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Congress Must Approve Offensive Military Action

Full Title:
A joint resolution to direct the removal of United States Armed Forces from hostilities within or against the Islamic Republic of Iran that have not been authorized by Congress.

Summary#

This resolution would require the President to pull U.S. Armed Forces out of fighting in or against Iran unless Congress votes to allow it. Its goal is to prevent an unauthorized war with Iran while still allowing self-defense and defensive help to allies.

  • Requires Congress to approve any offensive U.S. military action in or against Iran.
  • Orders removal of U.S. forces from hostilities that lack that approval.
  • Still allows the U.S. to defend its people, troops, and facilities from attack.
  • Keeps intelligence sharing in place, including with Israel and other partners.
  • Allows the U.S. to help Israel and other nations with defensive measures and equipment.

What it means for you#

  • Service members and military families

    • Lower chance of sudden U.S. combat with Iran unless Congress votes for it.
    • Missions in the region would focus more on defense, surveillance, and deterrence than offensive strikes on Iran.
    • Clearer rules about when the U.S. can enter a fight with Iran.
  • General public

    • More say through elected members of Congress before the U.S. enters a new war.
    • The U.S. could still respond if Americans or U.S. sites are attacked.
  • Allies and partners

    • The U.S. could continue sharing intelligence.
    • The U.S. could still provide defensive aid (like missile defense support) to help protect their territory from Iranian or proxy attacks.
  • Taxpayers

    • If it prevents new combat operations against Iran, it could limit some military spending tied to those fights. Offensive actions would need a separate vote by Congress.

Expenses#

No publicly available information.

Proponents' View#

  • Restores Congress’s constitutional role to decide on war, instead of leaving it to the executive alone.
  • Reduces the risk of an unplanned or escalating war with Iran.
  • Protects U.S. troops by avoiding unauthorized combat.
  • Increases transparency and public debate before major military action.
  • Keeps strong defenses: self-defense, intelligence sharing, and defensive help to allies are still allowed.

Opponents' View#

  • Could limit the President’s ability to act quickly against urgent threats from Iran or its proxy groups.
  • May signal weakness and reduce deterrence, inviting more aggression.
  • Creates uncertainty about what counts as “hostilities” or “against Iran,” which could slow needed actions.
  • Might complicate support to allies in fast-moving crises.
  • Seen by some as unnecessary because the President already has authority to defend U.S. forces and facilities.