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BOOKS: War Powers
By Eugene Kontorovich
Eugene Kontorovich on The Powers of War and Peace: The Constitution and Foreign Affairs After 9/11 by John Yoo
John Yoo. The Powers of War and Peace: The Constitution and
Foreign Affairs After 9/11. University of Chicago Press. 378 pages. $29.00
John
yoo has become famous for the memoranda
he wrote on various aspects of the war on terror while a lawyer at
the Justice Department, advocating a broad conception of
presidential power in the fields of war and foreign relations. The Powers of War and Peace does not address the particular controversies Yoo dealt
with while at Justice (and it is much to his credit that he does
not use this occasion to take shots at critics of his government
work). Rather, it outlines the broader framework that informs his
general understanding of the separation of powers and applies it to
some long-standing questions about the war and treaty powers. In
this sense, the title is misleading: His arguments do not turn in
any significant way on the exigencies of the current conflict or on
fdr-style
assertions that times of crisis require extraordinary powers.
Yoo argues that pre-Revolutionary British
political thought and constitutional practice developed a formal,
distinct concept of “executive” and
“legislative” powers. In particular, foreign relations
and war were regarded as “executive.” These notions
were studied and adopted by the Founders, with some modifications
to reflect the republican circumstances. Thus, when the
Constitution provides that “the executive Power shall be
vested in a President,” Yoo sees it as referring to a
definite set of powers and responsibilities, those that had
traditionally been regarded as executive. He applies this model
— along with considerable analysis of constitutional text and
actual practice — to current controversies, with mixed
results.
The Powers of War and Peace is most convincing when addressing the latter. Yoo
makes several important arguments about the role of treaties in the
constitutional system, challenging some of the more entrenched
positions in foreign relations law. The Constitution provides that
treaties shall be “made” by the president and ratified
by two-thirds of the Senate. However, a combination of precedent
and practice has made it so that deals with foreign nations having
the same binding force as treaties can be solemnized without the
consent of two-thirds of the Senate. The trick consists in calling
these deals “agreements” rather than
“treaties.” (This is one of the wonderful developments
that makes a legal education essential — and a copy of the
Constitution detrimental — to understanding constitutional
law.) Yoo presents a nuanced argument against the
interchangeability of treaties with other types of international
deals.
He also argues that the Constitution does not
make treaties self-executing — that is, that they do not
automatically create domestic legal obligations enforceable by
courts. This point is of overwhelming importance as it prevents the
president from using the treaty power as a back door to domestic
legislation, which is properly the province of Congress. Indeed,
some scholars argue that because of our participation in certain
treaties, the decisions of international bodies such as the
Security Council or the International Court of Justice are as
binding as federal legislation on Congress and the courts.
Non-self-execution allows the U.S. to participate in broad
aspirational human rights treaties without having them override
such core constitutional values as the separation of powers and
federalism. Finally, Yoo argues that the president should play the
leading role in interpreting treaty obligations, a sensible
position given that the chief executive negotiates treaties and
plays the major role in carrying out their obligations and in
determining whether other nations have satisfied their side of
bargains. None of this may seem particularly controversial (and the
book omits the most expansive and tenuous treaty power
arguments Yoo made in his Justice memos), but in the legal academy
it is not conventional wisdom.
Yoo’s
approach to the more high-profile
issue of war powers is less satisfactory, perhaps because the
problems are more difficult. The Constitution creates a system of
separated powers and relies on each branch of government to serve
as a check against the abuses of the others. Often, the lines of
separation are clear: Congress puts together laws and passes them;
the president can veto them; if he does not, he will decide on how
to implement them. Yet when it comes to relations with foreign
countries, whether they take the form of treaties or wars, the
Constitution’s lines of authority cross and intertwine. For
example, Congress has the power to “declare War,” but
the president is the commander in chief of the military. Congress
can “raise and support Armies,” but the president picks
the generals.
