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States Push to Take Back National Guard

by: Maya Schenwar, t r u t h o u t | Report

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National Guard Sgt. 1st Class Michael Dobbs. Some states are calling for a halt to National Guard deployments to Iraq. (Photo: Staff Sgt. Jon Soucy / US Army)

    Going on its seventh year, the Iraq war has taken its toll on not only the US military, but also on the states's National Guard units, which were called up when Congress passed the 2002 Authorization to Use Military Force (AUMF) against Iraq. Now a growing state-level movement is working to keep the Guard at home.

    Its logic: The AUMF's goals have been fulfilled. The authorization's explicit purposes were to defend the US against the "threat posed by Iraq" and to enforce UN Security Council resolutions regarding Iraq's alleged ballistic missiles and weapons of mass destruction. Saddam Hussein - along with his supposed threat - is gone, and the UN resolutions are no longer relevant, so there's no longer a mandate to keep troops in Iraq.

    The president can call up the states's Guard units in a time of war. But when the mandate for war becomes obsolete, say members of the Bring the Guard Home: It's the Law (BTGH) campaign, sending those troops overseas is illegal. BTGH members and their allies are now sponsoring a chain of bills and resolutions in states across the country, demanding an investigation into the legality of deploying the Guard to Iraq, and a refusal to comply with any illegal federal orders.

    "There is not Congressional authorization for the use of the Guard today," Vermont State Rep. Mike Fisher told Truthout. "One Guard member improperly called into federal service to fight a war - that's a real problem. Choosing to go to war is one of the most serious decisions that we make. The very least we can do is follow the Constitution."

    The state legislators involved in the campaign argue that it is their duty, along with the governor's, to ensure Guard members' welfare. Although a governor can't order the Guard's return, he or she does have the right to challenge federalization orders (mandates to call up the Guard) in the first place. Every month, another set of call-ups sends more Guard members overseas. Should a state decide to refuse a federalization order, the case would likely be brought to the courts.

    "We believe that it would be a good thing for a court to be asked the question of whether a state Guard can be brought into federal service to fight in an overseas war - other than in an emergency - that does not have a proper Congressional authorization," Fisher said.

    The campaign began back in 2007, after Fisher had written and passed a resolution in the Vermont legislature to urge the withdrawal of US military forces from Iraq. He wanted to intensify this state-level action against the war by asserting the war's illegality, and relating it back to Vermont law. So, Fisher joined with attorney Benson Scotch, formerly the executive director of Vermont's ACLU, to spearhead an effort that would both advocate for Vermont's Guard members and challenge the legal basis for continued US involvement in Iraq.

    The effort is premised on the National Guard's dual chain of command. Usually, the governor is the commander in chief of a state's Guard. With Congressional authorization, the Guard can be called into federal service. However, since that Congressional authorization has expired for Iraq, control reverts back to the states - or at least it should, under the Constitution, according to Scotch and Fisher.

    Regardless of legality, the federalization orders continue, with more Guard troops called up every month. The state Guards have seen some of their largest deployments since World War II. In New Jersey, for example, the planned deployment represents about 50 percent of the state's National Guard.

    This transfer of the Guard out of state not only reduces its ability to respond to local emergencies, it also fuels a frightening shift in US foreign policy, according to Ben Manski, executive director of the nonprofit Liberty Tree Foundation.

    "We're supposed to have a national defense that's based on the citizen soldier, and decentralized as a result," Manski told Truthout. "What the federal government has done, and what states have allowed it to do, is it has transformed the National Guard into the reserve for an expanded military and for a policy of empire building."

    In the process, the federal executive branch has taken over many of the rights and responsibilities of both Congress and the states. The War Powers Act of 1973 states that the president can wage war only by Congressional authorization, unless the US is under attack. Now, since Congress's authorization is no longer applicable and troops remain in Iraq, the standard is being set for a very weak Congressional role in war powers, according to Scotch.

    Under the current, Bush-conceived system, "Congress can start a war but cannot stop a war, or even impose enforceable limits to a war it authorizes," Scotch, who is now legal counsel to BTGH, told Truthout. "The president in today's US initiates, conducts, limits (or not) and ends wars (or not)."

    The Guard legislation promoted by the BTGH campaign reasserts not only the states's power to refuse illegal Guard orders, but also calls attention to the fact that Congress should determine whether or not a war is allowed to continue.

    At its heart, BTGH is a push to reverse the quiet ebbing away of the balance of powers that took place throughout the Bush administration. Now is the time to make sure the precedent of executive, federal domination doesn't become set in stone, according to Fisher.

    "Article 1 of the Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war and Article 2 gives the president the power to be commander in chief, "Fisher said. "It seems our founding fathers intentionally delivered us this tension, because they understood the dangers of executive power. They also delivered us tension between the states and the federal government - they positioned a large part of the military in the states's control."

