In a 32-page document delivered to Congress this week, the White House said that US forces involved in the Nato campaign were merely playing a supporting role. That role, it said, did not match the definition of "hostilities" as described under the War Powers Resolution of 1973. "US military operations are distinct from the kind of 'hostilities' contemplated by the resolution's 60-day termination provision," it said. The US role in Libya involves helping Nato aircraft with refuelling operations and assisting with intelligence-gathering, said the White House. The Obama administration insists that the US is not engaged in sustained fighting or "active exchanges of fire with hostile forces" that put US troops at risk.
This appears to be a minor support role to help NATO enforce a no fly restriction over Libyan airspace.
It is nothing like our military's role in Iraq or Afghanistan, nor is it like our role in Somalia or Bosnia. As long as there is a strict limitation on the amount of troops and equipment being used I don't have a problem with this. It would be a stretch to say that use of an armed drone to destroy jets on the ground in conjunction with a NATO peacekeeping operation constitutes an "act of war."





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