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Dear All, I sent a note to LIAPA to add PCLI and to Liz's question about posting the press release on the website, I think
that's a great idea. Sheila
On Mon, Mar 5, 2012 at 11:21 AM, Emb158 <emb158@aol.com> wrote: Can we get an endorsement by pcli
council by e-mail and then ask stephanie to post on website?
Liz
-----Original Message----- From: LI Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives < longislandpeace@gmail.com> To: undisclosed-recipients:; Sent: Mon, Mar 5, 2012 10:20 am Subject: NO WAR ON IRAN PRESS RELEASE Please ask your peace organization to endorse
this statement on NO WAR ON IRAN for PRESS RELEASE TO BE SENT OUT BY NEXT WEEK
Press Release: LI
Alliance and LI Groups STATEMENT ON NO WAR ON IRAN Revised
March 2, 2012
James Clapper, the
Director of National Intelligence: “We don’t believe [Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamanei]‘s made that decision
[to develop a nuclear weapon] yet.” (1/31/2012)
U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta: Iran has made "no decision yet" on nuclear
weapons. (2/16/2012)
General
Martin Dempsey, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff: "I believe it is unclear" that Iran is choosing to make
a nuclear weapon right now. (2/19/2012)
As
we approach the 9th anniversary of the U.S.-led war on Iraq, we are once again seeing American politicians
and pundits claiming that an oil-rich nation in the Persian Gulf, Iran, might soon build nuclear weapons. As before, with
Afghanistan and Iraq, they are now calling for regime change in Iran, ignoring those two previous, disastrous, wasteful wars. The likelihood of a war against Iran breaking out, either by “accident” or by design,
is quickly accelerating. Such a war would be a catastrophe for the millions of Iranian people, for Israel,
and for millions more in the region, as well as an economic and military disaster for the United States.
The pretext for the escalating threat
of war against Iran is not that it possesses nuclear weapons, but that it might want to develop
them in the future. Iran does not have a nuclear bomb. Both the Israeli and U.S. intelligence
communities report this and both say that Iran has not made the decision to build a nuclear weapon as the three quotes above
show.
A war against Iran would be a moral
and strategic disaster and a crime. Just the threat of
war, let alone an actual war against Iran, is a violation of the U.S. Constitution (according to the Supremacy Clause), international
law, the UN Charter, and the Nuremburg Principles. Therefore, we call on President Obama and Congress to prevent another war
in the Middle East.
We Demand:
·
President Obama announce that the U.S. will not attack Iran or be drawn into war if Israel attacks
Iran.
·
The U.S. Government exercise its diplomatic and economic power as well as its international relationships
to restrain the state of Israel from attacking Iran.
· An immediate cessation of sanctions and threats of war against Iran, assassination of its citizens, and other “covert” acts
by the United States, Israel, and their allies that are instigating war.
· A Regional Accord establishing
a Weapons of Mass Destruction Free Zone in the Middle East in order to end this cycle of coercion, fear and war.
-- Andrea Libresco Greg Maney Margaret Melkonian Kayla Rivara, Program Assistant L.I. Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives P.O. Box 301, Garden City NY 11530
We are grateful for all of you, for our peace community and for your work.
Below a reminder about some work for after Thanksgiving. Peace, Margaret Margaret Melkonian LI Alliance for
Peaceful Alternatives
Subject: [Ufpj-leg-action] Not Thankful for
2012 Defense Budget! Call NOW!
Not Thankful for 2012 Defense Budget! Call NOW!
While the “Super”
Committee works on the federal budget for FY 2013 and beyond, under the radar, the Congress is moving forward with another
huge Defense budget for FY 2012. When it returns from Thanksgiving break, the Senate will be voting on a $682.5 billion
Defense Authorization bill. This continues the war in Afghanistan and wastes unconscionable amounts of money at a
time when there are massive cutbacks in domestic programs at the federal, state and local levels. Senator Jeff Merkley (OR) has just introduced Amendment
No. 1174, requiring the President to present a plan “for an expedited withdrawal from Afghanistan prior to 2014.”
Co-sponsors are Senators Brown, Durbin, Gillibrand, Harkin, Lee, and Udall. For complete text
If your Senators
are not on this list, please call them now and ask them to co-sponsor Amendment No. 1174 to the 2012 Defense Authorization
bill. Use Friends Committee on National Legislation (FCNL) toll free number 1-877-429-0678 to call the congressional switchboard and ask for your senator by name.