The common understanding of the division of
power between the two branches is that Congress chooses when to
fight other countries, while the president controls the conduct of
the war. In a more extreme but academically popular version of this
position, the president cannot initiate any hostilities without
advance congressional authorization, except to repel sudden
attacks.
Challenging the dominant model, Yoo argues that
the Constitution gives the president a free hand both to start wars
and to control their conduct. This necessarily requires him to take
an extraordinarily narrow view of Congress’s declare-war
power. He sees it simply as a power to give a particular legal
status to hostilities — for example, authorizing the seizure
of enemy property — rather than to authorize them.
The Constitution seeks to place limits on
government and so rarely places plenary power in any one
branch’s hands. It would be odd indeed if it gave one man
military carte blanche. Yoo recognizes that his broad account of
executive power would be more convincing if another branch could
exercise an effective check on it. He rightly rejects judicial
oversight of warmaking. Instead, he sees Congress as the principal
check, through its power to “raise armies” and spend
money on them.
Yoo argues that if Congress disapproves of a
president’s war, it can refuse to appropriate money for it.
War is an expensive business, and the commander in chief will not
get far without congressional approval. But in Yoo’s view,
Congress can block a war only indirectly, through the appropriations process. In a
rough analogy, the president has sole custody of the keys to the
engine of war and sits at the steering wheel — but only
Congress can put gas in the tank. Because Yoo’s model of
checks and balances places almost exclusive reliance on the power
of the purse, his theory can be convincing only if appropriations
could in practice be an effective check on presidential war-making.
Here his argument is at its thinnest.
When the Constitution was ratified, the federal
army numbered fewer than 700 men; there was no naval establishment. The
state militias accounted for the bulk of the nation’s
military capability. The Constitution makes clear that Congress,
rather than the president, controls the “calling forth of the
militia.” Thus, the commander in chief, at the time of the
founding, had no means with which to start a war without prior
action by Congress. It would be odd if the decision about whether
to wage war were placed solely on the shoulders of an official so
ill-suited to ensuring its success.
Of course, times have changed. Since World War ii, the United States has
fielded a large, permanent military equipped with expensive and
complex weapons systems. It is the nature of modern war that an
advanced arsenal must be maintained at the ready. At the head of
such a host, the president can easily initiate and successfully
prosecute many campaigns. As a result, the president can easily
start wars without seeking additional
appropriations. This belies Yoo’s
claim that “Congress can simply block a President . . . by
doing nothing, by not taking the affirmative step of voting
funds.” In Yoo’s model, Congress’s decision to
create a military ready to meet any contingency allows the
president to do what he will with it. But of course, Congress has
no real choice in the matter — it could hardly leave the
nation defenseless by refusing to establish a large standing army.
Yoo goes further, arguing that if the president
starts a war Congress does not approve of, it can exercise its
constitutional check by cutting off funds during the conflict. But
as a check on presidential war-making, Congress’s
“purse-string” power is qualitatively different from
its power to “declare” war, because the decision to
start hostilities is substantially different from the decision to
terminate them before victory.
Critics have noted that it is unrealistic to
expect Congress to defund troops engaged in combat. Yoo devotes too
little time to addressing this important concern. He offers no
examples of such defunding in American history — because
there are none (nor, it seems from his account, did Parliament tie
the purse strings in the middle of a war).1 Today, even
Democrats sincerely opposed to the war in Iraq criticize the
President for not sending enough equipment to soldiers there. This should be taken as
evidence that the spending power cannot effectively check the power
to start wars once the latter has been exercised. But Yoo simply
dismisses this as a “failure of political will” on the
part of Congress rather than an institutional inability to cut off
money. If some Congresses fail to defund wars they dislike, it may
be dismissed as a failure of political will. But if it never happens, it may
be a failure of the system, or the theory.
