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CONGRESS SMONGRESS: White House Appears to Reserve Right to Strike Syria Without Congressional Approval

For the past two days, the White House press corps has pressed White House Press Secretary Jay Carney for some indication of how President Obama‘s deliberations on a response to Syria‘s large-scale use of chemical weapons will turn out. At Tuesday’s daily briefing, Fox News’ Ed Henry appears to have shaken loose a morsel of the administration’s thinking when he asked Carney about a 2007 statement by then-Senator Barack Obama, that a president only has constitutional authority to strike militarily if there is “an actual or imminent threat to the nation.”

While Carney refused to speculate about Congress’ role in authorizing a hypothetical response elsewhere in the briefing, his response to Henry seems to hint that the administration reserves the right to engage Syria militarily, without authorization from Congress.

Henry began by quoting a portion of a 2007 Boston Globe candidates’ questionnaire, in which then-Senator Obama said that “The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation, and asked “Does the President still agree with that?”

“Absolutely,” Carney replied, adding “but you are trying to get me to engage in a discussion about a decision that has…”

“Now it’s not about hypotheticals,” Henry interrupted. “We are within days, or even hours of the President making a decision, correct?”

Carney carefully constructed his answer from other answers he has given these past two days. “It is correct that the President is working with his national security team to respond to the clear violation of an international norm, by the Syrian regime, with the use of chemical weapons against civilians,” carney said. “It is clearly in the United States’ national security interest that norm be maintained, because the consequences of that standard dissolving are enormous, and detrimental to the interests of the United States, and detrimental to the international community, and partners in the region and the world at large.”

“Candidate Obama said ‘an actual or imminent threat to the nation,’” Henry pressed. “Do you believe that exists?”

“I believe, absolutely, allowing the use of chemical weapons on a significant scale to take place, without a response, would present a significant challenge,” Carney said, with a hesitation, “or threat to the United States’ national security.”

“Not just our allies in the region, but the United States?” Henry asked.

“Correct,” Carney replied.

Read more: mediaite.com