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Please Take a Moment to Breathe in Deep Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=40776"><span class="small">Dan Rather, Dan Rather's Facebook Page</span></a>   
Saturday, 31 March 2018 13:47

Rather writes: "Dispiriting and often depressing news continues to hit at a consistent pace. There are reminders everywhere of what an unusual and in many ways perilous age we find ourselves. But there is something about this time of year that always fills me with a sense of hope. And this year is no different."

Dan Rather. (photo: Christopher Patey)
Dan Rather. (photo: Christopher Patey)


Please Take a Moment to Breathe in Deep

By Dan Rather, Dan Rather's Facebook Page

31 March 18

 

ispiriting and often depressing news continues to hit at a consistent pace. There are reminders everywhere of what an unusual and in many ways perilous age we find ourselves. But there is something about this time of year that always fills me with a sense of hope. And this year is no different.

"Play Ball," is now ringing out in big league parks, and minor league fields. Optimism fills the stands and the hearts of many a fan. Maybe this year will be our year.

On a more spiritual note (although baseball is close to a religion for many) we are in a holy weekend. It is Good Friday with Easter Sunday a few days away. And for my Jewish friends, tonight marks the first night of Passover. These are occasions to gather with friends and family to literally celebrate rebirth, for us Christians the resurrection and for the Jews of a people from bondage.

The season is a fitting backdrop. Spring is a time of blossoming flowers and budding leaves. It is a time to start contemplating walks in the woods and, for those of us ever-hopeful anglers, dreaming of casting that perfect fly and catching that perfect fish. Trout season begins on Sunday and I am heading out of the city to God's cathedral in the forest, along the stream.

May those of you who are celebrating Easter have a happy one. May those of you who are celebrating Passover have a happy one. And may all of you have a happy spring.

I know life can hard. I know challenges can be great. But please take a moment to breathe in deep and smell the flowers, a dewy forrest, or the freshly mowed grass of the baseball diamond.


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I Was Locked Away From My Children for 14 Months Because I Couldn't Make Bail Print
Saturday, 31 March 2018 13:36

Mayes writes: "After three sleepless nights, dressed only in my nightgown, I heard the number that would change my life forever: $250,000 - my bail. Just like that, my whole world changed. I couldn't move. I could barely breathe. I almost fainted."

A women's prison. (photo: Reuters)
A women's prison. (photo: Reuters)


I Was Locked Away From My Children for 14 Months Because I Couldn't Make Bail

By Lavette Mayes, Broadly

31 March 18


Because I couldn't afford to pay $250,000 in bail, I had to languish behind bars for over a year while awaiting trial—without being convicted of a crime.

fter three sleepless nights, dressed only in my nightgown, I heard the number that would change my life forever: $250,000 — my bail. Just like that, my whole world changed. I couldn’t move. I could barely breathe. I almost fainted.

It took the judge 30 seconds to set a price for my freedom. Because I couldn’t afford it, I sat in Cook County Jail for 14 months, even though I had not been convicted of a crime. I was caught in the crosshairs of a justice system that destroys the lives of poor and working class people for no defensible reason.

At the time of my arrest, I was going through a difficult divorce. My mother-in-law had been living with me and my two children on the South Side of Chicago. One night, things escalated into a physical altercation that sent both of us to the hospital. I was taken directly from the hospital to jail. I was still in my nightgown, and I was not allowed to contact anyone for three days. Worse, I was taken away from my 14-year-old daughter and my 5-year-old son — I wasn’t allowed to call them or let them know where I was, even though I had no previous record of arrest or trouble at all.

After three days in that freezing cell, I was finally taken to my bail hearing. There must have been dozens of people there, with just one public defender representing us all. He did not know anything about me, my family, or my background. I was just told I wasn’t allowed to talk to the judge. My life would be reduced to 30 seconds where I could not even speak for myself. The attorney was speaking quickly, but it didn’t seem like he was saying much at all. And all I could do was stand there with my hands behind my back.

