
Senator Kirsten Gillibrand's office issued the following:
Washington, DC – U.S.
 Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, Ranking Member of the Senate Armed Services
 Personnel Subcommittee, today wrote an op-ed for the New York Daily 
News on her landmark legislation, the War Powers Reform Resolution, that would restore Congress's leadership in the nation’s foreign policy and finally put an end to unauthorized forever wars.
Specifically, Gillibrand’s War Powers Reform Resolution would amend the War Powers Resolution to
 ensure no Authorizations for the Use of Military Force (AUMFs) are used
 to continue perpetual wars that compromise the country’s national 
security. In order to deploy armed forces into hostilities, the 
legislation would require the president to provide Congress with a clear
 objective for military action; evidence that the use of the United 
States’ armed forces is necessary, appropriate, and proportional to the 
mission; a finite list of adversaries; and the names of the countries 
where the US military will deploy. Critically, the legislation would 
place a two-year limit on any future authorization, and deny 
appropriations for unauthorized wars. It would also repeal the 2001 and 
2002 AUMFs.
The full text of Gillibrand’s op-ed may be found here and below.
Last week, I returned from a trip to 
Afghanistan and Kuwait, where I visited our brave service members and 
thanked them for their many sacrifices during the season of 
Thanksgiving. These troops are some of the best and brightest our 
country has to offer. I am grateful and humbled by their dedication to 
serving our country.
Their continued deployment in places like 
Afghanistan, however, is a reminder that they are fighting a war that 
has gone on for almost two decades and has expanded to over a dozen 
countries — nearly all of it without specific congressional approval.
Congress granted President George W. Bush 
the 2001 Authorization for the Use of Military Force, or AUMF, for a 
quick military response to the terrorists who attacked us on our own 
soil. A year later, it passed the AUMF authorizing war in Iraq. But 
Bush, and the presidents who followed, used these authorizations to 
involve our military in other conflicts far beyond their original 
intents. Service members have fought and died in Niger, Syria and Yemen 
on the basis of these authorizations.
The founders of our country gave only 
Congress the power to declare war. They understood both the danger of 
giving any one person too much power and the fact that when war is 
waged, it is the American people who bear the burden and should thus 
have their voices heard. In recent years, Congress has relinquished its 
power to authorize war against new enemies or in new countries, and 
failed to meet its fundamental responsibility to hold presidents 
accountable for endless and unnecessary wars.
A healthy recent exception was when the 
House and Senate voted to end U.S. military support for the disastrous 
Saudi war in Yemen. But this exception is a unique circumstance that 
proves the rule.
Of course, we know that terrorism has not 
been extinguished. Even after the death of Osama Bin Laden and the 
decimation of Al Qaeda’s leadership, terrorists aiming to harm Americans
 have continued to metastasize. One need look no further than ISIS, 
which has inspired or claimed terror attacks in the United States, 
Canada, United Kingdom, Germany, France and more.
But meeting the terror threat does not 
require sending U.S. troops to fight foreign battles. Today, terrorists 
recruit and plan online, and they have struck us and our allies 
regardless of who physically controls a country.
To combat terrorism, we must leverage the 
sophisticated strategies that are America’s advantage. We have the 
best-trained intelligence professionals, quickest reaction forces, and 
top military assets deployed around the world. There is no geography we 
cannot reach on short notice. Our toolbox of diplomacy, alliances and 
development assistance has served us for decades, and we must double 
down on these tools once again.
We also can put an end to these forever 
wars by passing my legislation, the War Powers Reform Resolution. It 
would reinstate Congress’ authority to review military action from the 
president and end the manipulation of congressional authorizations for 
use of military force.
My legislation would repeal the 2001 and 
2002 AUMFs, eliminating the ability of President Trump or any future 
president to continue the nearly two-decades-old wars our service 
members are still fighting. It would limit all future AUMFs to two years
 and require the president to provide Congress with the specific 
military objective, enemy and location for the military action, along 
with a clear justification for that action.
It would also renew Congress’ power to end
 wars by allowing them to narrow or repeal an AUMF through the same 
expedited procedures used for creating one. Lastly, it would limit the 
use of congressionally appropriated funds to support only the actions 
authorized under the AUMF, restricting actions beyond its scope.
It is time to reclaim Congress’ full 
foreign policy and national security role by changing the way military 
action is authorized. Endless wars, and ill-advised deployments, must be
 things of the past. Instead, focused and deliberate military action 
must be used sparingly and only when we need it most. We owe it to our 
service members, their families, and to the American people.
 
