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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Fri, 28 Feb 2003 16:43:53 -0500
From: iNFoWaRZ <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: <Recipient list suppressed>
Subject: SNET: Move over Constitution, we've got U.N. charter

->  SNETNEWS  Mailing List

What the Patriots of America have been saying since Bush's first mention of war with 
Iraq, and now WorldNetDaily finally gets it.
It's not about oil, it's about world government and the destruction of national 
sovereignty.  It's about Tyranny.
---------------------

Friday, February 28, 2003

THE NEW WORLD DISORDER
Move over Constitution, we've got U.N. charter
Scholar: Iraq war maneuvers play into hands of internationalists

Posted: February 28, 2003 1:00 a.m. Eastern
By Diana Lynne
� 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

A renowned constitutional scholar predicts a United States-led war with Iraq could 
result not just in the loss of Saddam Hussein's sovereignty, but that of the U.S. as 
well, which in turn leads to the loss of personal liberty for individual American 
citizens.

It's not that Herb Titus is anti-war. He just thinks President George W. Bush is going 
about it the wrong way. Titus sees a hidden danger in the Bush administration's need 
to appease the international community by working through the diplomatic channels of 
the United Nations Security Council.

Security Council members in New York continue to debate proposals on the table that 
range from declaring Saddam Hussein in material breach of Resolution 1441 and invading 
now, to giving Hussein another six months to cooperate with U.N. weapons inspectors.

A one time dean of Regent School of Law and 1996 vice presidential candidate on the 
U.S. Taxpayers Party ticket with Howard Phillips, Titus is considered one of America's 
leading constitutional scholars. He's also an author and practicing attorney 
specializing in constitutional litigation and strategy.

"Presidents have substituted Security Council authorization for constitutional 
declaration of war," Titus told WorldNetDaily.

And in doing so, he argues, Bush and his predecessors play into the hands of 
internationalists who assert only the U.N. can authorize war and view the U.N. charter 
as trumping the U.S. Constitution.

"Article I, Section 8 is inoperative," said Titus, referring to the Constitution's 
mandate that the decision to go to war come from Congress: "The Congress shall have 
power to ... declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, and make rules 
concerning captures on land and water."

"Letters of marque and reprisal" refers to limited actions of war and was often used 
in the late 18th century to authorize surgical attacks on lawless Muslim pirates 
harbored by Tunisia and Libya. The "captures" cited as the third constitutional 
military option before Congress refers to the capture of naval vessels.

"The declaration of war is both a legal question and a practical decision," Titus 
explains. "At the time of the drafting of the Constitution, two factors were relevant: 
'Do you have good, legal reason?' and 'If you have legal grounds for war, is it 
practical to declare war?'

"While presidents have not said as a matter of law that the U.N. charter trumps the 
Constitution, the emphasis on the practical matter [seeking U.N. approval so that 
military action against Iraq isn't viewed by the international community as aggression 
or U.S. imperialism] reinforces the legal claim of the internationalists," Titus 
continued.

He concludes that Congress has failed on both counts in allowing presidents to make 
both the legal and practical decisions, and is complicit in the presidents' giving up 
American sovereignty to the U.N.

Congress and war

Congress has not formally declared war since World War II.

In response to the Vietnam War, it passed the War Powers Act in 1973, which requires 
the president to seek congressional approval before or shortly after ordering any 
military action abroad, including limited airstrikes.

At least one congressman tried to adhere to the Constitution. Last October, Rep. Ron 
Paul, R-Texas, proposed a declaration of war to his colleagues. Instead, Congress 
passed a resolution that authorized the use of military force against Iraq, provided 
the international community supports it.

"Sadly, the leadership of both parties on the International Relations Committee fails 
to understand that the Constitution requires a congressional declaration of war before 
our troops are sent into battle," Paul said after his proposal was voted down. "One 
Republican member stated that the constitutional requirement that Congress declare war 
is an anachronism and should no longer be followed, while a Democratic member said 
that a declaration of war would be 'frivolous.' I don�t think most Americans believe 
our Constitution is outdated or frivolous, and they expect Congress to follow it."

