Forget Robert Mueller. Trump's Attacks On Syria Are a Reminder We're Already in a Constitutional Crisis
Congress has completely abdicated its constitutional responsibility to authorize war.
Congress has completely abdicated its constitutional responsibility to authorize war.
He should stop gutting America's refugee program.
The unauthorized attack on Syria shows Congress won't enforce limits on the president's military powers.
Basically, it's just like every other military engagement since 9/11.
President announces retaliation for gas attacks, joined by France and U.K.
The president just threatened a confrontation with a nuclear power. Via tweet.
How will Trump and new national security adviser John Bolton respond to a reported chemical attack in a war-ravaged country?
Many people fear that John Bolton and Donald Trump might start an unnecessary war. But such fears would be unnecessary if Congress were to reclaims it power to initiate war.
The new national security adviser embodies the reckless interventionism that Trump criticized during his campaign.
The way to achieve peace is not to prepare for war but to reject militarism and empire, and embrace nonintervention.
The "bloody nose" strategy favored by some in his administration is extraordinarily reckless.
A prominent constitutional law scholar highlights the perils of wars waged without congressional authorization - a practice engaged in by Obama and now perpetuated by Trump.
Daniel Ellsberg on nukes, leaks, and the lost documents he copied along with the Pentagon Papers
His policy decisions have so far belied his understanding of the public's foreign policy frustration.
*Not including the cost of ongoing conflicts in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Niger...or the $4.8 trillion debt already accumulated from the post-9/11 wars.
A preemptive ban risks being a tragic moral failure rather than an ethical triumph.
What does Trump have to do to get the failing Afghanistan war into the news cycle?
The Trump administration pushes back on the idea of a new AUMF; Congress should push harder.
Private contractors have actually fought for America since America began, but they're not a panacea.
The controversy over Trump's condolence call should be a debate about promiscuous military intervention.
Jihadists would be no threat to Americans who were left to mind their own business.
Corker is a longtime defender of American intervention and war in the Middle East, and now wants to supply billions in weapons to the Saudis and Ukraine.
How could we be repeating the mistakes of Vietnam already?
A Senate vote shows that even Trump critics are happy to let the president use the military as he pleases.
Now that it's in Trump's hands, even the illusion of responsibility is fading.
Reason editors talk single-payer health care, Rand Paul's push to deauthorize foreign wars, and Chelsea Manning vs. Harvard.
"The neoconservatives and the neoliberals believe the president has unlimited authority," senator complains during unsuccessful attempt to repeal the post-9/11 authorizations for the use of military force.
The great disrupter of the establishment turns out to be-surprise, surprise-a man of the establishment.
The Kentucky congressman tells John Stossel why we should withdraw immediately from this "graveyard of empires."
The president's proclamations about Afghanistan are not a plan; they're a letter to Santa Claus.
Imperialism is not the highest stage of capitalism, as Karl Marx claimed.
The Truman war council discussed using atomic bombs just two weeks after the Korean War started.
Despite evidence they may make things worse, airstrikes are mistakenly seen as a perfectly reasonable response.
Lessons about U.S. interventionism fast forgotten.
In general, the world is becoming a more peaceful place as the percentage of the total labor force represented by armed forces personnel declines.
Unlike his predecessor, Trump has not even done us the courtesy of coming up with a laughable excuse.
"Guided by the beauty of our weapons."
Congress may let the president do anything when it comes to war, but that doesn't make it constitutional.
Susan Rice, war-authorization, and confrontation with the Russkies all get a real-time workout
President Trump says attack was to protect 'vital national security interest' of U.S.
The Trump administration is slouching toward war with Syria, and Congress, as usual, is failing to assert its constitutional role.
Apparently most folks would be nicer to each other.