While on the phone, it would be great
if you could also urge your member of Congress to co-sponsor Rep. Barbara Lee’s excellent bill: HR 780
Responsible End to the War in Afghanistan Act, which specifies that funding for US armed forces
in Afghanistan shall be limited to the “safe and orderly withdrawal” of all US troops and Defense Department contractors. List of co-sponsors (65):
Best wishes for a good
holiday to everyone. Rusti and Gael Co-conveners, UFPJ Legislative Working Group
_______________________________________________
--
OCTOBER
7TH IS THE 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE AFGHAN WAR
10 YEARS OF WAR IN AFGHANISTAN (2001-2011)
1,777 US SOLDIERS KILLED – 13,700 WOUNDED
Tens of Thousands of Afghans KILLED AND WOUNDED
COST TO US: $460 BILLION and counting – COST TO LI: $25 BILLION WAR IS OVER WHEN TAXPAYERS STOP PAYING FOR IT AND
WHEN CONGRESS VOTES TO STOP FUNDING IT. On October 7th, 1. MAKE A
PEACE CALL TO YOUR REPRESENTATIVES. TELL THEM: END THE WAR IN AFGHANISTAN.
BRING ALL OUR SOLDIERSHOME.
FUND WITHDRAWAL AND VETERANS’ HEALTHCARE.
USE WAR DOLLARS TO CREATE JOBS, PUT AMERICA BACK TO WORK, AND REBUILD OUR LI COMMUNITIES.
2. WANT TO DO MORE? Join us at Silence
the Drums of War Vigils at LI congressional offices on October 7. Distribute Fliers at LIRR stations (7-8 am)
on October 7. For info, call 516-741-4360. 3. HOFSTRA
TALKS at Lecture Hall, Axinn Library:
Monday October 3, 2011, 6:00-7:30pm -Chris Hedges, Nonviolent Citizen Resistance
to War and Global Climate Change
Thursday October 6, 2011, 11:10 am-12:30 Anand
Gopal, Afghanistan – America’s Longest War LONG ISLAND ALLIANCE FOR PEACEFUL
ALTERNATIVES LI Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives
--
Pax Christi USA remains committed to ending
the war in Afghanistan and bringing home all our troops. Let the passing of bin Laden usher in a new moment of clarity and
wisdom that the events of the last decade have so obscured. Like nearly every other al-Qaeda leader captured or killed since
9/11, bin Laden was ultimately done in—not by the invasion and occupation of Iraq, and not the 100,000 U.S. troops
in Afghanistan—but by the painstaking and meticulous application of the tools of criminal investigation. As Pax Christi
stated ten years ago, the events of 9/11 were a crime against humanity—not an act of war. And so today we also mourn
the loss of opportunity that was squandered in the wake of 9/11 that could have pursued the 9/11 criminals without casting
the whole world into tumult and war, without unleashing the racism and xenophobia that continue to tear apart communities
across the U.S. today
Amend the war powers act Center
for Constitutional Rights The Center for Constitutional
Rights is dedicated to advancing and protecting the rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. Founded in 1966 by attorneys who represented civil rights movements in the South, CCR is a non-profit legal and educational organization committed to the creative use of law as a positive force for social change. CCR uses litigation proactively to empower poor communities
and communities of color; to guarantee the rights of those with the fewest protections and least access to legal resources;
and to train the next generation of civil and human rights attorneys. Formed in order to work hand
in hand with people’s movements, CCR has lent its expertise and support to a wide range of movements for social justice.
We strive to complete the unfinished civil rights movement through targeting
racial profiling and other modern-day manifestations of racial and economic oppression and through combating discrimination that is based on gender or sexuality and struggling against government
abuse of power. For decades, CCR
has pushed U.S. courts to recognize international human rights and humanitarian
protections – and we have had groundbreaking victories that established the principle of universal jurisdiction in this
country and extended human rights standards to abuses committed by corporations and other non-government groups. The Center for Constitutional Rights was the first organization
to fight for the rights of the men held at Guantánamo Bay and
has been at the forefront of the battles to end the use of offshore prisons; to end the practice of "extraordinary rendition"
and torture; and to restore the fundamental right of habeas corpus and due process under the law. 1 Restore. Protect. Expand The Constitution: Amend the
War Powers Resolution Executive Summary At the heart of American constitutional democracy is the concept of checks and balances:
limits on the reach of each branch of government so that none can act unilaterally or exercise power without accountability.