"It's an undeclared, illegal war. Not only do I object to the war," Paul told 
WorldNetDaily, "but I object to the way the president is going about it."

The Iraq resolution, which came through the International Relations Committee and was 
promoted by committee Chairman Rep. Henry Hyde, R-Ill., was proposed by Bush.

"Terrorists willing to commit suicide in order to kill large numbers of innocents 
cannot be stopped by the familiar conventions of deterrence," Hyde said in a statement 
released while the committee was deliberating the resolution. "To assume that these 
terrorists and others will remain unarmed by Saddam is an assumption with a deadly 
potential. ... The president has demonstrated his determination to act to remove this 
threat and has asked the Congress for an authorizing resolution. ... In the name of 
those brave souls, both living and departed, who purchased our freedom, let us now 
act," he urged.

Worse than declaring nothing, Paul maintains, is that Congress transferred the 
authority to go to war to the president.

"We should never have one man making the decision to send young men to war 6,000 miles 
from our shore," Paul told WND. "We still haven't admitted to the 150,000 suffering 
from Gulf War Syndrome � I'm convinced as a physician there is a syndrome. We 
shouldn't be doing this so casually."

As WorldNetDaily reported, a group of Democratic lawmakers, soldiers and families of 
servicemen agree with Paul and filed a lawsuit in federal court, claiming war with 
Iraq would be illegal and unconstitutional, and accusing lawmakers of unlawfully 
ceding the decision to President Bush.

"The president is not a king," the group's lead attorney, John Bonifaz, said at a news 
conference announcing the suit. "He does not have the power to wage war against 
another country absent a congressional declaration of war. Congress has not declared 
war."

U.S. District Judge Joseph Tauro dismissed the suit Monday, ruling the judicial branch 
can only judge the war policies of the other two branches of government when they're 
in conflict. In this case, Congress and the president are in agreement.

"If you want constitutional government," said Titus, "don't look to the courts for 
your salvation. Look to yourselves and who you're electing to office."

Bush is not the first commander in chief to be sued over his military orders. A 
similar lawsuit was filed against President George H.W. Bush before the 1991 Gulf War 
by 54 members of Congress. It was denied by a federal judge in December 1990, who 
ruled the lawmakers did not have legal standing.

WorldNetDaily reported in 1999 that 26 congressional members filed a lawsuit against 
former President Clinton for violating both the Constitution and the War Powers Act by 
allowing U.S. forces to participate in NATO air attacks against Yugoslavia. The suit 
maintained that, according to the War Powers Act, Clinton must seek congressional 
approval for the Balkan war if he wished to pursue it beyond 60 days.

U.N.: Higher authority?

Bush and other administration officials present Iraqi disarmament as the crucial next 
step in the "war on terror."

In his State of the Union address, Bush cited evidence from intelligence sources, 
secret communications and statements by people now in custody that Hussein aids and 
protects terrorists, including members of Osama bin Laden's al-Qaida network.

Secretary of State Colin Powell subsequently laid out the Bush administration case in 
detail before the Security Council and congressional panels, claiming an al-Qaida cell 
based in Baghdad coordinates movement of people, money and supplies to and throughout 
Iraq and was responsible for the ricin plot in London and other planned terrorist 
attacks against countries including France, Spain, Italy, Germany and Russia.

Titus asserts officials use the word "war" as a "rhetorical device" with no more 
meaning than the phrase "war on drugs" or "war on poverty." He said the term is 
designed to elicit an emotional response to silence detractors.

If the term were taken seriously, Titus thinks Bush should have submitted his cause 
for war in careful and specific form to members of Congress last fall just as Powell 
did for members of the Security Council. He argues Congress didn't act on the basis of 
specific evidence and that's why the resolution authorizes the use of force but 
doesn't outright declare war.

