This episode dismantles a basic—but now politically weaponized—misunderstanding: that the President can use military force simply by designating a group as a Foreign Terrorist Organization under the Immigration and Nationality Act. That claim is legally false, constitutionally indefensible, and is being pushed in bad faith to justify unlawful military strikes, including the recent attacks on drug boats in the Caribbean.
We walk through the actual statutory framework of the INA:
* what an FTO designation requires,
* what legal consequences attach to it,
* why those consequences are immigration and financial in nature, not military.
We also clarify the Treasury Department’s Specially Designated Global Terrorist label—an entirely separate sanctions regime under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. It has zero bearing on authorizing military operations.
Then we turn to the one domestic-law instrument that does authorize force:the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) passed after 9/11.That statute narrowly authorized operations against the people and organizations responsible for the attacks—essentially al-Qaeda and its lineage. It has nothing to do with drug cartels, nothing to do with immigration law, and nothing to do with unilateral presidential claims of inherent wartime authority.
The bottom line:Rebranding immigration tools as war powers is unconstitutional, reckless, and illegal.If the United States is going to wage war on a new target, Congress must pass a new AUMF. Shortcuts aren’t lawful. And they aren’t acceptable.
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