Stand up for the facts!

Our only agenda is to publish the truth so you can be an informed participant in democracy.
We need your help.

More Info

I would like to contribute

A Trump nuclear strike against North Korea: constitutional or not?

Manuela Tobias
By Manuela Tobias August 10, 2017

President Donald Trump’s threats against North Korea and tweets about the United States’ powerful nuclear arsenal have raised the specter -- however small -- of nuclear war.

But some members of Congress argue that the current process by which the president can order a nuclear strike is illegal.

"Our view is the current nuclear launch approval process is unconstitutional," U.S. Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif, said on CNN on Aug. 8, 2017. Lieu has filed a proposal to require congressional approval before the president could launch a first nuclear strike.

"Right now one person can launch thousands of nuclear weapons, and that's the president. No one can stop him. Under the law, the secretary of defense has to follow his order. There's no judicial oversight, no congressional oversight," Lieu said.

Lieu, a colonel in the Air Force reserves, is generally correct about the president’s power to initiate a nuclear strike. The constitutionality, however, is a more complex question. We won’t rate Lieu’s claims on the Truth-O-Meter, but we did think it was important to provide context to his statement and the law.

Nuclear launch process

The current nuclear launch approval process was enshrined after the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan to end World War II. President Harry Truman signed the Atomic Energy Act of 1946 to give the president full responsibility over the nation’s nuclear arsenal.

(As an aside, Lieu’s argument wouldn’t apply in cases when Congress formally declares war, since the president has a longstanding right as commander-in-chief to decide how to wage war.)

So the current nuclear launch approval process doesn’t include the same checks and balances as other executive branch decisions. The launch process allows the president to use nuclear weapons with a single verbal order. Some experts believe the president doesn’t need to consult with the defense secretary. The president’s order cannot be overridden.

Unconstitutional?

The U.S. Supreme Court has never weighed in on the question of whether the current nuclear launch approval process is legal. Not surprisingly, we heard mixed opinions from legal scholars.

The Constitution allows the president to use significant military force without congressional approval if it’s in self-defense. But would it be constitutional for the president to respond to a conventional bombing with a nuclear strike? What about a state-sponsored act of terror?

These questions have no definitive answer.

The murkiness is due in some part to the framers not foreseeing the capability for mass destruction that nuclear weapons guarantee, said Samuel Issacharoff, a constitutional law professor at New York University. But, he said, the narrow design of a founding document doesn’t necessarily make a president’s unilateral military action — nuclear or non-nuclear — unconstitutional.

"The best one can say is that the constitutional scheme may be poorly designed for modern circumstances," he said.

War Powers Resolution

The discussion gets even more complicated if the president considers a pre-emptive strike rather than a retaliatory strike.

The Constitution does give Congress the authority to declare war, which it hasn’t done since World War II. But presidents before Trump — and including Trump with his April airstrikes in Syria — have initiated war or war actions without express congressional permission.

In 1973, Congress passed the War Powers Resolution requiring that in the absence of a war declaration by Congress, the president report to Congress within 48 hours of introducing armed forces into hostilities and remove forces within 60 days if Congress does not approve.

A simple reading, then, could give Trump a 48-hour window of unilateral power.

But the War Powers Resolution hasn’t stopped longer military interventions. President Bill Clinton sent U.S. troops into the former Yugoslav republic of Kosovo in 1999, and they remained in place despite the failure to receive congressional authorization.

The Korean War

There’s a final wrinkle to all of this: Some experts say that Trump could circumvent the need for Congress to declare war against North Korea, because the United States is already at war with North Korea.

The Korean War (1950-3) ended with an armistice, but the two parties never signed the peace treaty scheduled in Geneva in 1954 formally ending the war.

"In the absence of some new legal instrument that makes fighting the war improper, you can say that the president has whatever authority he had before," said Saikrishna Prakash, a law professor at the University of Virginia.

But there’s a caveat to that, too. Congress approved funding to fight the Korean War, but never formally declared war. That was done by the United Nations.

Share the Facts
-1
-1
-1
PolitiFact rating logo PolitiFact Rating:
Follows 1946 law
“Right now one person can launch thousands of nuclear weapons, and that's the president. No one can stop him."
in a CNN interview
Tuesday, August 8, 2017
Sign Up For Our Weekly Newsletter

Our Sources

Ted Lieu, CNN, Aug. 8, 2017

Lieu.House.gov, Press release, Sept. 27, 2016

Email interview with Jack D’Annibale, spokesman for Ted Lieu, Aug. 9, 2017

PolitiFact, "Trump's Syria airstrikes: constitutional or not?," April 7, 2017

PolitiFact, "To justify ISIS airstrikes, Obama using legislation he wants repealed," Sept. 18, 2014

Bloomberg Politics, "To Launch a Nuclear Strike, Donald Trump Would Follow These Steps," Jan. 20, 2017

William J. Perry, Tweet, Aug. 8, 2017

Washington Post, "No one can stop President Trump from using nuclear weapons," Dec. 1, 2016

Slate, "Are We at War With North Korea?," May 26, 2009

Email interview with Noah Feldman, constitutional law professor at Harvard Law, Aug. 9, 2017

Email interview with Samuel Issacharoff, Reiss Professor of Constitutional Law at New York University School of Law, Aug. 9, 2017

Email interview with Kermit Roosevelt, law professor at University of Pennsylvania Law School, Aug. 9, 2017

Email interview with Steve Vladeck, law professor at the University of Texas School of Law, Aug. 9, 2017

Email interview with Bruce G Blair, research scholar at Princeton University’s Program on Science and Global Security, Aug. 9, 2017

Email interview with Alex Wellerstein, nuclear weapons historian and blogger, Aug. 10, 2017

Phone interview with Saikrishna Prakash, James Monroe Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Virginia, Aug. 9, 2017

Email interview with Bruce Cumings, history professor at the University of Chicago, Aug. 10, 2017

Browse the Truth-O-Meter

More by Manuela Tobias

A Trump nuclear strike against North Korea: constitutional or not?