While the Iraq resolution enables Bush to abide by the War Powers Act, because 
"authorization of military force" is not "declaration of war," Titus concurs with Paul 
that war on Iraq does not pass constitutional muster.

So Bush � and presidents before him � instead seeks a "higher authority," says Titus, 
and subscribes to the rules of international law.

The U.N. charter was signed on Jun 26, 1945, in San Francisco, at the conclusion of 
the United Nations Conference on International Organization, and came into force on 
Oct. 24, 1945.

Although signed as a treaty, Titus said the charter was crafted more as a constitution 
for world government. Its preamble reads like the Constitution, referring to "we the 
people" as opposed to "we the member-nation governments." It also has an amendment 
clause similar to Article 5 that allows amendments to the charter approved by a 
two-thirds majority of the General Assembly.

Titus argues because it's a global constitution, the U.N. charter is illegitimate 
because it created a supranational government that derived its powers not from the 
consent of the governed but from the consent of the peoples' government officials who 
have no authority to bind either the American people nor any other nation's people to 
any terms of the charter.

Unlike the Constitution, the U.N. charter doesn't authorize war, only police acts to 
keep the peace. In fact, the charter's preamble states the main objective of the 
signatories was to "save succeeding generations from the scourge of war."

This may, in part, explain the uphill battle Bush has faced in securing Security 
Council approval for the use of military force against Iraq.

Paul maintains "police acts" is merely "1984 newspeak" for war.

"Police acts are to keep the peace. But there's no war in Iraq right now. We can't go 
there to establish peace if there's no war," he said.

Four years ago, Paul founded The Liberty Committee, an organization committed to 
rolling back the "socialists' authoritarian agenda" at work in the national 
legislative process. Sixteen of Paul's House colleagues joined a liberty caucus. Titus 
serves as senior legal adviser for the group.

The group touts one example of its successes on its website.

It cites legislation that was thwarted in December 2001 that would have "accelerated 
the transformation of the U.S. military into the standing army of the U.N. � a 
long-sought goal of the world socialists."

Ironically, Hyde painted the Iraq resolution in terms of America asserting its 
sovereignty.

"For those convinced of Saddam�s murderous intentions, the debate has centered on 
whether or not we should focus our efforts on assembling a coalition of friends and 
allies and seek the enhanced legitimacy that approval by the United Nations might 
render to our actions. But I believe that is the wrong debate," he said in his 
statement last fall. "We have no choice but to act as a sovereign country prepared to 
defend ourselves, with our friends and allies if possible, but alone if necessary. 
There can be no safety if we tie our fate to the cooperation of others, only a hope 
that all will be well, a hope that eventually must fail."

Despite the rhetoric, Congress only equipped Bush with an authorization of military 
force, not a declaration of war.

The difference, say Paul and Titus, boils down to subscribing to the U.N.'s world 
constitution, instead of our own.

"I don't believe in resolutions that cite the U.N. as authority for our military 
actions," Paul said. "America has a sovereign right to defend itself, and we don't 
need U.N. permission or approval to act in the interests of American national 
security. The decision to go to war should be made by the U.S. Congress alone. 
Congress should give the president full war-making authority, rather than binding him 
with resolutions designed to please our U.N. detractors."

The difference is also a question of whether or not the military force achieves 
victory, according to Paul, who maintains history bears witness to the importance of a 
declaration of war.

"When Congress issued clear declarations of war against Japan and Germany during World 
War II, the nation was committed and victory was achieved," he said. "When Congress 
shirks its duty and avoids declaring war, as with Korea and Vietnam, the nation is 
less committed and the goals are less clear.

"When you don't declare war for national security reasons, you wind up conducting war 
for political reasons and you don't get victory," he concluded.
-------------------------
-iNFoWaRZ
"It is the sacred principles enshrined in the UNITED NATIONS CHARTER to which the 
American people will HENCEFORTH PLEDGE THEIR ALLEGIANCE."
- President George Bush addressing the U.N.General Assembly February 1,1992.

Like hell we will, Bush.


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