Trump's Mixed Messages on North Korea Show Importance of Congress' Role in War Making
Checks and balances are there for a reason.

The Trump Show's™ latest story line involves North Korea and the authoritarian country's recent missile tests. Just as he did during the campaign, Donald Trump is wont to take diametrically opposite positions on any issue with abandon. Now the world's his stage.
Last week, President Trump told Reuters he believed there was a chance of a "major, major conflict with North Korea." The comments came on the heels of Secretary of State Rex Tillerson opening the door to potential negotiations with the North Korean regime, as The New York Times noted.
"Viewed in the most charitable light, Mr. Trump was, in his own nondiplomatic way, building pressure to force the North to halt its nuclear and missile tests," The New York Times suggested, "the first step toward resuming the kind of negotiations that Secretary of State Rex W. Tillerson has begun to talk about."
Then Monday, Trump offered that he'd be "honored" to meet with North Korea's leader, Kim Jong Un, and was open to such a meeting "under the right circumstances." Trump's phrasing re-enforced the notion that Trump has a thing for authoritarian world leaders—such praise highlights his own authoritarian tendencies. But the U.S. has also long had a thing for authoritarian world leaders, and a deep history of supporting authoritarian regimes.
There is a case to be made for some strategic ambiguity—that a sort of wildcard foreign policy can create negotiating room and force reflection on long-held and long-uninterrogated assumptions about foreign policy. But Trump's statements don't appear to add up to anything strategic. It's a higher-energy, more frenetic version of the same kind of aimless, interventionist, and ultimately destructive and counterproductive, foreign policy pursued by Barack Obama.
For example, while President Trump floated the idea that the South Korean government would have to pay for the U.S. missile defense system the two countries agreed last year the U.S. would deploy in the region, his national security advisor, and the interim South Korean government (elections are next week), insisted that would not be the case. The system went live in South Korea this week.
The leading presidential candidate in South Korea, Moon Jae in, has said he would review the system's deployment. H.R. McMaster, Trump's national security advisor, says the Trump administration continues to insist American allies pay more for their defense. Trump's comments could make it more likely for Moon to keep his promise of review if elected.
In the first month of the Trump administration, Defense Secretary James Mattis went to Europe to tell its leaders that American taxpayers could no longer "carry a disproportionate share of the defense of western values," particularly on NATO, which Trump had long critiqued on the campaign trail European leaders more or less called Trump's bluff, and the president eventually decided NATO was "no longer obsolete." Such heel-turns turn Trump's pronouncement into little more than noise.
That noise is dangerous largely thanks to Congress. On Face the Nation Sunday, asked if another North Korean nuclear test would yield a military response, President Trump said he didn't know, highlighting the importance of Congress asserting its war-making powers.
After Obama committed the U.S. military to intervention in Libya, Congress voted against an authorization of the actions, but also rejected a bill by Rep. Tom Rooney (R-Fla.) which would have defunded the Libya effort. The legislative tool exists, but if there wasn't the political will to use it in a Republican-led Congress against an unconstitutional action by a Democratic president, it's unlikely to be used now.
The U.S.-backed intervention in Libya led to the overthrow of Col. Qaddafi less than a decade after he volunteered to surrender his alleged weapons of mass destruction (WMD) to avoid the fate of Iraq's Saddam Hussein. Hussein's insistence on WMDs became part of the case made by the Bush administration in the run up to the war on Iraq. It was the last time Congress explicitly authorized U.S. military action.
Congress' continued abdication of its constitutional role on war-making in favor of unilateral presidential action, particularly since the Iraq war, has invited the aimless interventions, as has Congress' concomitant support for sanctions, wanton military spending surrounding, and tough-talking postures against countries like North Korea.
In 2002, as George W. Bush and his administration faced what they said was a regime in Iraq bent on developing WMDs, the president went to Congress for an authorization for the use of military force (AUMF). The U.S. invaded Iraq six months after Congress passed the AUMF, after the Bush administration said it exhausted other means to compel Saddam Hussein to disarm. It wasn't until well after the invasion and subsequent occupation that the U.S. learned Hussein was bluffing. He did not expect the U.S. to invade despite Congress voting on just such an authorization.
The Iraq AUMF did not prevent a war, but it forced the Bush administration to articulate a case for war in Iraq, however wrong it was. In the absence of Congress, the president can do anything. Trump's first 100 days, which saw military strikes against the Syrian government and an escalation of interventions elsewhere, illustrate what that means. Congress' failures don't lead to positive foreign policy outcomes, even with presidents who have filters.
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Such heel-turns turn Trump's pronouncement into little more than noise.
Eventually people will get that. Or maybe not.
If you couldn't figure out by about 1985 that Trump is so full of shit he has to constantly open his mouth and spew off some excess lest his fat head explode, the campaign should have told you he thinks he's The Trumpinator, a WWE superstar whose over-the-top bombast makes Ric Flair look like a shrinking violet. He's a real estate salesman for God's sake - a goddamn timeshare real estate salesman to boot. Trump's main problem is he's a mamma's boy who believed his mother was telling the honest truth when she said he was the smartest, handsomest, bestest little boy in all the world who said the most darling things and nobody's ever told him his mother was just talking shit, too.
