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Congress Closes the Book on Two Wars – Charles Hilu

This week, Congress tackled one of its most important defense policy bills of the year: the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), annual legislation that authorizes the Department of Defense to spend the money the legislature has appropriated for it. As usual, the bill is massive, not only in importance but also in length. Weighing in at about 3,000 pages, this year’s NDAA tackles a myriad of issues, including a small yet long-awaited reining in of the president’s war powers.

Inside the text of the NDAA is a repeal of the Authorizations for Use of Military Force (AUMF) that greenlit operations in Iraq during the 1991 Gulf War and Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2002. (The United States deposed Saddam Hussein in 2003, but Congress gave the president the authority to do so the previous year.) The House passed the massive bill Wednesday by a vote of 312-112, and the Senate advanced it Thursday in a procedural vote with 75 senators voting “yes,” setting up final passage likely next week. President Donald Trump has said he will sign it into law. Some analysts argue the repeal is unlikely to have any consequential impact on current U.S. foreign policy, saying the two AUMFs are widely considered obsolete, but the action represents Congress marking a formal legislative end to the Gulf and Iraq wars and constitutes an incremental step in the legislative branch reclaiming its warmaking power from the executive.

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