The House voted Thursday to limit President Donald Trump's
ability to unilaterally order military operations against Iran without further
authorization from Congress and said the U.S. must cease military action within
30 days. The resolution stipulated the Constitutional limits that curtail the
president's ability to deploy U.S. military forces abroad. It does not,
however, deal with paramilitary forces—like those of the Central Intelligence
Agency. In the wake of the killing of Iranian Quds Force commander Maj. Gen.
Qassem Soleimani last week, it's a crucial question: What is the president
allowed to do—and who does he have to tell?
When news broke about the drone strike against Soleimani,
lawmakers like New York Senator Chuck Schumer and Virginia Senator Mark Warner
complained about not being notified, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi
criticized the president for not coming to Congress beforehand (and pushed the
House to vote on the War Powers resolution this week), and there was general
confusion over whether the strike had illegally usurped Congress's power to
declare war.
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The primary mechanism granting authority to carry out
operations by the U.S. military in Iraq is the Authorization for Use of
Military Force (AUMF) which grants the president the power "to take action
to deter and prevent acts of international terrorism against the United
States." Passed in response to the September 11 attacks, the original AUMF
was tied to the Taliban and al Qaeda and associated forces; it did not
authorize a broad and unlimited "war on terror." In 2002 an
additional AUMF was passed authorizing the president "to defend the
national security of the United States against the continuing threat posed by
Iraq." This AUMF was the basis for operations against ISIS in Syria and in
Iraq. The president is required to notify Congress of the deployment within 48
hours. And as always, Congress holds the power of the purse.
But the U.S. military is not alone in its ability to carry
out strikes of the kind that killed Soleimani. The CIA is also capable of
complex armed and lethal force operations, and in fact has a presence in the
region and flies the same type of drone used in the strike. While the military
and CIA share similar capabilities, the approval process involved differs
significantly. A CIA operation is in the sole purview of the president and
requires only that the commander in chief submit a presidential finding within
48 hours of ordering an operation.
Let's take a hypothetical. What if the MQ-9 Reaper drone
that carried out the Soleimani strike was not a military drone but part of the
CIA? The operation would not be covered by the AUMF, says national security
expert Brad Moss, but governed by Executive Order 12333 and the National
Security Act. Authority to direct the CIA to carry out operations comes under
Title 50 and is granted by approving "covert action." The National
Security Act defines covert action as "an activity or activities of the
United States Government to influence political, economic, or military
conditions abroad, where it is intended that the role of the United States
Government will not be apparent or acknowledged publicly."
EO 12333 comes with its own protocols. First, it is the
responsibility of the National Security Council (NSC) to "consider and
submit to the president a policy recommendation, including all dissents, on
each
proposed covert action," as well as review the action once it has been launched. While the NSC prepares policy and reviews action, it is the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) who advises the president with respect to all ongoing and proposed covert action programs.
Finally, the congressional reporting duty lies with the CIA
Director and heads of any other agencies involved in a covert action, to inform
congressional intelligence committees. There is no congressional approval
required for covert action but the president must report the presidential
finding to the Gang of Eight—the majority and minority leaders of each chamber
as well as the chairperson and ranking minority members of the Intelligence
Committees.
Can covert action be used for targeted assassinations?
Presidents Gerald Ford in 1976, Jimmy Carter in 1978 and Ronald Reagan in 1981
signed Executive Orders banning such strikes. But in reality, the CIA has used
drones to kill enemy combatants on the battlefield, including Americans like
Anwar al-Awlaki, assassinated in Yemen on the order of President Barack Obama.
Previous presidents' executive orders are still in place, Moss points out, but
"the office of the president issues EOs and the office of the president
can choose to ignore the EO."
From the Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961 to the intelligence that targeted ISIS leader Bakr al-Baghdadi last October, the CIA has been involved in covert actions with significant international impact. And there is little in the way of a check on presidential power to use the CIA operationally—even when it comes to lethal operations. Should President Trump want to escalate hostilities with Iran while avoiding congressional oversight, the CIA provides him with a method to do so.
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