When just
war doctrine says that a war can be legitimate only if carried out by lawful
authority, the point is in part that private individuals have no right to declare
and prosecute a war, no matter how just their cause. Only governments have that right. But that doesn’t mean that just anyone in government has the right. As Francisco Suarez writes in his classic
treatment of just war doctrine:
[A]n inferior prince, or an imperfect state, or whosoever in
temporal affairs is under a superior, cannot justly declare war without the
authorization of that superior. A reason
for the conclusion is, first, that a prince of this kind can claim his right
from his superior, and therefore has not the right to declare war; since, in
this respect, he has the character of a private person. For it is because of the reason stated that
private persons cannot declare war. A
second reason in support of this same conclusion is that such a declaration of
war is opposed to the rights of the sovereign prince, to whom that power has
been specially entrusted; for without such power he could not govern peacefully
and suitably…
[A] war which, according to the preceding conclusion, is
declared without legitimate authority, is contrary not only to charity, but
also to justice, even if a legitimate cause for it exists. The reason supporting this conclusion is that
such an act is performed without legitimate jurisdiction, and is consequently
an illegitimate act…
[H]e who makes war without the authorization in question,
even if he has, in other respects, a just ground for so doing, nevertheless
incurs the penalties imposed upon those who wage an unjust war. (The Three Theological Virtues: On Charity,
Disputation XIII: On War, Section II)
Hence,
suppose that the mayor of an American city, or the governor of some U.S. state,
attempted to take the United States to war with Venezuela. Obviously, such an act would have no legal or
moral justification, for mayors and governors simply have no authority to do
such a thing. And equally obviously,
this would remain the case regardless of the justice of their cause.
But under
the U.S. constitution, the same thing is true of the President of the United
States. It is Congress rather than the President
that has the authority to maintain and fund the armed forces and to declare war. While the President is commander-in-chief,
that entails only that he is in charge of prosecuting a war once it is
initiated, not that he can himself initiate it.
To be sure, the War Powers Resolution – itself passed by Congress – adds
that the President can take military action in limited ways such as repelling
an immediate attack on the U.S. But he
must still consult with Congress and may not continue the action beyond sixty
days without congressional approval.
Nor can it
be said that custom has rendered such limitations a dead letter. It is true that presidents sometimes have
acted in ways that arguably go beyond them.
But when they have done so, this has typically been protested and
resisted as contrary to the law, rather than accepted as a de facto norm. Moreover, presidents still often do seek congressional
approval, and are expected to do so, especially when proposing a major military
action. For example, the Bush
administration’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and against terrorists were
conducted under congressional Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF). Naturally, one can question whether
everything that that administration did was justifiable under just war criteria,
but it does seem at least to have met the “lawful authority” condition.
Nor would it
do to suggest that the U.S. constitution is merely man-made law and thus
irrelevant to just war doctrine, which is a matter of natural law. For it is part of standard natural law
teaching that human law, like natural law, is binding in conscience as long as
it is not contrary to the natural law. Now,
whatever one thinks of the way the U.S. constitution sets out war powers, it is
not contrary to natural law. One can
argue that a different way of setting them out would have been better, but this
gives one no right whatsoever to ignore or disobey the law as it actually
stands.
And there
are in fact good reasons for the limits the U.S. constitution puts on presidential
power where war is concerned. For while
war can be just, it is extremely morally hazardous even in the best of
circumstances, and the passions associated with it frequently overwhelm reason. It should never be resorted to lightly, without
very careful weighing of the relevant moral and practical considerations. Limiting the president’s discretion where
war-making is concerned facilitates this.
Addressing the question of how citizens can be confident that a proposed
war is just, the eminent Catholic natural law theorist Heinrich Rommen wrote:
[F]reedom of the press and freedom of speech… afford a chance
for the issue to be presented broadly and objectively and for both sides to be
heard. A good opportunity exists also
where the representatives of the people have some control over the foreign
policy of the government. Another
favorable factor would be a constitutional provision that the most concentrated
competence of sovereignty – the declaration of war – be exercised “by
plebiscite or at least by resolution of representatives of the people” …
Only where these factors in some way operate, has the
individual citizen an access to the elements of fact and of law that make the justice
of the case… [W]here the public authority is uncontrolled and the citizen is
merely the subject of tendentious propaganda, he has hardly any access to the
objective facts which constitute the truth and to the justice of the case, and
must nolens volens rely upon
authority. (The State in Catholic Thought, p. 671)
Now, in the
case of possible war with Venezuela, the Trump administration has not only not
received congressional authorization, it has manifestly offered only “tendentious
propaganda” in support of such action.
My previous article noted some examples of this, such as the attempt to
stretch the word “terrorism” to cover actions which, while criminal and
immoral, are simply not “terrorist” in the legal sense. A similar sophistry was put forward this
week, when the administration declared
fentanyl to be a “weapon of mass destruction” (WMD). This is as absurd as pretending that Saddam
Hussein was a WMD (as some defenders of the Bush administration did when no
actual WMD had been found in Iraq). Like
Saddam, fentanyl is very bad indeed. But
like Saddam, fentanyl is nevertheless not a “weapon of mass destruction” in any
literal or legal sense.
President
Trump also this week suggested
that U.S. military action is justified because of Venezuelan theft of American “oil,
land, and other assets.” What he appears
to have in mind is Hugo Chavez’s taking control of oil assets from various American
companies almost twenty years ago. But
protecting corporate business interests is hardly a compelling reason to send
American servicemen to die. Moreover,
some of the companies in question have been compensated, other claims are still
being litigated, and the companies have
indicated that they have no interest in returning to Venezuela anyway.
Hence the
administration has still failed to make the case that war with Venezuela meets
the “just cause” condition of just war doctrine. And in any case, as I have argued, it has
also failed to meet the “lawful authority” condition. It seems the administration itself may
realize that much. The Washington Post has
reported that:
administration officials made a concerted push to reassure
potential GOP defectors – walking back Trump’s repeated threats of escalation
and sharing with them more details about its aggressive activities to disrupt
the Latin American drug trade.
Crucially, it appears, Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco
Rubio provided a classified briefing for select members of Congress where they
indicated the administration is not currently preparing to target Venezuela
directly and didn’t have a proper legal argument
for doing so, people familiar with the meeting told The Washington Post. (emphasis added)
Let’s hope that, Trump’s rhetoric and the massive naval buildup notwithstanding, concerns about the legality of a war with Venezuela will prevent the administration from starting one.

As Susie Wiles said, Trump wants Maduro to cry uncle and step down. He might.
ReplyDelete