Undeclared conflict? America's battles with Iran-backed militia 
		escalate, again
		
		 
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		 [June 29, 2021] 
		By Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe 
		Biden's latest strikes against Iran-backed militia in Syria and Iraq 
		were not the first nor likely the last of his young presidency. 
		 
		For some of Biden's fellow Democrats, the crucial question is: does the 
		pattern of attacks and counter-attacks amount to an undeclared conflict?
		 
		 
		If it does, they say, there is a risk that the United States could 
		stumble into a direct war with Iran without the involvement of Congress, 
		an issue that is becoming more politically fraught after two decades of 
		"forever wars." 
		 
		"It's hard to argue, given the pace of attacks against U.S. troops and, 
		now, the increasing frequency of our responses, this isn't war," Senator 
		Chris Murphy, a Democrat who leads a key Senate foreign relations 
		subcommittee, told Reuters. 
		 
		"What we always worry about is that the United States slips into war 
		without the American public actually being able to weigh in." 
		 
		The two countries came close to the kind of conflict Democrats fear in 
		January 2020, when the United States killed a top Iranian general and 
		Iran retaliated with missile strikes in Iraq that caused brain injuries 
		in more than 100 U.S. troops. That followed a series of exchanges with 
		Iran-backed militias. 
		  
		
		  
		
		 
		In the latest round, U.S. fighter jets on Sunday targeted operational 
		and weapons storage facilities at two locations in Syria and one in 
		Iraq, in what the Pentagon said was a direct response to drone attacks 
		by militias against U.S. personnel and facilities in Iraq.  
		 
		On Monday, U.S. troops came under rocket fire in Syria in apparent 
		retaliation, but escaped injury. The U.S. military responded with 
		counter-battery artillery fire at rocket launching positions.  
		 
		"A lot of people suggest that the term 'forever war' is just emotive, 
		but it’s actually a decent descriptor of the kind of strike we saw again 
		(Sunday): no strategic goal, no endpoint in sight, just permanent 
		presence and tit-for-tat strikes," Emma Ashford, a resident fellow at 
		the Atlantic Council, said on Twitter. 
		 
		SALAMI-SLICE APPROACH  
		 
		The White House has stressed that Sunday's air strikes were designed to 
		limit escalation and deter future militia operations against U.S. 
		personnel. 
		 
		They were also legal, according to Biden. 
		 
		"I have that authority under Article Two and even those up on the Hill 
		who are reluctant to acknowledge that have acknowledged that's the 
		case," Biden said, referring to part of the U.S. Constitution that lays 
		out the powers of the president as commander-in-chief of the armed 
		forces.  
		 
		Brian Finucane, a former official with the Office of the Legal Adviser 
		at the State Department, said the current administration - like others 
		before it - do not see the episodes as part of an ongoing conflict. 
		 
		He called it a "salami-slice" approach. 
		 
		"They would characterize these as intermittent hostilities. We had one 
		strike back in February and then the 60-day War Powers clock essentially 
		was reset," said Finucane, now at the International Crisis Group. 
		 
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			U.S. Army soldiers look at an F-16 fighter jet during an official 
			ceremony to receive four such aircraft from the United States, at a 
			military base in Balad, Iraq, July 20, 2015. REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudani/File 
			Photo/File Photo 
            
			
			  
            He drew a comparison to the tanker wars with Iran in 
			the 1980s, when the Reagan administration viewed "each round of 
			fighting as sort of a closed event." 
			 
			But experts say that view does not take into account that 
			Iran-backed militia are waging a sustained - and escalating - 
			campaign against the U.S. military presence in Iraq. 
			 
			Michael Knights at The Washington Institute for Near East Policy 
			cautioned that the militias' use of drones appeared increasingly 
			dangerous, employing GPS guidance and precisely targeting U.S.-led 
			coalition intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance assets, and 
			missile defenses. 
			 
			"In quantity and quality, Iraqi militia attacks on coalition points 
			of presence in Iraq are increasing. Unless deterrence is restored, 
			U.S. fatalities are increasingly likely," Knights said. 
			 
			Beyond pushing the United States out of the region, the militias’ 
			secondary goal is to signal to the United States, the Iraqi 
			government and others their mastery of more advanced weaponry, like 
			the explosive-laden drones, said Phillip Smyth, also at The 
			Washington Institute for Near East Policy. 
			 
			"They live on some of the covert actions that they're doing," he 
			said.  
			 
			Members of Congress are currently working on repealing some of the 
			war authorizations that presidents from both parties have used to 
			justify previous attacks in Iraq, Syria and elsewhere. 
			 
			But that wouldn't necessarily prevent Biden or any other U.S. 
			president from carrying out defensive air strikes. 
			  
            
			  
			 
			After he was briefed by Biden's national security team, Murphy said 
			he remained concerned. U.S. troops were in Iraq to battle Islamic 
			State, not Iran-aligned militia. 
			 
			If Biden is wary of going to Congress for war powers, then perhaps 
			he needs to heed Americans' skepticism about interventions in the 
			Middle East, he said. 
			 
			"If Congress had a hard time authorizing military action against 
			Iranian-backed militias, it would largely be because our 
			constituents don't want it. And that's what's missing from this 
			debate," he said. 
			 
			(Reporting by Phil Stewart and Idrees Ali; additional reporting by 
			Jonathan Landay and Patricia Zengerle; Editing by Mary Milliken and 
			Sonya Hepinstall) 
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