Biden’s ‘Sustained Campaign’ in Yemen Is Illegal and Pointless

That isn’t going to stop the administration from pressing ahead with military action that the president himself has acknowledged isn’t working.

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The U.S. and Britain continue to wage war on Yemen while pretending that they aren’t at war:

The U.S. and U.K. launched strikes against eight Houthi targets Monday, the two countries said, in a continuing bid to stop the Yemeni rebel group’s attacks on ships transiting the Red Sea.

The strikes marked the second major assault by a joint force of the two countries and the eighth time overall that the U.S. has targeted the group, which is armed, funded and supported by Iran.

The latest round of attacks is part of the Biden administration’s plan for a “sustained campaign” that Congress has never debated or authorized. The U.S. has dubbed the campaign Operation Poseidon Archer, and the administration has no idea when it will be concluded. According to the Post, U.S. officials say that they “don’t expect that the operation will stretch on for years like previous U.S. wars in Iraq, Afghanistan or Syria,” but that is not much of a consolation when the administration can’t even admit that it is fighting a war.

Knowing how our government tends to prolong and alter its military missions once they start, it isn’t hard to imagine the current campaign morphing into something else over time. The troops that are now in Syria were sent there to fight ISIS, but now they stay there to oppose Iranian influence and serve as targets for local militias. U.S. forces have been fighting in Somalia for more than a decade and a half, and there is no sign that they are leaving anytime soon. Once U.S. forces are involved in hostilities in a country, there is considerable resistance to extricating them. Even if the new war in Yemen turns out to be the limited one that the administration claims that it is, that won’t change the fact that it is illegal and unauthorized. If support for the Saudi coalition war on Yemen merited a war powers challenge (and it absolutely did), direct military action in Yemen definitely requires that Congress step up and put a stop to the president’s illegal war.

Besides being illegal, the new war in Yemen is pointless. No one expects that the campaign will achieve its stated goal, but that isn’t going to stop the administration from pressing ahead with military action that the president himself has acknowledged isn’t working. Spencer Ackerman, author of Reign of Terror, commented on Biden’s determination to continue the strikes:

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Daniel Larison is a contributing editor for Antiwar.com and maintains his own site at Eunomia. He is former senior editor at The American Conservative. He has been published in the New York Times Book Review, Dallas Morning News, World Politics Review, Politico Magazine, Orthodox Life, Front Porch Republic, The American Scene, and Culture11, and was a columnist for The Week. He holds a PhD in history from the University of Chicago, and resides in Lancaster, PA. Follow him on Twitter.

3 thoughts on “Biden’s ‘Sustained Campaign’ in Yemen Is Illegal and Pointless”

  1. Biden and Sunak are starting a war in Yemen to defend Israel’s genocide, war and ethnic cleansing in Gaza. Netanyahu hopes they help Israel spread the war to the rest of the ME. Zelensky wishes the war in Ukraine would get as much coverage as the war in Gaza.

  2. Well it is unlikely to help, or achieve its stated objective. It isn’t pointless this is an election year

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