The power to initiate warfare, because of its grave and potentially long-term consequences for the entire republic, is rightly
assigned to the entire Congress under the American system, rather than to the President, a single individual. Wisely, the
Constitution provides that the decision to go to war should be debated thoroughly and openly in Congress, rather than carried
out by a secretive order, on the judgment of one person. The 1973 War Powers Resolution, which sought to reassert Congressional
control over executive war-making, has failed since its inception
to rein in the executive. The legislation was seriously flawed at the time, and has proved inadequate to deal with contemporary
issues of conflict and the division of powers. Every President
since 1973 has asserted that it is unconstitutional; Congress has been loath to challenge non-compliance. Despite numerous
challenges to Presidential war making, many by the Center for Constitutional Rights, the courts have refused to adjudicate
claims of violations. In this context, the
Bush administration has been able to greatly extend the practical usurpation of war powers by the executive, as part of an
unprecedented expansion of executive power overall. Not only did the Bush administration overreach its authority by wresting
control of war-making from Congress, but it did so on the basis of false
information and, in some cases, authorizations from Congress for the limited use of military force were used as blanket authorizations
for of all kinds of ongoing policies, programs and hostilities.
In other cases, the executive acted secretly and unconstitutionally to carry out "military actions" of various magnitudes
without accountability.President Obama must pledge to help restore the balance of power and work with Congress
to support a reform and revision of the War Powers Resolution. As a matter of constitutional integrity, all executive acts of war must be prohibited without Congressional authorization, and must
comply with international law. President Obama must also end
the wars launched, illegally, by the Bush administration. 2 Background The United States Constitution assigns to Congress the power to declare war, as well as the power to issue
letters of marque and reprisal referring to hostilities short of full-scale war, and to control funding for the armed forces.
The President, as commander in chief, is given the power to lead the armed forces. Since World War II the United States has not formally declared war; contemporary conflicts – including
the wars in Korea and in Vietnam, and military actions against
non-state forces – have not been declared wars. It is in this context that Congress and the President have battled over
the question of authority for taking the country to war. In
1973, after years of undeclared war in Vietnam, Congress passed the War Powers Resolution with the intention of restoring
Congressional authority to decide when the United States should go to war or engage in military action that might lead to
war. The resolution declares that "[T]he President, in every possible instance, shall consult with Congress" before
introducing US Armed Forces into hostilities or imminent hostilities, and that the President must report within 48 hours any
such introduction of forces. Once such a report is submitted, Congress
has 60 days to authorize such use of United States forces or extend the time period, and if it does not do so, the President’s power to use those troops automatically terminates
and they must be withdrawn. Although President Nixon vetoed the resolution, it was overridden by a two-thirds vote in both
houses of Congress and became law.Since 1973, however, US presidents have generally ignored the War Powers Resolution, and
have argued that it is unconstitutional. Though presidents
have submitted reports and requests for authorization of military
force to Congress more than 100 times since then, covering everything from embassy evacuations to the Kosovo intervention,
the executive branch has continued to insist that the authority of the commander in chief means that presidents are not bound
by the War Powers Resolution. In fact, in only one case, (the 1975 Mayaguez seizure) did the executive acknowledge
that it was acting pursuant to the War Powers Resolution, thus
triggering the time limit, and in that case after the action was over and US forces withdrawn. On only one occasion has Congress
exercised its authority to determine that the time requirements of the act would become operative and extended the time period
through passage of the 1983 Multinational Force in Lebanon Resolution. Both Democratic and Republican presidents have claimed the right to engage in wars without Congressional
authorization. For example, in 1990, George H. W. Bush claimed that
he could go to war in Iraq, and in 1999 Bill Clinton used force against Yugoslavia after the House had refused to specifically
authorize hostilities. The 1999 war against Yugoslavia clearly
violated the War Powers Resolution in that it lasted more than
60 days without Congressional authorization. Both
Bush administrations claimed, in 1991 and 2002 respectively, that even though Congress enacted 3
resolutions authorizing force, they still exercise
independent executive authority to continue and expand wars and
are not bound by the actions of Congress. They articulated broad theories of presidential power, under which the President
alone can use force in a broad array of circumstances. As President George H. W. Bush put it, "I didn’t have to
get permission from some old goat in the United States Congress to kick Saddam Hussein out of Kuwait." In a great many instances, neither the President nor Congress, nor