Even
if yoo is right that such a check
is conceivable in theory, one must ask whether it is desirable. For
the left, the lesson of Vietnam was that great caution must be
taken to avoid entering ill-advised wars. But in hindsight it seems
the true moral is that the only thing worse than entering an
ill-advised war is losing it. Thus, it would not be a sensible
system for Congress to have to block action it considers wrong (a
presidentially initiated war) by doing something even worse
(stopping appropriations for it). And one should not presume that
the Framers intended to create a system in which Congress’s
only alternative to war was defeat or humiliation.
The spending power is also no check if what the
president wants to do is cheap. If Congress wanted to prohibit the torture of
captured enemies, cutting off funding for such interrogations would
be of little use, since the activity can be carried out with little
or no money. If Congress is to have any control over such matters,
it must be through direct legislation. But in Yoo’s view,
such legislation would impermissibly infringe on the
president’s authority as commander in chief.
Finally, the president could evade spending
limitations imposed by Congress by finding alternative sources of
financing. Charles i paid for his wars by selling royal properties and
borrowing money, thus bypassing Parliament; the English Civil War
ensued. Surely the Framers would not have left the Constitution
open to this defect. Today, a hard-pressed president might seek out
contributions or, worse, loans from other nations. This is not so
far-fetched — the Gulf War was financed in part with foreign
contributions, and much of the Iran-contra scandal was about the
White House’s efforts to obtain alternative funding from
foreign nations after Congress cut off support for the Latin
American freedom fighters. Or the president could pay for the war
from its own proceeds — for example, by selling assets
of a defeated enemy (Iraqi oil, for example). Or perhaps he could
sell U.S. military hardware to other nations — he is, after
all, commander in chief of the armed forces. If these expedients
seem unlikely or fantastic, it is because no president has been put
in a position where he might resort to them — specifically,
because Congress has never cut off funds in the middle of a war.
When Yoo does suggest limits on presidential
war powers, it only muddies the waters. He criticizes President
Clinton for placing U.S. troops in Kosovo under foreign command.
This, he says, violated the Appointments Clause, which requires
those given federal executive power to be chosen through a process
that involves Congress; foreign commanders do not go through this
process, but are given executive power when they can give orders to
U.S. troops. True, other presidents have done this, particularly in
the World Wars. But they only gave the foreign commanders
“operational command” rather than strategic command.
Why this makes much of a difference is not clear, but for Yoo, it
means Clinton’s actions were unconstitutional while previous
presidents escape censure.
Yoo’s appointments-clause argument is
plausible, but hard to reconcile with his other positions. If
anything is the president’s bailiwick, it is the actual
conduct of war, and placing U.S. soldiers under tactical command of
foreign officers bears directly on the conduct of the war: If we
operate side-by-side with allies, it may be necessary for its
successful prosecution. As long as the president can remove the
soldiers from foreign command, his “commander in chief”
role is preserved — indeed, it is strengthened through
greater flexibility in how units are organized. In other words,
Clinton’s action was arguably a core “executive”
one. Moreover, if, as Yoo says, the policy problem with putting
troops under foreign command is that it weakens the
president’s accountability to Congress and the public, one
wonders why Congress can’t block such actions by refusing to
pay the soldiers’ salaries or deployment costs. If the power
of the purse is strong enough to stop a war in its tracks, surely
it can stop the placing of a small number of troops under a nato commander.
While
yoo generally overstates the extent
of executive power, it is unduly limited by the leading alternative
model. Indeed, his account is compelling for much the same reason
that John Hart Ely’s arguments for congressional supremacy
proved so forceful a generation ago. In Ely’s vision,
Congress picks the fights and the president fights them. In
Yoo’s account, the president wields the sword and Congress
the purse. Both appeal because they are tidy.
Yet the reason the debate over the proper
allocation of authority remains alive is because the true division
is not so neat. The cost of giving broad power to Congress is
fecklessness; the cost of giving it to the president is
recklessness. Giving both branches a say in whether to commence
hostilities and how to prosecute them may be the best way to hedge
both risks. But such a model does not admit of precise
formulations.