One by one, we’d step up, and the judge would announce the price for our freedom. It was like being at an auction. I could not afford to pay my $25,000 bond, which was the ten percent deposit on my full bail amount needed to secure my immediate release. As a result, I was locked up behind bars for over a year awaiting trial. All that time, I didn’t see or touch my children once. Our family was devastated. When you incarcerate a mother, you incarcerate the whole family.

Lavette Mayes shares her firsthand account of being caught in the cross hairs of a broken bail system. Animated video developed by ACLU's Campaign for Smart Justice.

After multiple hearings, my bail was finally lowered to $95,000. The Chicago Community Bond Fund was able to help me pay the 10 percent bond, and I was released. But the damage was done. Because I’d been incarcerated for so long, I’d lost my business and my housing.

After my bond was paid, I was still on house arrest, under electronic monitoring. This was the same as being incarcerated for me, and it made it nearly impossible for me to be an attentive mother to my kids. I couldn’t take out the trash or supervise my son playing down the block. Armed sheriffs would show up at my house unannounced regularly. I could not stand the thought of returning to jail or being on house arrest for another 14 months—or more—while awaiting my actual trial. I needed to be with my children. They had suffered enough already.

While I was on electronic monitoring, I was forced to take a plea deal, even though I knew I could win my case if I fought it. I had already been trapped behind bars for the amount of time that the court would have required if I had been found guilty, and fighting the charge would have meant staying under an electronic monitoring setup that felt like its own version of jail.

My story, however, isn’t unique. Right now, there are about 3,000 people incarcerated at the same Cook County Jail where I was held because they cannot afford to pay their money bails. According to the Prison Policy Initiative, there nearly 500,000 people currently incarcerated throughout the US while they await trial—many of whom are there simply because they can’t afford to post bail. These are people who are losing their livelihoods, their families, and who knows what else, all because they cannot buy their freedom.

That’s why I’ve dedicated my life to trying to make sure other people don’t have to go through what I went through. I want people to know how money bail and electronic monitoring affect not just the individual who is surveilled, but the whole family and community. Our current money bail system treats poor people as guilty until they can come up with money to pay for freedom. I’m proud of the work we’re doing with the Chicago Community Bond Fund to push for local and state reforms that end this system that discriminates against the poor and destroys lives.

There are groups like Chicago Community Bond Fund doing that same important work in communities across the country that you can find and support through the National Bail Fund Network. We can only win this fight against money bail by organizing in our communities, raising our voices about this injustice, and demanding changes from politicians.


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FOCUS: Israeli Snipers Murder 17, Wound Dozens of Trapped Refugee Protesters at Gaza Border Print
Saturday, 31 March 2018 11:36

Cole writes: "Palestinians in Gaza staged an unarmed protest Friday, part of a planned multi-week event, near the Israeli line of control. They are demanding the right to return to their homes."

A Palestinian woman wounded by Israeli sniper fire during Land Day protests in Gaza. (photo: Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters)
A Palestinian woman wounded by Israeli sniper fire during Land Day protests in Gaza. (photo: Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters)


Israeli Snipers Murder 17, Wound Dozens of Trapped Refugee Protesters at Gaza Border

By Juan Cole, Informed Comment

31 March 18

 

alestinians in Gaza staged an unarmed protest Friday, part of a planned multi-week event, near the Israeli line of control. They are demanding the right to return to their homes.

The Israeli army indiscriminately opened fire on the protesters with live ammunition, killing at least 17 and wounding dozens (perhaps hundreds). Hundreds were also sickened by military-grade tear gas. This was shooting fish in a barrel. There is no reason to think that the Israeli troops were in danger or received deadly fire themselves. There was rock throwing toward the fence that imprisons the Palestinians. No Israeli casualties have been reported. Some video circulating, which IC cannot confirm, appears to show victims shot in the back or while praying. This was more like a US police shooting of an innocent, unarmed victim.

