Congress members split over US attack on Iran
The following are statements from key legislators:
Senate armed services committee chair Roger Wicker, a Mississippi Republican, applauded the operation but cautioned that the US now faced 'very serious choices ahead'.
Senate foreign relations committee chair Jim Risch, Republican of Idaho, said, 'This war is Israel's war, not our war, but Israel is one of our strongest allies and is disarming Iran for the good of the world.' Risch added, 'This is not the start of a forever war. There will not be American boots on the ground in Iran.'
'This is not constitutional,' conservative Republican Representative Thomas Massie of Kentucky said on social media. He was referring to the power of Congress to declare war on foreign countries.
US House of Representatives speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican of Louisiana, said, 'The president gave Iran's leader every opportunity to make a deal, but Iran refused to commit to a nuclear disarmament agreement.
'The president's decisive action prevents the world's largest state sponsor of terrorism, which chants 'Death to America,' from obtaining the most lethal weapon on the planet.'
Senate majority leader John Thune, a South Dakota Republican, said, 'I stand with President Trump.'
Democratic Representative Rashida Tlaib of Michigan, a daughter of Palestinian immigrants: 'President Trump sending US troops to bomb Iran without the consent of Congress is a blatant violation of our constitution. The American people do not want another forever war. We have seen where decades of endless war in the Middle East gets us — all based on the lie of 'weapons of mass destruction.''
Democratic Senator Tim Kaine of Virginia said the US public 'is overwhelmingly opposed to the US waging war on Iran' and said Trump displayed 'horrible judgment'.
Max Rose, a former Democratic member of Congress who now is a senior adviser to the progressive veterans' group 'VoteVets', said, 'Trump's decision to launch direct strikes against Iran without congressional authorisation is illegal.' Rose added, 'This conflict is his and the Republicans who have abrogated all their responsibilities.'
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