even the courts have been willing to trigger the War Powers Resolution mechanism. This is in part because the courts will
not enforce the Resolution where Congress is either silent or acts ambiguously, even though the law clearly requires the troops
to be withdrawn in such circumstances. In 1999, in the case of Yugoslavia,
Congress voted not to authorize war, yet failed to pass legislation
ordering the troops home and in fact funded the military action. Clearly, without reform of the legislation to address its
weaknesses and without a concerted effort by a new executive in concert
with Congress, the debate over war powers and responsibilities will remain paralyzed. War
Powers in the George W. Bush Years In
instances where Congress is too opposed, divided, conflicted or unsure to affirmatively authorize warfare, both the Constitution and the War Powers Resolution require that the United States not
go to war. And yet, the Bush administration repeatedly forged
ahead in defiance of the law, relying on an unconstitutional claim of
executive power and the cynical political expectation that Congress would not want to be responsible for withholding support
from American troops or ending a war once it was launched. Post
9/11 Authorization for the Use of Military Force In the immediate
aftermath of September 11, 2001, President Bush and Congressional leaders negotiated legislation authorizing the President to take military steps to deal with the parties responsible for
the attacks on the United States. The Authorization to Use Military Force (AUMF) was passed on September 14, 2001, giving the President powers to "use all necessary and appropriate force
against those nations, organizations or persons he determines
planned, authorized, committed or aided the terrorist attacks…or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to
prevent any future acts of international terrorism…." The resolution stated that it was intended to "constitute specific statutory authorization within the
meaning of section 5(b) of the War Powers Resolution," and that "[n]othing in this resolution supersedes any requirement of the War Powers Resolution." President Bush, for his part, asserted that the AUMF "recognized
the authority of the President under the Constitution to take action
to deter and prevent acts of terrorism against the United States." He said, 4
"In signing this resolution,
I maintain the longstanding position of the executive branch regarding the President’s constitutional authority to use
force, including the Armed Forces of the United States, and regarding the constitutionality of the War Powers Resolution."
In this way, both the President and Congress maintained their positions on the constitutionality of the War Powers Resolution
and the responsibilities of the President under it, even as Congress found a way to support the President’s immediate
response to the attacks. The Bush administration,
however, subsequently cited the 2001 AUMF as justification for virtually every "anti-terrorist" program it would carry out over the next 7 years thereby conjuring vast presidential war
powers that Congress clearly never intended to grant. The president insisted that the AUMF not only authorized the invasion of Afghanistan, but also: the substitution of military commissions
for courts to try prisoners in Guantánamo; the detention
without any hearing of prisoners captured anywhere in the world and deemed enemy combatants; the warrantless wiretapping in
the United States by the NSA; the preventive detention of US
citizens and resident aliens captured not on any battlefield abroad but within the United States; and the rendition and torture of alleged suspected terrorists. The president also claimed
that he had independent war powers that could not be curtailed by Congress and would allow him to, for example, torture prisoners
even where Congress enacts legislation prohibiting such treatment. Iraq War In the summer of 2002,
the Bush administration began publicly denouncing Iraq for its supposed possession of weapons of mass destruction, and suggesting
that Iraq was allied with Al Qaeda’s terrorist network. The campaign was unmatched in recent history for its cynicism:
in the absence of Central Intelligence Agency and Defense Intelligence Agency intelligence supporting such allegations, the
White House manufactured its own evidence, as was later revealed by both news media and Defense Department reports. The
Bush administration also clearly ignored the United Nations Charter prohibiting wars that are not sanctioned by the UN Security
Council or carried out in self-defense. And, when justifying the war, then Secretary of State Colin Powell made a patently
false presentation to the Security Council about Saddam Hussein’s
possession of weapons of mass destruction. Other administration officials presented a similarly false picture; for example, as the invasion began, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld claimed that US officials not only knew that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction,
but also that "[w]e know where they are." The administration also lied to Congress. In October 2002,
a few days before the Senate was to vote on the Joint Resolution
to Authorize the Use of Armed Forces Against Iraq, about
75 Senators were told in closed session that Saddam Hussein had
definitive means to attack the eastern seaboard of the US with biological 5 or chemical weapons. Based on such misrepresentations,
Congress voted to approve the initiation of war with Iraq. The Constitution’s requirement that only Congress has
the power to initiate war is designed to ensure an open, honest and public debate about whether to go to war. While Bush went