Although the US press is reporting that those killed died in “clashes,” they appear all to have been on the Gaza side of the line of control and never actually to have encountered any Israelis. There was no “clash.” Shooting down innocent unarmed people on their own land is typically termed “murder.”

In 1948, lean, mean Jewish immigrants into British Mandate Palestine attacked Palestinian villagers and townspeople in the south, in places like Beersheba and Nejd, and drove them into the Gaza Strip, where they live to this day, many of them still in refugee camps. On Nejd lands the Europeans formed the Israeli town of Sderot, which they have peopled not only with Israelis but also Thai agricultural guest workers.

Families in Gaza displaced from Nejd could walk home in half an hour if allowed to.

70 percent of Palestinian resident families in Gaza were kicked out of their homes in what is now Israel by armed Jewish immigrants into British Mandate Palestine, and the Palestinians were consigned to 8 refugee camps. They would starve to death if it were not for aid via the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, the budget of which Trump has just kneecapped. There are now 1.8 million people in Gaza, most of them desperately poor. Since 2007 they have been under a military and economic blockade by Israel, which routinely shoots their fishermen and has limited import of building materials such as cement. Israel carefully dispenses the right to leave Gaza, essentially a large jail for the victims of Israeli ethnic cleansing, and several Palestinian children have died in recent times because they weren’t permitted to go get good medical care.

In the course of World War I, the British army conquered geographical Palestine away from the Ottoman Empire. The other Mandatory forces authorized by the Versailles Peace Treaty, were charged with temporarily administering Syria, Iraq, Togo and other countries-in-waiting for the welfare of their inhabitants and in preparation for independence. Britain had some of these obligations in Palestine, for the then 1.3 million Palestinians, as well. But many British administrators thought of their charge as two-fold, since they also wished to establish what they called a “home” for the “Jewish people” in the midst of the teeming masses of Palestinians. They were paying off what they saw as a debt to Zionist leaders for their support in WW I. Their other debt was to the Hashemites of Mecca, to whom they awarded Transjordan.

Zionism grew up in the second half of the 19th century as a form of Jewish nationalism, modeled on the Romantic nationalism of the Germans and Italians. Most Jews of the time rejected the notion of making their religion the basis for a virulent form of modern racism or of giving Christian nationalists a cudgel with which to beat their Jewish co-citizens by declaring, as Zionists implied, that French Jews were Jewish and not French at all.

Moving people around to the inconvenience of their neighbors was a feature of authoritarian government in early twentieth century High Modernism. The British also dreamed of bringing millions of Punjabis from India into Iraq when they conquered it in 1918. Stalin moved Crimean Tatars to Central Asia. So too was the technique of partition. The French conquered Syria in 1920 and abruptly carved out of it a majority-Christian Lebanon, to make the whole region easier to rule, since they expected the Christians to support colonialism. Britain saw the European Jews it was importing as playing a similar role.

The Ottomans and their Muslim predecessors had ruled this region for nearly 1300 years with the exception of a hiatus during the Crusades. In the millennium after Christ, most Palestinian Jews had converted to Christianity and then some converted to Islam. A small number of men emigrated to Europe as merchants around 800 and they grew into the Ashkenazi Jewish community, taking non-Jewish convert wives and occasionally converting friends and neighbors. Between 1000 CE and about 1800 CE, there were almost no Jews in Palestine; Bonaparte’s expedition estimated 3,000 around 1799. In the 1800s some Russian charities were set up so that Jewish retirees could go to Jerusalem and spend their last days studying Torah in the holy city, and Russian Jewish residents grew in number to a few thousand.

Tens of thousands of Jews relocated to the British Mandate of Palestine in the 1920s, but they were small numbers of mainly Eastern European pioneers. They carefully set up a system whereby they received monetary support from Jewish communities in the West to buy up land, and then they alienated that land in perpetuity, forbidding its resale to non-Jews. Their goal was to buy up enough of Palestine on which to form a Jewish state, and to expel any Palestinians who would not cooperate.