One can begin by noting that the Constitution
makes the president commander in chief in peacetime as well as
wartime. This, along with the Framers’ emphasis on the need
for speed, decisiveness, and secrecy in war, suggests the president
may unilaterally exercise force in interstitial situations —
preemptive strikes, punitive raids, pinpoint surprise attacks, or
to defend against imminent threats short of invasion. To put it
differently, even if the president is primarily responsible for
prosecuting rather than initiating wars, he must be understood to
have the power to fight them successfully. That may require commencing hostilities suddenly
without telegraphing the military’s intentions to the enemy
through congressional debates on c-span.
Such uses of force may in practice commit the
nation to wars not authorized in advance by Congress. Indeed, the
president need not initiate hostilities to exercise de facto
war-starting power. Simply deploying a large troop presence in an
area of potential conflict, as President Bush did in the buildup to
the Gulf War, may force Congress’s hand.
The power to provide for the armed forces is
also shared between the branches — and here Yoo errs in the
other direction, understating the authority of the president by
making so much of Congress’s spending power. While only
Congress can appropriate taxpayer money for military purposes, the
president can surely provide for his forces from smaller pools of
resources. He could, for example, authorize troops to forage for
food, or to use captured weaponry. This may not get one far in an
era of mechanized warfare, but it underscores the problems with
treating, as Yoo does, certain functions as inherently executive or
legislative.
On the other hand, notwithstanding the
president’s role as commander in chief, he does not have
plenary authority over the direction of military campaigns.
Congress is expressly given the power to make rules for the
regulation and discipline of the armed forces. Such rules could
limit the president’s authority by, for example, prescribing
the modes of interrogation that could be used on captured enemies.
The limits on Congress’s power in this regard are not clear
— surely Congress should not micromanage warfighting. Nor are
the limits on the executive’s power to precipitate war clear
— surely the president should not swallow up Congress’s
primary role in picking conflicts.
As Justice Jackson wrote in the Steel Seizure Cases, the
seminal modern decision on these issues (and one unduly neglected
by Yoo), one
may be surprised at the poverty of really
useful and unambiguous authority applicable to concrete problems of
executive power as they actually present themselves. . . . A century and a
half of partisan debate and scholarly speculation yields no net
result but only supplies more or less apt quotations from respected
sources on each side of any question. They largely cancel each
other.2
In the fifty years since Youngstown, the academic checks
and balances have broken down. “Scholarly speculation”
resolved itself in favor of a crabbed construction of the
executive’s war powers. In other areas of constitutional law,
it is a cliché that the Constitution did not enact any
particular economic theory — whether the nation pursues
capitalism or socialism is not determined by the Founders and
cannot be decided by the courts. But the dominant vision of war
powers embraces a very particular view of America’s role in
the world: one under which the U.S. cannot easily project force
abroad, superintend a variety of interests across the globe, or
respond effectively to the manifold contingencies presenting
themselves to a global superpower. If the Constitution does not
enact capitalism, it certainly does not enact other fashionable
creeds, like isolationism, multilateralism, pacifism, or
“soft power.”
Though Yoo’s book goes too far in its
conception of executive power, it does serve as a useful retort to
the overly narrow conception that has dominated the field for a
generation. On this level, the book not only advances, but also
embodies, “checks and balances.”
1 Congress did close out the Vietnam War by cutting off all funding for combat operations in Indo-China after Aug. 15, 1973. But the war was effectively over by then. Congress had tried to stop the bombing of Cambodia six weeks earlier with a spending bill, but President Nixon had vetoed it. The August deadline was a compromise between Congress and the commander in chief. Yoo does not discuss this episode, which underscores the weakness of the spending power in this context.
2 Youngstown
Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S. 579, 592 (1952) (concurring opinion).
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