The NATO Treaty Does Not Supersede the Constitution
A group of senators is challenging the conventional interpretation of Article 5's an-attack-on-one-is-an-attack-on-all provision.

As the White House pushes for the admission of Ukraine into NATO, a group of senators is questioning a common interpretation of the security pact's founding treaty.
On June 22, Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.) and Reps. Chip Roy (R–Texas) and Warren Davidson (R–Ohio)* introduced legislation to clarify America's commitment in the case of an attack on a fellow NATO member, emphasizing that "if the President deems it necessary to engage United States forces in hostilities in order to restore or maintain the security of the North Atlantic area as stated in Article 5, such action does not supersede the constitutional requirement that Congress declare war or authorize the use of military force prior to the United States engaging in hostilities."
Paul explained the move in an article for Responsible Statecraft. "For decades, many legislators have incorrectly interpreted Article 5 as an obligation that unquestionably commits the United States to provide military support should a NATO ally be attacked," he wrote. "The Constitution grants to Congress the sole authority to determine where and when we send our sons and daughters to fight. We cannot delegate that responsibility to the president, the courts, an international body, or our allies."
Article 5 of the NATO treaty declares that "an armed attack against one or more of [the group's members] shall be considered an attack against them all." Officials have traditionally interpreted this as a requirement to intervene if any of NATO's 30 members are attacked. Thus, for example, an errant Russian missile landing in Poland could allow a U.S. president to unilaterally authorize military force against Russia.
But while Article 5 commits NATO allies to defend each other, it stops short of demanding military aid, stating that a responding party can take "such actions as it deems necessary, including the use of armed force."
According to Article 11 of the treaty, the agreement's provisions should be carried out through the "respective constitutional processes" of NATO countries. For the U.S., this means that any decision about military intervention requires congressional approval.
"There's no conflict between the treaty and the Constitution. If there were, of course, the Constitution would prevail," explains Michael J. Glennon, a professor of constitutional and international law at Tufts University. "This debate has made clear over the course of the 100 years since the Treaty of Versailles came before the Senate that the House of Representatives cannot constitutionally be cut out of the decision to go to war. That's the bottom line."
Despite this clear language, the prevailing view is that a military response is an "ironclad" aspect of the agreement. President Joe Biden has reinforced this idea by claiming, "An attack against one is an attack against all. It's a sacred oath. A sacred oath to defend every inch of NATO territory."
The supposed sanctity of the prevailing view has prompted accusations of weakness against those who question it. When Paul previously introduced this legislation in 2022 as an amendment to the resolution backing the ascension of Sweden and Finland to NATO, Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) declared it "wobbly on Article 5."
"I think that there's a real pervasive ignorance of foreign affairs among many members of the legislature. They have this magical sense of deterrence, that deterrence is cheap," says Justin Logan, director of defense and foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute. "The framers of the Washington Treaty didn't think that way. They thought that international politics was a really dangerous business."
Given the potential for a conflict with a nuclear-armed power, it is ever more important to ensure that military action is deliberative and in the country's interest.
*CORRECTION: This original version of this article mischaracterized Roy and Davidson's positions in Congress.
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Paul, Roy, and Davidson are right. It is Congress that declares war. IMHO, Congress needs to rein in the President drastically.
I am in general agreement, but one specific problem is what constitutes a declaration of war or a state of war.
Does Congress's agreeing financing for an action which in international law would be taken as a war action constitute an implicit declaration of war, - President: "give me $100bn so I can invade Mujikistan", Congress: "here's $120bn, knock yourself out, kiddo"; or does Congress have to say, "we hereby declare that we are now at war with Eastasia"?
Based on events of the last 70 years or so, the former appears to be the case. Representative Cathy McMorris Rogers stated this during a debate when a constituent questioned her.
I think it's cowardly. If they want war, they should be on record as voting to declare war.
So that they can vote for it before they vote against it?
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The Constitution gives Congress the sole authority to declare war, but it's silent on any specific wording that would be required. How can something like one of the AUMF's not be a declaration of war?
Paul, Roy, and Davidson are right.
Fucking GOP warhawks.
Yeah, Dems are the party of peace...or peas...or something.
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More like the globalist party who doesn’t care at all about (or should I say actually hates) the USA (defined by the US Constitution).
The reality is that Congress does not declare war anymore. No matter what Rand Paul thinks. Has nothing to do with NATO and everything to do with the UN Charter
Oh.
They don't do it anymore. Well I guess that's that then.
What we need is a discussion about letters of marque and reprisal.
What provision of the UN Charter precludes formal declarations of war (but allows the informal equivalent)? Is it true that no UN member has ever officially declared war on another?
Chapters V and VII which call the Security Council into action. Hague Convention also creates a 'law of war' and hard to avoid that when you have overtly declared war. There are examples of declared war since 1945 but the entity that declared war did so for the purpose of forcing the Security Council into action or trying to.
Good luck, but when Congress has already given the President so much free rein in military actions, clawing this one back is a lost cause.
Bingo!
Better late than never. Perhaps they are signaling no rubber stamps.
Perhaps, but until we have a thorough house cleaning in congress, it is only signalling. But, I'm glad they are doing it.
If Article 5 actually meant that NATO members were required to go to war against a country which carried out an attack on any member, then NATO would be required to be at war with the US following the Nordstream pipeline attack.
The US, Ukraine, or both, most likely.
When did Roy and Davidson become senators?