By 1936 the Palestinians had figured out that the British Mandate, far from being benevolent, was predatory and malevolent, aiming at dominating them for hundreds of years and in the meantime of displacing them with Ashkenazi clients, whom the Palestinians viewed as illegal immigrants. The Palestinians launched a revolt, 1936-1939, which convinced the British to issue a White Paper promising to restrict further Jewish immigration and to schedule Palestine to become an independent country by 1949. Zionist thinkers and leaders, livid, pledged that the White Paper would not stand.

With the rise of Fascism and institutional, murderous Antisemitism in Europe in the 1930s, the number of Jewish immigrants into Palestine rose significantly in the 1930s. By 1940 there were 400,000, and the Palestinians were over a million.

When the British announced in 1947 that they planned to decamp, civil war broke out in Palestine. The Palestinians lost and 720,000 of them were expelled from their homes (these families have grown into several million). In 1967, the Israelis came after the refugees in the West Bank and Gaza and established rule over them.

Today, there is a Palestinian majority in the lands controlled by Israel. But only the Jews and a small minority of Palestinians living inside Israel can vote or have power, and their military rule controls the West Bank and encircles Gaza, which they have left without an airport or harbour or any visible means of support.

Zionist propaganda has assiduously covered up this tawdry reality, so that, amazingly enough, as with the realities of climate change, the American public is oblivious to what is being done to the Palestinians and blames them for any reaction they undertake to these massive and ongoing injustices.

White Americans are the richest people in the world and the most powerful, but have developed a sense of grievance that led them to put the Neofascist Trump regime in power in Washington. Imagine what they would do if they had been treated the way the Palestinians have been. That is why blaming everything on “Hamas” is silly. Hamas is a symptom, not the disease.


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FOCUS: What Mueller Knows Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=45295"><span class="small">Bob Bauer, Lawfare</span></a>   
Saturday, 31 March 2018 11:10

Bauer writes: "Even as President Trump has escalated his attacks on Special Counsel Robert Mueller, the congressional leadership has spurned movement on proposed legislation to protect the investigation."

Robert Mueller. (photo: James Berglie/TNS)
Robert Mueller. (photo: James Berglie/TNS)


What Mueller Knows

By Bob Bauer, Lawfare

31 March 18

 

ven as President Trump has escalated his attacks on Special Counsel Robert Mueller, the congressional leadership has spurned movement on proposed legislation to protect the investigation. Republicans have sponsored certain of these bills, but their commitment to this project has cooled. They argue that no bill is really needed because the president, they are sure, will not fire Mueller.

Others are not so sure. Steve Vladeck the enactment of proposals to provide judicial review of any dismissals for “good cause.” He rightly argues that the measure would hold up under constitutional review because Morrison v. Olson is still good law; he also notes that this move simply enforces the that poach far less on executive authority than did the independent counsel law as a whole. It is, he writes, a “no-brainer,” an “easy way” to meet the threat to the Mueller investigation even for those who do not wish for a return to the independent counsel nightmares of yore.

I would argue instead for a still easier way to safeguard Mueller’s role. Rather than enact a measure to enforce the special counsel rules, Congress might address one of their : the that the special counsel report to Congress. Legislators could require that, if fired, the special counsel provide such a report on the status of the investigation through the date of his dismissal, focusing on whether the inquiry had uncovered credible evidence of potential crimes by the president, his family or close associates. He would give Congress the information it needed to seek judicial assistance in obtaining any and all material relevant to his report that would otherwise be protected under grand-jury secrecy rules.

One advantage of this measure is that it allocates to each branch the role it is most appropriately equipped to play under the Constitution without unduly encroaching on the authority of any. The president may be entitled to fire Mueller, presumably for a variety of “good” reasons, but not to protect himself. Few would defend the notion of executive authority exercised for this corrupt purpose, carried out to bury the incriminating evidence. The next question, then, is which of the two remaining branches of government—Congress or the judiciary—should ferret out improper motive.

