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News ID: 76185
Publish Date : 15 February 2020 - 22:31

Memo Shows Trump Lied About Assassination

WASHINGTON (Dispatches) -- The White House told Congress on Friday that President Trump authorized the strike last month that martyred Iran’s most important general to respond to attacks that had already taken place, contradicting the president’s claim that he acted in response to an imminent threat.
In a legally mandated, two-page unclassified memo to lawmakers, the White House asserted that the terrorist strike that martyred Gen. Qassem Soleimani was "in response to an escalating series of attacks in preceding months” by Iran and Iraqi militias.
"The purposes of this action were to protect United States personnel, to deter Iran from conducting or supporting further attacks against United States forces and interests, to degrade Iran’s and Quds Force-backed militias’ ability to conduct attacks, and to end Iran’s strategic escalation of attacks,” said the report, which was transmitted on Friday to the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
The document confirmed what lawmakers had privately suspected as the Trump administration has offered a shifting set of justifications for the assassination of General Soleimani in Baghdad — taken with no congressional consultation — which brought the United States and Iran to the brink of war.
"This official report directly contradicts the president’s false assertion that he attacked Iran to prevent an imminent attack against United States personnel and embassies,” Representative Eliot L. Engel of New York, the chairman of the Foreign Affairs Committee, said in a statement. "The administration’s explanation in this report makes no mention of any imminent threat and shows that the justification the president offered to the American people was false, plain and simple.”
In the days after the strike that martyred General Soleimani, U.S. administration officials gave a variety of rationales for the action as they confronted questions about why Trump undertook such a provocative move that could incite an escalation with a "dangerous rival”, The New York Times said.
Trump and other top officials, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, said the strike was conducted in response to imminent threats to American lives, but they declined to provide any evidence, leaving lawmakers in both parties irate.
Pressed over several days, Pompeo conceded that the United States did not have specific intelligence on where or when an attack would take place. Trump claimed that four American embassies had been targeted for attacks, but under questioning during a television interview, Pentagon chief Mark Esper said he had seen no evidence of that.
Trump later insisted on Twitter that General Soleimani had, in fact, been planning an imminent attack on United States forces, but added, "it doesn’t really matter because of his horrible past!”
The report on Friday came a day after the Senate passed a resolution aimed at restraining Trump’s war-making powers

with Iran. The rare bipartisan vote illustrated the depth of the skepticism in both parties about the president’s strategy, and lawmakers’ frustration with the administration’s refusal to consult Congress on military matters. The House is expected to pass the measure soon, sending it to the president’s desk. Trump’s advisers have said he will veto it.
The White House infuriated lawmakers in early January when it sent Congress a formal notification of the drone strikes required under the War Powers Act. Lawmakers had expected it to lay out a legal justification for the strike, but the entire document was classified, and officials who read it said it contained no information on future threats or an imminent attack.
Lawmakers were further angered by a series of briefings delivered by top administration officials that they described as insulting and demeaning, complaining that they were dismissed for questioning the administration’s strategy.
Congressional Democrats have coalesced behind a new push to repeal the 2002 law, which was passed to authorize a military response to Saddam Hussein and his government. They said Trump’s broad reading of it illustrated how the statute has been stretched and distorted to accommodate missions that Congress never envisioned when it was debated.
"To suggest that 18 years later this authorization could justify killing an Iranian official stretches the law far beyond anything Congress ever intended,” Engel said.
The House last month voted to repeal the 2002 law, with lawmakers in both parties arguing that the authorization had become outdated and been abused by presidents as a blank check to circumvent Congress in taking military action.