke to the lived experience unless American
coming unless American citizens demand it. of a generation that had fought to free itself citizens
Unless Americans rediscover their reverence from a king.8 7 Our experience over the past
for constitutional limits, and vote according- eight years has given us little reason to adopt a demand it.
ly, the slide toward empire will continue. more “exalted opinion of human virtue.”
Judge Learned Hand put it best: “Liberty lies Indeed, President Clinton’s abuses of presiden-
in the hearts of men and women; when it dies tial authority reaffirm the founding genera-
there, no constitution, no law, no court can tion’s skeptical view of human nature. As
save it. No constitution, no law, no court can Jefferson put it, “In questions of power, then, let
even do much to help it.”8 5 no more be heard of confidence in man, but
bind him down from mischief by the chains of
the Constitution.”88 The Clinton years have
Conclusion underscored our need to reforge those chains. If
republican government is to survive, the imper-
In the twilight days of his presidency, last ial presidency cannot. Restoring the country’s
spring, William Jefferson Clinton responded chief executive to its limited, constitutional role
heatedly to a reporter’s question about is a difficult task, but a necessary one, for those
impeachment and how it fits into his legacy: Americans who think that the Constitution
“Let me tell you: I am proud of what we did and the Republic are worth saving.
there, because I think we saved the
Constitution of the United States.”86
Reverence for the Constitution is certainly to Notes
be applauded in a chief executive, and a pas- 1. William Jefferson Clinton, Letter to Col. Eugene
sionate desire to “save” our national charter all Holmes, December 3, 1969, quoted in the New

21
York Times, February 13, 1992, p. A25. 15. Quoted in Berger, p. 138.

2. On August 10, 1992, then-candidate Clinton said 16. Quoted in Bill Gertz, “Albright Says U.S. Bound by
of the letter to Colonel Holmes, “Well if you read the Nuke Pact,” Washington Times, November 2, 1999, p. A1.
whole letter . . . I was talking about there—we were
fighting with a draft in an undeclared war, and I 17. 354 U.S. 1, 5–6 (1957).
think at least Congress ought to have to declare a
war . . . before drafting large numbers of people.” 18. David B. Rivkin, Jr., Lee A. Casey, and Darin R.
CBS, This Morning, CBS News transcripts, August 10, Bartman, “The Collapse of the Soviet Union and
1992. A cynic might note that this explanation leaves the End of the 1972 Anti–Ballistic Missile Treaty:
open the question of whether undeclared wars are A Memorandum of Law,” www.heritage.org/
acceptable if fought by a volunteer army, a question nationalsecurity/legalbrief/legalbrief.html.
that Clinton would later, through his actions,
answer in the affirmative. 19. Quoted in ibid.