Congress has the power to impeach, and the firing of Mueller in an investigation directly involving the president is squarely within Congress’s legitimate constitutional concern. The president may claim the authority to dismiss Mueller; but the Congress need not accept that he may do so for the purpose of limiting or frustrating the capacity of the House of Representatives to determine the grounds for an impeachment inquiry. While Congress is not dependent on the special counsel in launching such an inquiry, its actions will be informed, as in Watergate, by an independent criminal investigation (and vice versa). Mueller has investigative tools that congressional investigating committees lack. But, apart from these benefits of an unimpeded special counsel inquiry, the House of Representatives would have every interest in understanding whether the president shut down an investigation in his personal interest, motivated by the wish to evade legal liability and congressional scrutiny.

By contrast, if the courts are asked to be the primary actors in the review of a dismissal, they are forced into an awkward position. They would be asked to rule in a context unlike any other requiring them to review executive branch dismissal under a “for cause” standard. The question is not whether they may, but rather whether they should, be put in this position in these highly charged political circumstances. Once in the middle of the most incendiary of controversies, they stand to be singed, or worse. A case in point are the attacks during the investigation of President Bill Clinton on the Special Division of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, accused of partisan mischief replacing of Robert Fiske with Ken Starr.

Vladeck is confident that the prospect for judicial review generates disincentives for the political actors to invite the courts’ intervention. He states that this “judicial procedure” for reviewing a dismissal “would almost certainly never have to be utilized.” The president would not move against Mueller “for blatantly inappropriate reasons” if he “knew there was even the specter of judicial review.” Mueller would not challenge a dismissal if it were “undisputedly for good cause.”

But who is to say that a beleaguered and threatened president would not take his chances even with a weak case, or that he would not have reasons—or at least believe he had reasons—that ranked higher than “blatantly inappropriate” ones?  How readily would a special counsel accept that his cause for dismissal was “undisputedly good,” when declining to appeal means giving up his job, absorbing the harm to his reputation—and sacrificing possibly years of investigative work?

In either case, once invoked, judicial review precipitates an extended course of litigation. As Vladeck notes, it is not clear what would become of the investigation as the parties clash in court, and the litigation could “become a referendum on Morrison, rather than the desired inquiry into the propriety of Mueller’s sacking.” Vladeck doubts that any of these uncertainties or problems will come to pass, but only because he doubts the occurrence of litigation.

Requiring that the special counsel report to Congress in the event he is fired would remedy a clear defect in the current regulations. But the remedy is not extraordinary. In fact, Congress required just such a report of the independent counsel under the old statute, which called for the counsel to advise Congress of any “substantial and credible” grounds for impeachment.

The president could, of course, make life difficult for the special counsel by putting him out the door from one day to the next and denying him official facilities for the production of the report. This action would speak for itself: it would not be costless for the president to assert good cause for the dismissal and then act to impede the counsel from providing this accounting.

But Congress can legislate all the necessary support and protection for the support of the special counsel that the executive branch would not provide. Moreover, once the special counsel has reported credible evidence of presidential misconduct, Congress can subpoena records to which the special counsel no longer has access and seek judicial assistance in overcoming grand jury secrecy protections under rule 6(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. It can specify by law appropriate procedures for the transmission under seal of sensitive information to the House and Senate Judiciary Committees.

This report-upon-firing should not trouble a president who has nothing to fear—one who has “undisputedly good cause” for the firing.  But if he should have cause for worry—because his dismissal of the special counsel is a bid to save himself—he should be aware and have to consider that there is only so much he can get away with. The president can still fire the special counsel—but not as he pleases. He cannot take without consequence an action that sabotages Congress’s discharge of its constitutional responsibilities.

The special counsel’s report would not convey any view of possible grounds for impeachment. One of the flaws of the independent counsel statute was its requirement that the counsel act as an agent of the Congress in performing such an assessment, which is not properly a prosecutor’s to make. In the proposal at hand, however, the special counsel would state whether the investigation had led to credible evidence of criminal misconduct, with a “roadmap” like the one that Special Prosecutor Leon Jaworski supplied to the Congress in the Watergate matter. Faced with questions about whether a president could be indicted while in office, Jaworski proceeded by the book as much as possible, and Congress could provide this same pathway for Mr. Mueller.