    The Guard initiative also activates another "branch" of opinion that was neglected throughout the Bush administration: the American people. Since state-level legislation hits closer to home, and since state legislators interact with their constituents more regularly and on a more immediate level, the BTGH campaign intends to provide a new, effective outlet for citizens's voices.

    "We had seven years that the most people thought they could do to change foreign policy was to march, to vote or to participate in direct action," Manski said. "At the state level, it's much easier for people to get involved in legislation."

    For example, instead of writing letters to members of Congress, advocates for BTGH often request to speak directly with their state representatives or senators. National groups like Military Families Speak Out, Veterans for Peace and Peace Action have worked through their local chapters to communicate with legislators.

    Grassroots efforts directly led to Wisconsin state Rep. Spencer Black's involvement in the campaign.

    "The issue was brought to my attention by community activists," Black told Truthout. Wisconsin's version of the bill will be introduced in March.

    As the new session of Congress gains speed, the Guard legislation is quickly moving forward. Versions of it have been introduced in 14 states, and eight more have active campaigns pushing for the bill's introduction.

    In Oregon, bipartisan Guard legislation was introduced last week. Leah Bolger, vice president of Veterans for Peace, is hopeful that the upcoming deployment of 3,000 Oregon Guardsmen overseas will be halted and the case will be brought to the courts.

    "Our hope for the campaign is that if just one state can get this legislation passed and stand up to these illegal federalizations of Guard troops, it will have a ripple effect across the country," Bolger told Truthout.

    The legislation's sponsors firmly believe it is still relevant under the Obama administration. Bush not only left Obama with a foreign policy disaster to clean up, according to Fisher, he also left him a "legal mess." The state legislation is intended to redirect war powers back to their legal order.

    "I have a great hope for Obama - I really believe he is many times better than Bush, in many ways," Fisher said. "But if it was illegal for Bush to demand the state Guard deploy to Iraq, it is for Obama as well. We can't let that precedent stand - that a president can federalize the Guard without Congressional approval."

    In fact, according to Scotch, the ascendancy of a new president with "a humane ethic and a sound view of the Constitution" opens up new possibilities for the BTGH movement, just as it does for health care advocates, environmentalists and civil rights activists. Scotch hopes that Obama might become the first president to endorse the War Powers Act of 1973.

    "The Bush years and the Iraq war experience teach us that the smart sharing of war powers is still the best response to an increasingly dangerous world," Scotch said.

  

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Maya Schenwar is Executive Director of Truthout.

Comments

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The National Guard is for

The National Guard is for guarding the homeland in times of war or disaster. It is not to be used for foreign adventures. If the executive, with the support of Congress, feels that we need to send troops to other countries, a universal draft should be instituted and the reserve be used until the drafted troops are able to replace them. This is the structure that we once had in place and we must put back. No more "back door" draft by using and abusing the National Guard.

The writer has failed to

The writer has failed to address the National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2007, which goes a step further and authorizes the President and/or his designee to deploy the National Guard not only into foreign wars, but also on U.S. soils. In other words, the governors are no longer the Commanders of their states' National Guard units, over Washington, even in domestic emergencies, unless the Presidents "lets them be." That deserves some changing, as does the practice of a Sec. of Defense and the big Generals conspiring to turn public opinion against the promise of the President to UNoccupy Iraq within 16 months. They have just launched a media attack on the President's plan, which is one of the major things that got him elected. Support him, people! E-mail your representatives in D.C. and in your states and tell them to SUPPORT him or be fired! After the past couple of weeks, it appears to me that a LOT of them need to be fired! If there is not an election soon enough for you, circulate recall petitions or whatever you can do. We have HAD it with these BigGovCorp moguls of wealth and power relegating us to the status of slaves. Time to ACT!

The states ought to take the

The states ought to take the guard back. If our federal government wants to fight a war, let them raise an army. Bush got away with that for too long.

Here is a link to a video of

Here is a link to a video of the Launch of Bring the Guard Home, It's The Law!" at the National Pressa Club in Washington DC http://www.whynotnews.org/2009/01/27/bring-the-guard-home-its-the-law/

I agree with Charles. A few

I agree with Charles. A few years ago the prevailing wisdom was that we could be warmongers without consequences - that we could could torture, kill and maim without the American public becoming squeemish because we had such an overwhelming force ("shock and awe"/"blitzkrieg") that we didn't need to obey international law. With an obedient mainstream news the American public would never be forced to acknowledge the reality of what we were actually doing. The final piece of the puzzle was a military comprised of poor people and gung-ho rednecks, all of whom had been duped into thinking that all they had to do was sign up and the government would foot the bill for college, teach them valuable skills for the workplace, and they'd be barely making a personal commitment while feeling like heroes. We could never enact a draft because the American people would be forced to actually pay attention to the news. These soldiers couldn't bitch about being manipulated because, afterall, they signed up for it, right? This is why we sign up 18-year-olds. Who else would have a short enough memory to actually believe military propaganda. The American people are actually pretty peace-loving, as soon as they have to face consequences for a war that was only meant for someone else's profit. The shine on the freshly minted propaganda is finally starting to wear off.