3. As Fulbright later said: “The biggest lesson I 20. Quoted in Craig Cerniello, “Administration,
learned from Vietnam, is not to trust government Congress Continue Debate over Membership, Future
statements. I had no idea then that you could not of ABM Treaty,” Arms Control Today, May 1998,
trust [the] government.” Jonathan Alter, “Remem- www.armscontrol.org/ACT/may98/cc3my98htm.
brance: Sen. J. William Fulbright, 1905–1995,”
Newsweek, February 20, 1995, p. 76. 21. Most recently, the Pentagon’s chief weapons
tester conceded that missile defense tests con-
4. Quoted in Richard H. Curtiss, “U.S. Obituaries ducted thus far have “significant limitations,”
on Senate Leader J. William Fulbright Omit His given that the Pentagon knows the type of rocket
Mideast Views,” Washington Report on Middle East launching the target as well as the nature of the
Affairs, April–May 1995, www.washington-report. target, where the missile is coming from, and
org/backissues/0495/9504049.html. when it is being launched. See “Time Investigation
Shows That This Week’s $100 Million Space
5. Quoted in Alter, p. 76. Shield Test Is All but Fixed,” Time, July 2, 2000,
www.time.com/time/pr/missiles.html.
6. J. William Fulbright, The Arrogance of Power
(New York: Random House, 1966), pp. 245–46. 22. For example, Robert Kagan of the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace and the
7. Quoted in Arthur Schlesinger Jr., The Imperial Weekly Standard supports NMD because “nothing
Presidency (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1973), is more likely to push the United States toward an
pp. 298–99. isolationist foreign policy than our increasing
vulnerability to missile attack.” Robert Kagan, “A
8. Quoted in Alter, p. 76. Real Case for Missile Defense,” Washington Post,
May 21, 2000. See also George Will, “Missile
9. U.S. Constitution, art. II, sec. 2. Defense Charade,” Sacramento Bee, June 11, 2000
(arguing that NMD is necessary so that the
10. Quoted in Dafna Linzer, “Albright Disavows United States can defend Taiwan, Kuwait, and
Helms’ Statement,” Washington Times, January 25, South Korea without risking missile attack).
2000.
23. See Ivan Eland, “Protecting the Homeland:
11. As Hamilton noted in Federalist 69, this power The Best Defense Is to Give No Offense,” Cato
“is more a matter of dignity than of authority. . . . It Institute Policy Analysis no. 306, May 5, 1998,
was far more convenient . . . than that there should www.cato.org/pubs/pas/pa-306es.html.
be a necessity of convening the legislature . . . upon
every arrival of a foreign minister.” 24. See “Global Climate Change: Selected Legal
Questions about the Kyoto Protocol,” Congression-
12. Raoul Berger, Executive Privilege: A Constitutional al Research Service Report for Congress 98-349,
Myth (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, November 24, 1998.
1974), p. 122. Emphasis in original.
25. William H. Lash III, “Kyoto Climate Treaty
13. Quoted in Leonard Levy, Original Intent and the Advocates Act to Circumvent Senate Approval,”
Framers of the Constitution (New York: Macmillan, Legal Opinion Letter, Washington Legal Founda-
1988), p. 38. Emphasis added. tion, April 2, 1999.

14. Antonin Scalia, A Matter of Interpretation (Princeton, 26. David McIntosh, “Will the Administration
N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1997), pp. 16–18. Implement the Kyoto Protocol through the Back

22
Door?” Nonline News Center, October 9, 1998, 40. Quoted in Jonathan Elliot, ed., The Debates in the
http://www.nonline.com/procon/topics/1998/ Several State Conventions, on the Adoption of the Federal
November/16Nov-10.asp. Constitution as Recommended by the General Convention
at Philadelphia in 1787, 2d ed., vol. 2 (Washington: U.S.
27. Theresa Sotto, “House Members Assert EPA Congress, 1836), p. 528.
Cannot Regulate CO2 under the Clean Air Act,”
Weathervane, March 20, 2000, www.weathervane. 41. Federalist 69, quoted in Hamilton, Madison,
rff.org/features/feature090.html. and Jay, p. 418. Emphasis in original.

28. See Deborah Simpson and Steven Simpson, 42. 5 U.S. (1 Cranch) 1, 28 (1801).
“The Power to Make Law: Can the EPA Regulate
C O2 under the Clean Air Act?” Institute for 43. Quoted in Wormuth and Firmage, pp. 27–28.
Research on the Economics of Taxation, Studies
in Social Cost, Regulation and the Environment, 44. Quoted in Stuart Taylor Jr., “A Betrayal of the
no. 2, September 1999; and Legal Affairs Com- Constitution,” Legal Times, September 19, 1994, p. 25.
mittee, “CO2: A Pollutant?” Report to the Nation-
al Mining Association Board of Directors, 45. Quoted in Jason Sherman, “Clause and Effect,”
October 12, 1998. Armed Forces Journal, September 1998, p. 14.

29. Quoted in Joanne Kenen, “With Congress 46. See Ted Galen Carpenter, “Setting a Dangerous
Away, Clinton Names Ambassador,” Philadelphia Precedent in Somalia,” Cato Institute Foreign
Inquirer, June 6, 1999. Policy Briefing no. 20, December 28, 1992.

30. Ilona Nickels, “Capitol Questions,” www.cspan. 47. White House Briefing, Federal News Service,
org/questions. October 14, 1993.

