US
Action in Mali is Another Undeclared War
By Ron Paul
The Daily Bell
January 29, 2013
President Obama last
week began his second term by promising that “a decade of war is now ending.”
As he spoke, the US military was rapidly working its way into another war, this
time in the impoverished African country of Mali. As far as we know, the US is
only providing transport and intelligence assistance to France, which initiated
the intervention then immediately called Washington for back-up and funding.The Daily Bell
January 29, 2013
However, even if US involvement is limited and, as Defense
Secretary Leon
Panetta said, US boots on the ground are not being considered “at this
time,” this clearly is developing into another war. As usual, the mission is
creeping.
Within the first week of
French military action in Mali, the promise that it would be a quick operation
to put down an Islamic rebel advance toward the capitol was broken. France
announced that it would be forced to send in thousands of troops and would need
to remain far longer than the few weeks it initially claimed would be
necessary.
Media questions as to whether the US has Special
Operations forces, drones, or CIA paramilitary
units active in Mali are unanswered by the administration. Congress has asked
few questions and demanded few answers from the president. As usual, it was not
even consulted. But where does the president get the authority to become a
co-combatant in French operations in Mali, even if US troops are not yet overtly
involved in the attack?
How did we get to Mali? Blowback and unintended
consequences played key roles. When the president decided to use the US
military to attack Libya in 2011, Congress was not consulted. The president
claimed that UN
and NATO
authority for the use of US military force were sufficient and even superior to
any kind of congressional declaration. Congress once again relinquished its
authority, but also its oversight power, by remaining silent. That meant the
difficult questions such as why the action is necessary, what it would entail
and what kind of unintended consequences we might see if the operation does not
go exactly as planned were neither asked nor answered.
When Gaddafi
was overthrown in Libya, many fighters from Mali who had lived in Libya and
been trained by Gaddafi’s military returned to their home country with
sophisticated weapons and a new determination to continue their fight for
independence for northern Mali. Thus, the France-initiated action against Libya
in 2011 led to new violence and instability in Mali that France decided it must
also address. Shortly after the French attack on Mali, rebels in Algeria
attacked a BP gas facility in retaliation for their government’s decision to
allow foreign military to fly over Algerian territory en route to Mali. Thus,
the action in Mali to solve the crisis created by the prior action in Libya is
turning into a new crisis in Algeria. This is the danger of interventionism
and, as we saw in Vietnam more than four decades ago, it threatens to drag the
US further into the conflict. And Congress is AWOL.
There is a reason why the
framers of our Constitution placed the authority to declare war strictly with
the legislative branch of government. They knew well that kings were all too
willing to go to war without the consent of those who would do the killing and
dying − and funding. By placing that authority in Congress, the people’s branch
of government, they intended to blunt the executive branch’s enthusiasm toward
overseas adventurism. The consequences of this steady erosion of our system
toward the unitary executive are dire.http://theintelhub.com/2013/01/29/us-action-in-mali-is-another-undeclared-war/
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