This measure could supplement Richard Pildes’ proposal that . Pildes correctly notes, as does Vladeck, that these rules present no constitutional issues. They address policy objections to the scope of the old law: They do not go nearly as far as the old independent counsel statute in constraining the president’s conduct of his executive function. By adopting the Justice Department current rules as its own, Congress could resist reviving the independent counsel model while still ensuring, in Pildes’ words, the “integrity and impartiality of investigations…when the Justice Department faces a conflict of interest.” A codification could add this contingent reporting to the existing rules, under which Mueller currently has no authority, and the supervising acting attorney general has only highly restricted rights, to report to Congress on his investigation.

There is no reason to doubt that Republicans in the Congress will oppose this measure—just as, at the moment, they oppose all other measures to protect Mueller. But their objections to the legislation currently on the table—that is, that it is unnecessary to defend against a firing they believe will not occur—would no longer stand.

Similarly useless would be a claim that the clock is being turned back to the days of the old and discredited independent counsel statute. Unlike the independent counsel, Mueller would not need to opine on the existence of the grounds for impeachment. He would report to the Congress only on matters clearly within his prosecutorial mission and would do so only when the president took action—the firing—that bore directly on the Congress’s exercise of its constitutional responsibilities. The courts would not be involved in adjudicating the legality of a dismissal but would rule on Congress’s demands for access to grand jury material.

Finally, the question might be raised whether this amendment to the law is necessary. Congress does not need fresh statutory authorization to call Mueller to testify about the investigation if he is fired, and it can subpoena records from the executive branch to support its inquiry into the circumstances of the dismissal and the possible grounds for impeachment. But mapping out these steps by statute assures that, when Congress acts, it will do so by a previously established set of procedures—which should temper, to some degree, concerns that legislators will react in the heat of the political moment and perhaps under partisan pressures. Moreover, by tying these procedures to a dismissal, Congress would put the president clearly on notice about its opposition to a firing and its determination to hear from Mueller what the president may be seeking to cover up.

Whether Trump is sincere in his stated objections to the Mueller inquiry, or whether those objections arise out of anxiety over his (or his family’s and associates’) legal exposure, every day presents once more the question of whether he might fire Mueller. If he finally does, the question of his motive will be inescapably presented—and Congress has the constitutional obligation to answer that question. It should ensure that it will receive the full story from the special counsel about what he found, through his last day in office, about the president’s conduct.


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Congress, Not Trump, Has the Authority Over War Print
Saturday, 31 March 2018 08:45

Sanders writes: "On March 20, by a vote of 55-44, the U.S. Senate tabled a resolution that I introduced along with two of my colleagues, Republican Mike Lee of Utah and Democrat Chris Murphy of Connecticut, calling on the president to withdraw U.S. participation in the war in Yemen."

Bernie Sanders. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)
Bernie Sanders. (photo: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)


Congress, Not Trump, Has the Authority Over War

By Bernie Sanders, Foreign Policy

31 March 18


America's representatives can, and should, end the country's participation in the horrific onslaught on Yemen

n March 20, by a vote of 55-44, the U.S. Senate tabled a resolution that I introduced along with two of my colleagues, Republican Mike Lee of Utah and Democrat Chris Murphy of Connecticut, calling on the president to withdraw U.S. participation in the war in Yemen.

We offered this resolution for two reasons. First, the Saudi-led war in Yemen has led to one of the worst humanitarian crises in modern history. Second, the time is long overdue for Congress to reassert its constitutional authority in matters of war. Article I of the U.S. Constitution states clearly that the people’s representatives in Congress, not a single person residing in the White House, shall have the power to declare war.