This is a predictable consequence of sending in the junior varsity.
As opposed to Sullum and ENB, right?
"introduced this legislation in 2022 as an amendment to the resolution backing the ascension of Sweden and Finland to NATO, Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah) declared it "wobbly on Article 5."
The last "good" Republican.
The time to have brought this up was when the Senate debated and approved the NATO Treaty. Now it's too late to do anything except sue and take it to the Supreme Court
Had they had the correct forethought back then, they would have had the House also ratify the treaty. Then it would qualify as Congress authorizing it.
The time to have brought up abortion was when the Bill of Rights was drafted and approved. Too late to do anything except take it to the Supreme Court.
It's NEVER too late to correct a mistake. As pointed out in the article, the NATO treaty does not contradict the Constitutional requirement for Congress to declare war. The NATO treaty does not require any member nation to respond militarily to an attack on another member nation. If Russia attacks Poland, for example, Congress would still have to declare war before the President could respond militarily. The bill they introduced would clarify this, probably in the form of a resolution. The better response would be to repeal the War Powers Act and replace it with a less unconstitutionally broad and vague Emergency Response authorization - no more than two weeks and only to defend the United States against a military attack.
As pointed out in the article, the NATO treaty does not contradict the Constitutional requirement for Congress to declare war. The NATO treaty does not require any member nation to respond militarily to an attack on another member nation. If Russia attacks Poland, for example, Congress would still have to declare war before the President could respond militarily.
I don't see how its possible to interpret it otherwise. Even if Russia were to attack us directly Congress would still have to authorize a military response.
The problem with this is it's a lie or an easy evasion of the Constitution. NATO has no forces separate from the member States so while the US may not go to war, NATO doing so would necessitate US forces outside the US declaring war.
In the sense that US military forces are stationed in Europe, it's possible that a Russian attack (for example) would strike against "the United States" and, of course, our troops would defend themselves. NATO also cannot "go to war" - it's an organization that coordinates military planning. If Russia attacks one or more member nations of NATO we would be pledged to help defend them under the treaty but it would not be an automatic declaration of war without Congress authorizing it.
Historically, plenty of "attacks" did not lead to War.
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"a real pervasive ignorance of foreign affairs among many members of the legislature" ... and the Constitution ... and logic ... and science ... and fact ... and history ... and law!
Having said that, however, we probably want the President to automatically defend the United States against a military attack as an emergency without waiting for Congress to take Constitutional action. The War Powers Act is way too broad and vague to be Constitutional if the Supreme Court had been doing its job. A simple law passed by Congress that says that the President can take emergency military action in the event of a military attack on the United States for no more than two weeks without a declaration of war by Congress would be sufficient and not at all vague or broad.
Even two weeks is generous, in our modern age of travel and communication, Congress shouldn't have a problem assembling a quorum for an emergency session to pass legislation within 24 hours of an attack.
Is having a law explicitly saying this really necessary? Surely the Founders must have considered the possibility of needing to respond to an attack before Congress could be assembled. But I guess having a law clarifying the extent of the authority needed for that wouldn't hurt, since its extent isn't clear from the Constitution itself.
Apparently it IS necessary. Read the actual text of the War Powers Act and tell me that it does not violate the Constitution. Then look at how even that unconstitutionally broad and vague cession of power to the Executive Branch has been abused by Presidents over the years since and tell me we don't need a law!
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The obvious point is that even a direct attack against the US does not *obligate* us to go to war against the offending nation.
“The Constitution grants to Congress the sole authority to determine where and when we send our sons and daughters to fight. We cannot delegate that responsibility to the president, the courts, an international body, or our allies.”
Ron Paul is absolutely correct here. But it doesnt matter. They will do whatever they want. See Viet Nam and the 58000 dead boys who were enslaved and sent there to die for a reminder.
The time to do this would've been when NATO was founded. The better thing to do now would be to make any addition to NATO require a 2/3rds vote in the Senate.
In 1949 NATO reflected American foreign policy, but increasingly it now drives it.
Good observation.
LOL More MAGAs falling for Russian sympathizers in Congress and media to try and justify Russia murdering a country. Pathetic.
Fuck off, retard.
LOL, Ukrainian Nazis invading the Reason discussion thread. Pathetic.
Can you help me to understand your post? How is pointing out the constitutional requirement to declare war justifying the Russian invasion?
Congress DID act when the Senate ratified the treaty.
But that, like Nixon selling us to the Soviets with the ABM treaty, was an act of treason. ABM surrenderism directly contradicts the Second Amendment.
The issue I think is - is a treaty more binding on the US than legislation.
Not all treaties are honored.
Not all wars are declared.
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The Constitution is clear. No treaties override the Bill of Rights even if NRA lawyers want to believe otherwise. Coolidge made this explicit to American reporters. The Second Amendment defeated Hitler and Hirohito, and if Ukraine had such an Amendment there would be no Russian attack to repel or enforce reprisals against. (https://bit.ly/3Tm8cu6)
The Second Amendment defeated Hitler and Hirohito,
I don't recall a Second Amendment in the Soviet Constitution or the 1905 Annalen der Physik
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The US Constitution is the SUPREME law of the USA.
Ignorance of ^^^ THAT ^^^ makes the USA non-existent.
If NATO is the supreme law; then the USA is NATO not the USA.
Though nowhere does the Constitution restrict the "supreme law of the land" to itself.
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