Getting your player ready...
WASHINGTON — The next time the president goes to war, Congress should be consulted and vote on whether it agrees, according to a bipartisan study group chaired by former secretaries of state James Baker III and Warren Christopher.
In a report released Tuesday, the panel says the law governing the nation’s war powers has failed to promote cooperation between the executive and legislative branches. It says the 1973 resolution should be repealed and replaced with legislation that would require the president to inform Congress of any plans to engage in “significant armed conflict” or non-covert operations lasting longer than a week.
Congress would act within 30 days, either approving or disapproving.