Though a majority of our Senate colleagues voted to table our resolution — that is, they chose to avoid taking a vote on the issues it raised — I am more convinced than ever of the need to go forward aggressively on this matter. We must never forget that the two most significant foreign-policy disasters in the modern history of the United States, the war in Iraq and the war in Vietnam, occurred when Congress sat back and allowed two administrations, one Republican and one Democrat, to lie to the American people as they led us into conflicts with horrific consequences. We must never allow that to happen again.

On March 20, 2003, the war in Iraq, which I strongly opposed, began and the bombs started falling on Baghdad. Today, it is widely acknowledged that the war in Iraq was a blunder of enormous magnitude, and that our entry into that war was based on a series of falsehoods. Despite what the Bush administration said, Iraq had no role in the 9/11 attacks, and it did not possess weapons of mass destruction that threatened the United States.

As we now know, that war created a cascade of instability around the region that we are dealing with today in Syria and elsewhere, and will be for many years to come. Indeed, had it not been for the Iraq War, the Islamic State would almost certainly not exist.

The war deepened hostilities between Sunni and Shiite communities in Iraq and elsewhere. It exacerbated a regional struggle for power between Saudi Arabia and Iran and their proxies in places like Syria, Lebanon, and Yemen, and it undermined American diplomatic efforts to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

That war was created by a Republican administration. Now, let me tell you about a Democratic administration, and an earlier conflict that began on similarly false pretenses. In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson cited an attack on a U.S. ship in the Gulf of Tonkin as a pretext for escalating the U.S. intervention in Vietnam.

We now know from declassified recordings that Johnson himself doubted that the USS Maddox had come under fire on Aug. 4, 1964, but still used that alleged attack to push for the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, authorizing him to escalate United States military involvement in Vietnam.

Johnson’s administration misled both Congress and the American people into that war, just as the Bush administration misled us into the war in Iraq. Repeatedly, disasters occur when presidents refuse to tell their people the truth, and when Congress abdicates its constitutional responsibility to get that truth.

The truth about Yemen is that, by providing intelligence and the aerial refueling of Saudi combat planes, U.S. forces are engaged in hostilities unauthorized by Congress. This war has resulted in a massive humanitarian crisis where some 10,000 civilians have been killed, 40,000 more have been wounded, and more than 3 million have been displaced. In November of last year, the United Nations emergency relief coordinator said that Yemen was on the brink of “the largest famine the world has seen for many decades.” Fifteen million people lack access to clean water and sanitation because water treatment plants have been destroyed. More than 20 million people in Yemen, over two thirds of the population, need some kind of humanitarian support, with nearly 10 million in acute need of assistance. More than 1 million suspected cholera cases have been reported, representing potentially the worst cholera outbreak in world history.

The Yemen war has also undermined U.S. efforts to stop terrorism. In 2016, Reuters reported that the war “has helped al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP)” — one of al Qaeda’s most dangerous branches — “to become stronger than at any time since it first emerged almost 20 years ago.” A 2016 U.S. State Department report likewise found that the conflict had helped both al Qaeda and the Islamic State to “deepen their inroads across much of the country.”

While Iran’s support for insurgents in Yemen is a serious problem, the reality is that this war has helped Iran to expand its influence. As a Public Radio International story put it last year, “if Yemen’s Houthis weren’t Iranian proxies before, they could be soon.” In other words, justifying this war in terms of “pushing back on Iran” could become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

In voting to table our resolution, the chair and ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee committed to hold hearings on this three-year-old military intervention. I hope that these hearings will happen soon, and that they will ask the necessary tough questions about the administration’s justifications for this war. If not, I reserve the right to bring our resolution to the floor of the Senate for consideration again.

If Congress supports U.S. participation in the war in Yemen, let them have the courage to vote for it. If they support an expanded role for U.S. troops in Syria or anywhere else, let them vote for it. But for the future of our country, the credibility of our commitments, and the well-being of our armed forces, Congress cannot continue to abdicate the constitutionally mandated war-making responsibilities which the founding fathers gave to them.


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