to Congress to get authorization, the spirit of the Constitution
was not complied with, because the executive did not inform Congress
of the true facts, and Congress abdicated its responsibility to seriously attempt to determine what those true facts were. Moreover, Bush again refused to concede any war power
to Congress. While President Bush noted he had sought a "resolution of support" from Congress to use force against
Iraq, and that he appreciated receiving that support, he also stated that: "my request for it did not, and my signing
this resolution does not, constitute any change in the long-standing positions of the executive branch on either the president’s
constitutional authority to use force to deter, prevent, or respond to aggression or other threats to US interests or on the
constitutionality of the War Powers Resolution." The long and tragic history that followed leaves
little room for doubt that the nation would have been better served
by frank and open debate before the resolution authorizing the illegal attack on Iraq in violation of the UN Charter was approved by Congress. The war and occupation have cost not only billions
of dollars, but cost hundreds of thousands of Iraqi, American, and allied lives, created violence in the region and spurred internal conflict in Iraq. The responsibility of the Bush administration for this devastating military
adventure is clear. Congress too bears responsibility for its own failures over the years, from the continuance of funding
for the Iraq war in the face of military failure, gross human rights abuses and spiraling costs. But, the structural inadequacy
of the existing War Powers Resolution as a brake on dangerous executive war-making is more evident than ever. In the Obama
Administration, this must be corrected to protect America – and the world – against similar future disasters.
Summary and Policy Proposals Congressional power to declare war has been usurped by the executive’s
assertion of its exclusive decision-making power to engage in unchecked "military actions" of various magnitudes.
The constitutional vision of the commander in chief – someone responsible for taking short, quick, defensive actions
in emergency situations – has been superseded by the vision of presidents, most recently or egregiously George W. Bush,
who claim sole authority to conduct protracted, offensive wars and large-scale military actions. Executive authority has been
so distorted that an unconstitutional vision of war power as presidential prerogative has 6
taken over. The wars launched illegally
by the Bush administration must be brought to a close. And, the constitutional
vision of Congress holding war powers must be realized though effective legislation, as an important democratic brake on executive adventurism. Reform the War Powers Resolution The War
Powers Resolution has failed. Every president since the enactment of the Act has considered it to be unconstitutional. Presidents have generally not filed a report that would start the
60-day clock running, despite repeated executive introduction
of armed forces into places like Indochina, Iran, Lebanon, Central America, Grenada, Libya, Bosnia, Haiti, Kosovo and Somalia,
among others. Congress has usually not challenged this non-compliance. And, the judiciary has persistently refused to adjudicate
claims challenging executive action as violating the War Powers Resolution, holding that members of Congress have no standing to seek relief, or that the claim presents non-justifiable political
questions. The War Powers Resolution, as written,
was flawed in several key respects. The first flaw was that the Resolution
imposed no operative, substantive limitations on the executive’s power to initiate warfare, but rather created a time
limit of 60 days on the president’s use of troops in hostile situations without explicit congressional authorization. This approach was a mistake, because as a practical matter it
recognized that the President could engage in unilateral war-making
for up to 60 days, or 90 days with an extension. But the Constitution
requires that Congress provide authorization prior to initiating non-defensive war, not within a period of months after warfare is initiated. As history has demonstrated time and again,
it is difficult to terminate warfare once hostilities have begun.
The key time for Congress to weigh in is before hostilities are
commenced, not 60 or 90 days afterward. Secondly, the
War Powers Resolution correctly recognized that even congressional silence, inaction or even implicit approval does not allow the president to engage in warfare – but it failed to provide
an adequate enforcement mechanism if the president did so. Under the resolution, wars launched by the executive were supposed to be automatically terminated after 60 or 90 days if not affirmatively
authorized by Congress – but this provision proved unenforceable.
Presidents simply ignored it, Congress had an insufficient interest
in enforcing it and the courts responded by effectually saying: if Congress did nothing, why should we? Reforming
the War Powers Resolution is a project that will require leadership from the President and the political will of Congress,
working together in the service and preservation of the Constitution. In light of the abuses that have taken place under the
Bush administration, it is the responsibility of a new administration to insist on transparency in the drafting of new legislation. There is a long history of attempts to revise the War Powers Resolution. As new legislation is drafted, 7 though,
it will be important to focus on the central constitutional issues. Much time has been spent in debating how to address contingencies.