31. Steven J. Duffield and James C. Ho, “The 48. Quoted in Ruth Marcus and Helen Dewar,
Illegal Appointment of Bill Lann Lee,” Texas “Clinton Tells Congress to Back Off,” Washington
Review of Law & Politics 2 (1998): 335. Post, October 19, 1993.

32. Quoted in ibid. 49. Quoted in Congressional Record, August 5,


1994, 140, S10,663.
33. Indeed, in the closing months of his adminis-
tration, Clinton has used the recess appointments 50. Quoted in George J. Church, “Destination
clause to appoint three more ambassadors with- Haiti,” Time, September 26, 1994.
out Senate approval. All three were big-dollar con-
tributors to the Democratic Party. See Sean 51. Ibid.
Scully, “Clinton Quietly Installs 3 Envoys,”
Washington Times, August 29, 2000, p. A1. 52. Taylor. Emphasis in original.

34. James Madison, Writings of James Madison, vol. 6, 53. Dellinger’s letter and the law professors’
ed. Gaillard Hunt (New York: Putnam’s, 1906), p. 74. response are reprinted in American Journal of
International Law 89 (January 1995): 122–30.
35. See, especially, Berger; Levy; and Francis D.
Wormuth and Edwin B. Firmage, To Chain the Dog of 54. 30 Weekly Compilation of Presidential
War (Dallas, Tex.: Southern Methodist University Documents 2417.
Press, 1986).
55. 31 Weekly Compilation of Presidential
36. Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787, as Documents 2144.
Reported by James Madison, August 18, vol. 3 of
Elliot’s Debates, ed. James McClellan and M. E. 56. Nick Cook, “A War of Extremes,” Jane’s Defence
Bradford (Richmond, Va.: James River Press, 1989), Weekly, www.janes.com/defence/news/kosovo/
pp. 451–52. jdw990707_01_n.shtml.

37. Ibid. Emphasis in original. 57. Charles Lane, “TRB: Something to Declare,” New
Republic, May 17, 1999, www.tnr.com/archive/0599/
38. Quoted in Wormuth and Firmage, pp. 27–28. 051799/trb051799.html. Emphasis added.

39. Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and 58. Quoted in Jake Tapper, “Declaring War on
John Jay, The Federalist Papers, ed. Clinton Rossiter Undeclared War,” Salon, May 6, 1999, www.salonmag.
(New York: Mentor, 1961), p. 418. com/news/Feature/1999/05/06/war.

23
59. USIS Washington File, “Transcript: White were not informed of the raid. Gen. Henry Shelton,
House Daily Briefing,” April 19, 1999, www.usinfo. chairman of the Joint Chiefs, was presented with
org/wf/990419/epf101.htm. the decision as a fait accompli and was ordered not
to inform the other members. See Tracy Connor,
60. Quoted in Lane. “Top U.S. Brass Kept Out of Loop on Missile Raid:
Mag,” New York Post, October 5, 1998.
61. For Campbell’s account of his legal battle with
the administration, see Tom Campbell, “Kosovo— 73. James Risen and David Johnston, “Experts
An Unconstitutional War,” Mediterranean Quarterly Find No Arms Chemicals at Bombed Sudan
11, no.1 (Winter 2000): 1–7. Plant,” New York Times, February 9, 1999, p. A3.

62. Quoted in Tapper. 74. See Vernon Loeb, “U.S. Unfreezes Assets of
Saudi Who Owned Plant Bombed in Sudan,”
63. Fourteen more members joined the suit after Washington Post, May 4, 1999; and “What Terrorist
it was filed. Link?” Editorial, Washington Post, May 7, 1999.