He's a real estate salesman for God's sake
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Of course its irrelevant when congress loves to make war too.
Who do you think pays for their hookers and boats?
I'm fine with Trumps comment towards N. Korea. He unlike all the others has actually given them options. This blanket idea of doing "X" and only "X" has not worked so far.
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Our "conflict" with North Korea is not a "war", but a "Police Action", and is ongoing since 1950.
Trump's actions and comments on North Korea are dangerous.
Kim Jung Un is not held in check by any powers in North Korea, he does not appear to be rationally connected to reality, and he appears willing to lead North Korea into national suicide, killing untold hundreds of thousands or millions of people in the process. He seems to think that will be glorious and that he will somehow survive.
Pressuring him or threatening him or trying to negotiate with him are all likely to fail. How do you deal with such a person who has so much power over the fate of so many people?
I hope North Koreans figure that out before disaster strikes.
Congress has no power to "make war". They can declare it but it takes the Commander-in-Chief to order in the military, which he can do, and has done, without Congress declaring anything, throughout our history.
Get over it!
Whether you like it/him or not, Trump has all the power any other president has had.
Congress may have the power to declare war but the Minority president has the power to provoke the rather unstable leader of North Korea into doing something that could force everyone's hand. Those in power in North Korea live a very good life at the expense of their people. They have a vested interest in seeing Mr Kim remain in power. With no one to gainsay him and facing increasingly bellicose threats from the US, no one can be sure what Kim Jung Un will do. He is as paranoid as his father with less seasoning. Daddy used his missiles to get aid and food from the West. Sonny boy appears to think that he can scare everyone into recognizing him as the leader of a major nuclear power. This sets the stage for a major collision and by the time Congress gets into the act we may be confronted with a fait accompli.
Congress may have the power to declare war but the Minority president has the power to provoke the rather unstable leader of North Korea into doing something that could force everyone's hand. Those in power in North Korea live a very good life at the expense of their people. They have a vested interest in seeing Mr Kim remain in power. With no one to gainsay him and facing increasingly bellicose threats from the US, no one can be sure what Kim Jung Un will do. He is as paranoid as his father with less seasoning. Daddy used his missiles to get aid and food from the West. Sonny boy appears to think that he can scare everyone into recognizing him as the leader of a major nuclear power. This sets the stage for a major collision and by the time Congress gets into the act we may be confronted with a fait accompli.
Congress may have the power to declare war but the Minority president has the power to provoke the rather unstable leader of North Korea into doing something that could force everyone's hand. Those in power in North Korea live a very good life at the expense of their people. They have a vested interest in seeing Mr Kim remain in power. With no one to gainsay him and facing increasingly bellicose threats from the US, no one can be sure what Kim Jung Un will do. He is as paranoid as his father with less seasoning. Daddy used his missiles to get aid and food from the West. Sonny boy appears to think that he can scare everyone into recognizing him as the leader of a major nuclear power. This sets the stage for a major collision and by the time Congress gets into the act we may be confronted with a fait accompli.
Congress may have the power to declare war but the Minority president has the power to provoke the rather unstable leader of North Korea into doing something that could force everyone's hand. Those in power in North Korea live a very good life at the expense of their people. They have a vested interest in seeing Mr Kim remain in power. With no one to gainsay him and facing increasingly bellicose threats from the US, no one can be sure what Kim Jung Un will do. He is as paranoid as his father with less seasoning. Daddy used his missiles to get aid and food from the West. Sonny boy appears to think that he can scare everyone into recognizing him as the leader of a major nuclear power. This sets the stage for a major collision and by the time Congress gets into the act we may be confronted with a fait accompli.
Congress may have the power to declare war but the Minority president has the power to provoke the rather unstable leader of North Korea into doing something that could force everyone's hand. Those in power in North Korea live a very good life at the expense of their people. They have a vested interest in seeing Mr Kim remain in power. With no one to gainsay him and facing increasingly bellicose threats from the US, no one can be sure what Kim Jung Un will do. He is as paranoid as his father with less seasoning. Daddy used his missiles to get aid and food from the West. Sonny boy appears to think that he can scare everyone into recognizing him as the leader of a major nuclear power. This sets the stage for a major collision and by the time Congress gets into the act we may be confronted with a fait accompli.
Congress may have the power to declare war but the Minority president has the power to provoke the rather unstable leader of North Korea into doing something that could force everyone's hand. Those in power in North Korea live a very good life at the expense of their people. They have a vested interest in seeing Mr Kim remain in power. With no one to gainsay him and facing increasingly bellicose threats from the US, no one can be sure what Kim Jung Un will do. He is as paranoid as his father with less seasoning. Daddy used his missiles to get aid and food from the West. Sonny boy appears to think that he can scare everyone into recognizing him as the leader of a major nuclear power. This sets the stage for a major collision and by the time Congress gets into the act we may be confronted with a fait accompli.
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Congress already did declare war on north Korea. There was no peace treaty that ended the war. The cease fire that was negotiated has been publicly repudiated by North Korea on multiple occasions.
So drink up; Trump can do as he pleases there.
One more thing to blame on the UN.
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