Has anyone else noticed that

Has anyone else noticed that they've stopped airing the commercials about "just one weekend a month"?

About time the States stood

About time the States stood for their rights! The National Guard needs protection from the Feds to eliminate abuse of powers.

Should be just, "Guard,"

Should be just, "Guard," since they are no longer doing much to guard THIS country from anything... What a waste of local people, protecting citizens of this country from what, exactly? An invasion of Terrorists? You're kidding, right?

The logic was flawed in the

The logic was flawed in the first place, and the minute those "items" were not found is when the Guard should have been sent home. The thing that makes this National Guard mother (son to Iraq all of 2005) the most angry is that the lily-livered coward Bush hid in the Guard during Vietnam, but felt okay about sending our sons and daughters to do what he would not--and for a lie! I do all I can to urge Congress to prosecute Bush & Co for their war crimes.

The National Defense

The National Defense Authorization Act for FY 2007 written about by a previous commentator is an anti-Constitutional "law". That is, it contradicts specific Constitutional language and subverts the built in constraints at the basis of our democratic system that provides checks and balances via States control their own militias. Moreover, most of legislation passed during the criminal Bush Administration worked to subvert the Constitution. This and so many other "wartime provisions" were aimed at war profiteering at the expense of citizen's rights. Very few, if any, would stand serious democratic scrutiny. They must be repealed. The Patriot Act; The Military Commissions Act; Violent Radicalization & Homegrown Terrorism Protection Act of 2007; The Insurrection Act as part of the 2007 Defense Appropriations Bill (HR 5122) are but a few. They hide behind the pretext of security while being corrosive of democratic law and processes. People should check out this truly un-American legislation. These measures boggle the mind in their anti-democratic intent. They are mostly still in place and the forces behind this legislation are still an active threat to our democracy.

What I expect most Governors

What I expect most Governors are even more concerned about is out of which treasuries, federal or states, will the money come to replace all the equipment that has been worked to death in Iraq and Afghanistan. The cost to replace this equipment is many billions of dollars and to date this cost has been purposely ignored by the Bush administration and by Congress. Let's see if the Republicans support states rights in this matter or continue their hypocrisy of the past 8 years, starting with the 2000 vote recount in Florida they so effectively blocked.

I have a nutty idea. Why

I have a nutty idea. Why don't we bring the National Guard home? We could offset this by making the Army do their "fighting" abroad rather than having their guns focused on all of us in direct violation of the Posse Comitatus Act. Afterall, isn't maintaining a police state in protection of der fatherland the police's job?

This campaign started just

This campaign started just over a year ago, but already has almost half the country involved. Please go to www.bringtheguardhome.org to see if your state has a campaign. If they do--get involved. If they don't--let us help you start one!

Doubtless, the Federal

Doubtless, the Federal government will continue to ignore the constitution, Law and States Rights issues believing absolutely, as it does, in its power to compel compliance. There is a fiction here that the States have any power at all in what has become the new 'National Security' Super State that resides in Washington D.C. This is no longer a Republic. For all intents and purposes, the President is a dictator and the people have no intrinsic, constitutionally protected rights. The recent financial 'bailouts' prove our transformation into a dictatorship.

I have heard from so many

I have heard from so many gun nuts that they need their pistols and rifles to preserve their freedoms should a national govt theaten them. I have asked why I should not have an M1 tank or F16, if we want to do any realistic "ensuring"and gotten smirks because there personal pleasure and manlihood is the only reason for these guns. OK, I can live with that. But the point is, we, the states, do need a "well regulated militia" in case another Bush type administration uses the misbegotten laws now on the books which let the President disregard posse comitatis intent. We need the Guard at home, that is, under control of the states and its peoples. Try to get your neighbor interested in this. Ain't important. To me it was one of the most important violations of the Constitution, because Bush could have with his signature, taken control of all reasonable resistance to a coup.

We in Military Families

We in Military Families Speak Out urge people in other states to press from the National Guard to be brought back to the United States right now, to serve the emergency needs of the people in their states. Highland Park and Teaneck NJ town councils passed resolutions supporting the resolutions in the State Legislature (SJR55 and AJR104). Bring the Guard Home, it's the law!!!