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WASHINGTON — On Wednesday, 74 days after U.S. forces joined the military operation in Libya, President Barack Obama seemed to run out of goodwill on Capitol Hill. A group of both liberals and conservatives, defying the leaders of both parties, threw their support behind a bill to pull the U.S. military out of the Libya operation. That prospect led GOP leaders to shelve the bill before it came to a vote.

That episode signaled how abruptly the politics of U.S. war-making have changed, as the intervention in Libya follows a bloody, weary decade in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Now, a Democratic president has asked the country to support a new military action and missed a legal deadline that required him to get Congress’ authorization. In response, an anti-war movement has appeared in an unlikely place: a House dominated by the Republican right.

“We are in control in the House, and we want something on the floor,” said Rep. John Campbell, R-Calif., one of a number of conservatives who called Wednesday for a showdown with Obama. “Put a resolution up, and let us express . . . to the president that ‘You no longer have the authority of this Congress to conduct military operations in that country.’ “

Since the beginning of the Libyan operation, congressional leaders have been quietly supportive of Obama — but mostly just quiet. In the Senate, a resolution in support of the president is still waiting for a vote.

In the House, GOP leaders had said little on the subject, even after Obama missed a deadline set in the 1973 War Powers Resolution. That law required him to obtain congressional permission within 60 days, a deadline that passed last month.

Kevin Smith, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, explained his boss’ reticence: “His intention is not to undermine the commander in chief, at a time when we have troops in harm’s way.”

But also on Wednesday, discontent with that military operation — and with war-making in general — seemed to boil over.

An early warning had come the week before, when the House narrowly voted down a proposal to demand a speedy transition of U.S. forces out of Afghanistan. In 2010, a similar bill garnered 162 votes in defeat, including nine Republican votes. This time, it still lost — but with 204 votes, including 26 Republican votes.

On Wednesday, the bill at issue was far more drastic. Introduced by Rep. Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, it would demand that Obama withdraw forces from the Libyan operation within 15 days. That would be a crippling loss for the NATO-led campaign.

The resolution looked, a week before, like a long shot. Then, on Wednesday, it wasn’t.

“There’s been disquiet for a long time,” said Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., one of those who supported it. “Republicans have been too eager to support some military ventures abroad. And this, I think, is perhaps a little more consistent with traditional conservatism.”

Conservatives expressed support for the bill in a closed meeting, but GOP leaders put off the vote. Instead, they said they would gather all 200-plus House Republicans to discuss Libya again this afternoon.

At the White House on Wednesday, press secretary Jay Carney said only that Obama would wait to see what Congress does.

“We feel strongly that the president has acted in a way that is consistent with the War Powers Resolution,” Carney said.

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