64. Quoted in “Separation of Powers and Foreign 75. Robert Novak, “Wagging Saddam,” Creators
Policy,” Panel discussion held at Federalist Society’s Syndicate, December 21, 1998. When the presi-
1999 National Lawyers’ Convention, November dent described that incident in his address to the
11–13, 1999, www.fed-soc.org/foreign-fedv3i3.htm. country, however, he did not give the full story,
stating merely that Iraq had “shut off access to
65. Quoted in E. Michael Myers, “Ghosts of the headquarters of its ruling party.” “Transcript:
Vietnam Led Rep. Campbell to Force Balkan President Clinton Explains Iraq Strike,”
Votes,” The Hill, May 5, 1999, p. 7. http://www.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/stories/
1998/12/16/transcripts/clinton.html.
66. Interestingly, the historian who popularized
the phrase “the imperial presidency,” Democratic 76. Quoted in Kim Wilsher, “Moon Rose and
partisan Arthur Schlesinger Jr., announced the Ramadan and Final Blitz Began,” Mail on Sunday,
death of the imperial presidency early on in the December 20, 1998, p. 7.
impeachment drama: “The fall of the Soviet
Union completed the revolt against the abuse of 77. “Despite Baghdad’s Opposition, U.N. Still
Presidential power. Because it was the creation of Planning Arms Inspections,” May 24, 2000,
international crisis, the imperial Presidency col- CNN.com, http://cnn.org/2000/WORLD/meast/
lapsed once that crisis came to an end.” Arthur 05/24/un.iraq/index.html.
Schlesinger Jr., “So Much for the Imperial
Presidency,” New York Times, August 3, 1998. As 78. Quoted in Christopher Francescani, “Whistle-
this paper attempts to show, contra Schlesinger, Blow Inspector: It’s Wag the Dog,” New York Post,
reports of the demise of the imperial presidency December 17, 1998.
have been greatly exaggerated.
79. David Broder, “Hard Faces of Partisanship,”
67. Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, “New York Washington Post, December 19, 1998.
Times Ignores Violation of the War Powers Act,”
May 28, 1999, www.fair.org/activism/war-powers. 80. William Safire, “On Impeachment Eve,” New
html. York Times, December 17, 1998, p. A33.

68. Vernon Loeb, “A Dirty Business,” Washington 81. Stephen Chapman, “Bombing of Iraq
Post, July 25, 1999, p. F1. Expanding the Limits of Cynicism,” Chicago
Tribune, December 20, 1998.
69. Resolution of Impeachment of President George Bush,
H.R. 34, January 17, 1991, http://thomas.loc.gov/. 82. Abner Mikva, “If Congress Really Wants to
Stop the Kosovo War, It Can,” Legal Times, May 3,
70. Which is not to concede that those particular 1999, p. 23.
exigent circumstances obviate the need for a dec-
laration of war. They merely underscore that the 83. John Hart Ely, “The American War in
administration here went further even than Indochina, Part II: The Unconstitutionality of the
Reagan did with Grenada and Bush with Panama. War They Didn’t Tell Us About,” Stanford Law
Review 42 (May 1990): 1133.
71. Madison, p. 174.
84. Ibid., p. 1093.
72. Odder still were the circumstances surround-
ing the decision to launch the attack. Apparently, 85. Learned Hand, The Spirit of Liberty (New York:
the four service chiefs of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Knopf, 1952), p. 144.

24
86. Quoted in Terence Hunt, “Clinton Won’t Ask for Constitution was ratified. As John Quincy Adams
Pardon,” Detroit News, April 13, 2000, http://detnews. judged it, Madison “scrutinized the doctrines of
com/2000/nation/0004/13/04140014.html. Pacificus with an acuteness of intellect never per-
haps surpassed,” refuting them with quotes from
87. It’s true that Hamilton later recanted many of Hamilton himself. See Berger, pp. 135–38.
the views on presidential power that he expressed
in the Federalist Papers. In his 1793 debates with 88. Quoted in David Mayer, The Constitutional
Madison under the nom de plume “Pacificus,” Thought of Thomas Jefferson (Charlottesville:
Hamilton argued for broad executive latitude in University Press of Virginia, 1994), pp. 2–3. Mayer
foreign affairs. Madison answered his arguments cites Paul Leicester Ford, ed., The Writings of
under the name “Helvidius,” arguing for the lim- Thomas Jefferson (New York: G. P. Putnam’s,
ited view of executive power under which the 1892–99), vol. 7, p. 304.

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