YesI'mALiberal
Member
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2013
- Messages
- 325
I can't believe there are folks here that believe Paul's DOW proposal in Nov. 2014 should be trumpeted at this time. It's as if they wear blinders to the world outside of Pauldom. Advancing this as somehow a show of Paul's "aggressive stance" versus ISIL ignores the facts on the ground. Here's a little refresher.
First, the proposal in 2014 was purely for show - it was late in an election year, a new Congress with a new Senate majority was coming in, and there was zero chance it would be taken up. The actual debate was taken up in 2015, specifically February.
Second, the idea of declaring war was instantly jettisoned. You DO NOT declare war on a gang of bandits. To do so would instantly give them some legitimacy and a recognition of sovereign rights. Even Rand Paul recognized he was getting nowhere with this, and switched to the AUMF language.
So, let's go to the actual debate.
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?468893-Poll-Most-back-ground-troops-in-ISIS-fight
Contrast this to Paul's approach - one year time limit, restricted exclusively to the territory ISIL currently occupied in Iraq/Syria, and more restrictively defined use of ground troops. He also would have removed a bunch of existing authorities from prior AUMFs that are sacred to the GOP, and which they insist are all the authority the Pres. needs. Reality:
You guys think his proposal somehow makes him the hawk in the room? Good luck with that.
As Revere1776 put it: Look, I get what he's trying to do here but this seems really ill-conceived. On what planet is he supposed to win respect with this "Declaration of War" against an "organization," confining it to one year, and limiting the use of troops? Not to mention it has absolutely no provision as to what victory could conceivably look like. I know the point is to make Congress take responsibility for military action but I just don't see how this thing will win him any points really. I don't think most folks will take it the way he's hoping.
http://archive.dailypaul.com/329819
First, the proposal in 2014 was purely for show - it was late in an election year, a new Congress with a new Senate majority was coming in, and there was zero chance it would be taken up. The actual debate was taken up in 2015, specifically February.
Second, the idea of declaring war was instantly jettisoned. You DO NOT declare war on a gang of bandits. To do so would instantly give them some legitimacy and a recognition of sovereign rights. Even Rand Paul recognized he was getting nowhere with this, and switched to the AUMF language.
So, let's go to the actual debate.
A majority of Americans polled, 54 percent, said their member of Congress should vote to authorize U.S. military action against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), while 32 percent are opposed to it.
Positions on ground troops break down to 40 percent who support a “limited number” of troops on the ground, mostly in line with the president’s authorization. Twenty-six percent want the military to deploy a “large number of U.S. ground forces.”
The authorization request, released Tuesday, allows the president to fight ISIS for three years without geographic limitation but prohibits “enduring offensive ground combat operations.” Congressional resistance to the plan continues to grow on both sides of the aisle and many lawmakers have said they are unsure it will pass as is.
There’s a stark partisan split over the ground troop debate. Thirty-eight percent of Republicans support deploying a “large amount” of boots on the ground, while just 16 percent of Democrats back that strategy. That largely mirrors the debate in Congress: Republicans have panned the strategy for being too restrictive, while Democrats are worried the vague language could give the president too much power.
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?468893-Poll-Most-back-ground-troops-in-ISIS-fight
Contrast this to Paul's approach - one year time limit, restricted exclusively to the territory ISIL currently occupied in Iraq/Syria, and more restrictively defined use of ground troops. He also would have removed a bunch of existing authorities from prior AUMFs that are sacred to the GOP, and which they insist are all the authority the Pres. needs. Reality:
More: http://www.bloomberg.com/politics/ar...ng-war-in-iraqRand Paul's Not-So-Secret Plan to End the War on Terror by Declaring War in Iraq
By David Weigel - Nov 24, 2014
Kentucky Senator Rand Paul swooped in. He gave an interview to New York Times reporter Jeremy Peters, which was splashed on the newspaper's website with the headline "Rand Paul Calls for a Formal Declaration of War Against ISIS." Instead of a sleepy issue that the administration could sit on for a while, Paul made a new AUMF a subject of debate—on libertarian terms.
...
Last year, Paul told me that most of the War on Terror's over-reaches came from "a very expansive understanding of the use of the Authorization of Force in 2001." He had been trying to get Congress to officially declare the Iraq war over, and finding very few takers. Same was true for repealing the 2001 AUMF. "I think it would have absolutely no chance of going anywhere if I were to introduce it right now," he said.
You guys think his proposal somehow makes him the hawk in the room? Good luck with that.
As Revere1776 put it: Look, I get what he's trying to do here but this seems really ill-conceived. On what planet is he supposed to win respect with this "Declaration of War" against an "organization," confining it to one year, and limiting the use of troops? Not to mention it has absolutely no provision as to what victory could conceivably look like. I know the point is to make Congress take responsibility for military action but I just don't see how this thing will win him any points really. I don't think most folks will take it the way he's hoping.
http://archive.dailypaul.com/329819
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