Senate rebukes Trump on Saudi, backs war
powers resolution
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[March 14, 2019]
By Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Republican-led
U.S. Senate on Wednesday approved a resolution seeking to end U.S.
support for the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in the war in Yemen, in a
rebuke of President Donald Trump's policy toward the kingdom.
The vote was 54-46 in the Senate, more than the 51 needed to pass in the
100-member Senate, as seven Republicans joined Democrats in backing the
measure. The war powers resolution seeks to end any U.S. military
involvement in the conflict, including providing targeting support for
Saudi air strikes, without authorization from Congress.
The four-year-long civil war in Yemen, which pits the Saudi-led
coalition against Houthi rebels backed by Iran, has killed tens of
thousands of people and spawned what the United Nations calls the
world's most dire humanitarian crisis, with the country on the brink of
famine.
Backers of the resolution, including a handful of Trump's fellow
Republicans as well as Democrats, argued that U.S. involvement in Yemen
violates the constitutional requirement that Congress, not the
president, should determine when the country goes to war.
"We're helping a foreign power bomb its adversaries in what is
undoubtedly, irrefutably, a war," said Republican Senator Mike Lee, who
sponsored the resolution, urging a 'yes' vote.
The Yemen vote could be only the first of two major setbacks for Trump
this week, as senators are due to vote tomorrow on a resolution
disapproving of his use of his emergency powers to pay for a wall on the
border with Mexico, even though Congress has not approved it.
The resolution must still be approved by the House of Representatives to
be sent to the White House, which said earlier on Wednesday that Trump
plans a veto. It would be the first of his two-year-long presidency.
MESSAGE TO TRUMP - AND RIYADH
Democrats and Republicans reintroduced the resolution two weeks ago as a
way to send a strong message to Riyadh - and to Trump - about the
humanitarian disaster in Yemen. Many lawmakers also want to push Trump
to demand a stronger response from the Saudi government to the murder of
Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi at a Saudi consulate in Turkey in
October.
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Trump has held back on criticizing Saudi Arabia, calling them an
important strategic ally and counterbalance to Iran in the region.
He has also touted Saudi purchases of U.S. defense equipment as a
generator of American jobs.
Resolution opponents argued that support for the Saudi-led coalition
is not an appropriate use of the war powers act limiting the
president's ability to send troops into action, because U.S. forces
are not actively engaged in fighting.
Some also contended that stopping U.S. support would help Iran, and
potentially prolong the conflict by ending Washington's ability to
influence Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, a partner in
the conflict, to pursue a sustainable political settlement.
"We need to stay engaged with the limited engagement that we have,"
said Senator Jim Risch, the Republican chairman of the Foreign
Relations Committee. He also said the resolution "sets a bad
precedent" because the United States is not directly involved in
Yemen.
The Senate had approved the war powers resolution in December,
during the last Congress, the first time such a measure had passed
the chamber. But Republicans, who controlled the House until
January, did not let it come up for a vote.
With the Democrats in control, the House passed its own version of
the resolution in February, but a procedural issue meant the House
must vote on the Senate's version of the measure.
Overcoming a veto would require two-thirds majorities in both the
Senate and House, more votes than it has garnered so far.
(Reporting by Patricia Zengerle; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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