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		 Obama 
		readying request to use force against Islamic State 
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		[February 10, 2015] 
		By Patricia Zengerle
 WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The White House 
		will ask Congress by Wednesday for new authority to use force against 
		Islamic State fighters, congressional aides said on Monday, paving the 
		way for lawmakers' first vote on the scope of a campaign that is already 
		six months old.
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			 The United States is leading an international coalition against 
			Islamic State, and President Barack Obama launched an air campaign 
			in August against the militant fighters, who have killed thousands 
			of people while seizing swaths of territory in Iraq and Syria. 
 The administration's failure so far to seek a formal Authorization 
			to Use Military Force for the campaign has caused some members of 
			Congress to express concern that it overstepped the president's 
			constitutional authority.
 
 Others have said that lawmakers should weigh in on an issue as 
			important as the use of military force.
 
 The administration has said the campaign is legal, based on 
			authorization passed under President George W. Bush in 2002 for the 
			Iraq War and in 2001 for fighting al Qaeda and associated groups.
 
 
			
			 
			Nancy Pelosi, leader of the House of Representatives' Democrats, 
			told reporters last week the White House would seek an authorization 
			that would last three years. She said there had not yet been 
			decisions about the geographic scope of an authorization or what 
			limits would be placed on combat troops - "boots on the ground."
 
 That issue is expected to be a major sticking point in debate. Many 
			Democrats want to bar sending in U.S. combat forces, but several 
			Republicans have insisted it would be inappropriate to limit 
			military commanders.
 
 Senator Bob Corker, the Republican chairman of the Senate Foreign 
			Relations Committee, said hearings on the administration's request 
			would start quickly.
 
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			The Obama administration had been in close consultations with 
			lawmakers before making its formal request, which could make the 
			approval process move more quickly, he said.
 "There have been serious consultations, and there will be more 
			serious consultations," he told reporters at the Senate.
 
 Obama is also expected to seek a repeal of the Iraq war 
			authorization, but not the 2001 authorization, which passed days 
			after the Sept. 11 attacks.
 
 Congressional aides told Reuters on Monday that was still the 
			expectation for Obama's request, given discussions between the 
			administration, lawmakers and congressional staffers. They requested 
			anonymity because they were speaking about private consultations.
 
 The White House has declined to comment on the timing or details of 
			the request.
 
 (Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Sandra Maler and Steve 
			Orlofsky)
 
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