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IN THE NEWS - Rules on Making War
By Caty Weaver
Broadcast:
This is Steve Ember with the VOA Special English
program In The News.
American officials and the public are debating
if the United States should take military action against Iraq. Officials
say Iraqi President Saddam Hussein is expanding his biological and chemical
weapons program and seeking to build nuclear weapons. President Bush
says he must be removed from power.
There is support for action against Iraq among
most leaders of Mister Bush's Republican Party and many Democrats. Yet
some of them say the United States should not act alone. Leaders of
many countries have expressed concern about the possibility of an attack
by the United States.
The Bush administration claims it already has
Congressional permission to go into Iraq. It says a resolution passed
by Congress in nineteen-ninety-one approving the Persian Gulf War is
still in effect.
However, some political experts and members
of Congress say new congressional approval would be required for military
action against Iraq. On Thursday, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee, Patrick Leahy, called for Congress to debate and vote before
any possible military action. He said the United States Constitution
demands it and the American people expect it.
Article One of the Constitution gives the legislature
of the United States government the power and right to declare war.
Article Two makes the president the commander-in-chief of the armed
forces. So, Congress is responsible for declaring war and the president
is responsible for carrying it out.
In ninety-seventy-three, Congress passed a law
linked to those parts of the Constitution. It is called the War Powers
Act. It says the president must tell Congress when he deploys troops
into areas where hostile actions are probable. The same law orders the
president to withdraw troops within sixty days unless Congress declares
war, approves the military action, or extends the time limit.
In nineteen-seventy-five, Gerald Ford became
the first president to use the War Powers Act. He sent troops to re-capture
an American transport ship captured by the Khmer Rouge of Cambodia.
He took quick and limited military action against Cambodia and reported
to Congress about it as required.
Since then, other presidents have taken military
action without following the War Powers Act. For example, President
Reagan sent troops to assist Kuwaiti ships during the Iran-Iraq war
in nineteen-eighty-seven. He said that action did not require use of
the law.
On Thursday, Vice-President Dick Cheney said
that President Bush understands the importance of public and congressional
support for any military action. He said Mister Bush would seek some
kind of congressional approval for action in Iraq if he decides it is
necessary.
This VOA Special English program In The News
was written by Caty Weaver. This is Steve Ember.
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