It will be impossible to write into law any comprehensive formula for every conceivable situation, though; much more important
will be establishing the fundamental principles of reform: The War Powers Resolution should explicitly prohibit executive acts of war without previous Congressional
authorization. The only exception should be the executive’s power in an emergency to use short-term force to repel sudden
attacks on US territories, troops or citizens. It
is true that many potential conflict situations will be murky, complicated or divisive, and that quick congressional action may not always be forthcoming. Yet, history shows the folly of launching
wars that are not supported by the American people. The United States should not use military force until a substantial consensus
develops in Congress and the public that military force is necessary, appropriate and wise. Today, as in 1787, the reality is that the interests of the people of the United States
are best served if the Congress retains the power to declare war, and the President’s unilateral power to use American
forces in combat should be reserved to repelling attacks on American
troops or territories and evacuating citizens under actual attack.
Repelling does not equate retaliation for an attack on an American city that occurred in the past, be it several days, weeks
or months prior; it also does not mean launching a surprise invasion of
a nation that has not attacked us. Repelling similarly does not permit the inflation of supposed threats against US citizens
as justification to invade another country, as was the case in the Dominican Republic in 1965 and Grenada in 1983. The president can respond defensively to attacks that have been launched
or are in the process of being launched, but not to rumors, reports, intuitions, or warnings of attacks. Preventive war, disguised
as preemptive war, has no place in constitutional or international law.To ensure that this principle is
enforced, new legislation should prohibit the use of appropriated funds for
any executive use of force that is unauthorized under the statute. Furthermore, the reformed War Powers Resolution must allow
room for judicial oversight in the case of conflicts. A president who initiates hostilities in disregard of the statute would undoubtedly use appropriated funds to do so, forcing Congress
to make the difficult decision of whether to authorize funds
for troops engaged in combat. The statute should therefore state
that a presidential violation of the act would create an impasse with Congress, and that separation of powers principles require
the Court to decide the merits of any challenge brought against an alleged violation. And, a presidential violation of this
principle should be explicitly made an impeachable offense.8 End Abuses of Authorizations of Military Force The past 8 years saw a period of lawless executive action in the area
of war-making, marked by disregard for the Constitution, Congress, and the courts. The consequences for the democratic process
and American security have been grave. President Obama must make plain his intention to conduct national security policy in
full compliance with the law, and must demonstrate that America’s policies will not be carried out by deception. The post 9/11 Authorization for the Use of Military Force
was used by the Bush administration as justification for any and all acts the executive chose to engage in without the approval
of, or in many cases, the knowledge of, Congress. White House lawyers
claimed this AUMF allowed the President to engage in warrantless wiretapping, arbitrary detention, extraordinary rendition
and numerous other illegal acts. The noxious principle of the all powerful "unitary executive" has no place in the
Constitution. President Obama must
reject language in any Authorization of Military Force that gives over-broad powers to the executive, and must pro-actively inform Congress about the extent of any executive actions under an
AUMF. When a President
receives an authorization from Congress for the use of military force, it cannot be taken as a blanket authorization of unchecked
executive authority. The United Nations Charter begins with a commitment "to save future generations
from the scourge of war." This cannot be accomplished in violation of the fundamental principles of international law.
Hence, the amended War Powers Resolution must make strict compliance with international law an essential ingredient of US
policy. Conclusion The
last 8 years saw an expansion of executive power unprecedented in American history. The consequences for constitutional rights
and our system of government are grave. But in no area have the consequences been more devastating than in the area of war-making.
The cost in lives, human rights and long-term strategic interests is staggering. President Obama must not only work to heal
the damage wrought by the Bush administration, but restore the constitutional principles of separation of powers and ensure
that future conflicts will not be launched without checks and balances.
"Enough with the slaughters" in Iraq- "Enough with the slaughters. Enough with the violence. Enough with the hatred in Iraq!"
~Benedict XVI Palm Sunday ****************************************
“ …our Conference reiterates that terrorism cannot be fought
solely, or even principally with military methods .This ‘war on terrorism’ should be fought with the support of
the international community and primarily by non-military means, denying terrorists resources, recruits and opportunities
for their evil acts.”
~USCCB January 12 ,2006
There were not sufficient reasons to unleash a war against Iraq. To say nothing
of the fact that, given the new weapons that make possible destructions that go beyond the combatant groups, today we should
be asking ourselves if it is still licit to admit the very existence of a ‘just war’”
~Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, Pope Benedict XVI, May 2nd, 2003.
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