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OAN Commentary by:Β Adonis HoffmanΒ
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Every time the U.S. launches a military strike, conducts a covert operation, withdraws troops, imposesΒ sanctionsΒ or recognizes a foreign government, a chant arises from the rafters.Β
Policymakers,Β punditsΒ and the press go on television to assert that the president βowesβ the American people an explanation. Their emphatic tone suggests an enforceable duty and implies that theΒ president has somehow shirked his responsibility by notΒ disclosingΒ what is happening. Yet our Constitution imposes no suchΒ mandate,Β however compelling the moral claims of the day may seem.
Americans have become accustomed toΒ receiving a fulsome description from theΒ president of sensitive military operations underway.Β We ask, βWhat is the objective? What is the plan? What is the end game?β as if the administration were duty-bound toΒ discloseΒ all ofΒ those things at once. Not only have we come to expect an explanation,Β but weΒ even demand it.Β
Yet in reality, itΒ isΒ unrealisticΒ to expect theΒ president to fully disclose the totality of AmericanΒ objectivesΒ for all the world to see.
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When it comes to military action, U.S. law, custom and precedent all play a key part in what, when and how American presidents convey critical messages of state to the citizenry. While candor and respect from theΒ Oval OfficeΒ should be the guiding light for anyΒ administration, Congress has the only legitimate claim to hearing firstΒ βΒ and fullyΒ βΒ from theΒ executive.Β Β
Article IIΒ establishesΒ the president as commander-in-chief and chief executive. It also requires that the president βfrom time to time give to the Congress Information of the State of the Union.βΒ So the duty toΒ discloseΒ by theΒ president runs to Congress, not directly to the public.Β Β
When it comes to military movements and the deployment of troops and resources, the key governing statute isΒ theΒ War Powers Resolution of 1973. That law requires executive branch consultation with Congress βin every possible instanceβ before introducing U.S. forces into hostilities. It also requires a report to Congress withinΒ 48 hoursΒ and imposes a 60- to 90-day withdrawalΒ clock,Β absent congressional authorization. Again, theΒ presidentβs obligation is to Congress. The law does not require a public explanation to citizens, although it isΒ a best practice of responsible leadership.Β
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Our national security law adds another layer of interpretation. Presidents have broad authority to classify sensitive information under executive orders governing classified material. The Supreme Court inΒ has describedΒ the president as the βsole organβ of the nation in foreign affairs. Even as Congress asserts its authorization and appropriationsΒ jurisdiction, the executiveΒ retainsΒ an unfettered right to discern and declare what can be classified.
Thus, if a president concludes that military action should be covert and classified, it remains hidden from the American public, although not from Congress.
Our history is replete with covert operations,Β ranging fromΒ the 1953 CIA-involved coup in Iran, which overthrew Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh, to Cold War regimeβchange missions, of which theΒ U.S.Β attemptedΒ 72Β between 1947 and 1989,Β includingΒ 64 covert actions. During the 1980s, Americans were shielded from knowledge ofΒ Operation Cyclone,Β a CIA program arming and funding AfghanΒ fighters against the Soviet Union. Recent interventions include theΒ 2011 Libya operation, where U.S. and NATO forces helped topple Moammar Gadhafi.Β Β
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The Framers intentionally vested significant foreign policy authority in a single executive for speed and unity. At the same time, they required periodic reporting to Congress to preserve accountability.
Courts historically defer to theΒ executive in foreign affairs.Β InΒ Goldwater v. Carter, justices declined to intervene in a dispute over treaty termination. InΒ Zivotofsky v. Kerry, theΒ court recognized exclusive presidential authority over diplomatic recognition. Even so, the focus of judicial review has centered on constitutional power, not public communication, and certainly not whether the president adequately explained his reasoning to the public.
We are a government of laws, not men, but American political custom continues to influence what happens in our system. Our modern democratic tradition has created,Β perhaps rightfully, expectations that our commander in chief will step forward in a public address to explain the actions of governmentΒ β if not while things are happening, certainly right after.
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Presidents who commit forces, endΒ warsΒ or reshape alliances usually address the nation at some point proximate to the events. They are wont to do so not because a statute commands it, but because their own political legitimacy and sustainability in a republic depends on public understanding and consent of the governed.Β
History shows that pattern clearly.Β Abraham LincolnΒ defended Civil War actionsΒ in speeches and letters.Β Franklin RooseveltΒ used fireside chatsΒ to prepare American for global conflict.Β John F. KennedyΒ publicly explainedΒ the strategy during the Cuban Missile Crisis. George H.W. BushΒ addressed the nationΒ before the 1991 Gulf War.Β George W. BushΒ spoke repeatedlyΒ after September 11 and beforeΒ the Iraq War.Β Barack ObamaΒ explained intervention in LibyaΒ and the policy of targeted killing.Β Joe BidenΒ addressed the publicΒ regardingΒ withdrawal from Afghanistan.
NoneΒ wereΒ legally required or compelled to deliver national addresses. Yet all understood that major foreign policy decisions in a democracy demand public justification.Β
Our precedents, however, are not uniform. Covert CIA operations often remain undisclosed. Drone programs have been mostly classified for years. Special operations may be acknowledged only after successful completion. Presidents frequentlyΒ balance transparency against operational security βΒ as they should.Β
Secrecy has a necessary and essential role in the process. It is embedded in nationalΒ security structure. Disclosure can compromise intelligence sources, reveal tacticΒ or weaken diplomatic leverage.Β The World War II axiomΒ βloose lips sink shipsβΒ may appear lightheartedΒ today, butΒ itΒ was quite real at the time.Β
By design, presidents are supposed toΒ operateΒ within a narrow corridor. Although they are not legally obligated to fully brief the public, their success ultimately relies upon public confidence. Explanation, even when not required by law, often becomes necessary to respect the citizenry and sustain that confidence.Β
In our always-on global media culture, theΒ president is best served by remaining discreet butΒ disclosingΒ what is necessary for Americans to feel valued, respected and informed. That reflects not only goodwill but also good governance.Β
(Views expressed by guest commentators may not reflect the views of OAN or its affiliates.)
Adonis HoffmanΒ is a lawyer, analyst, and independent counsel who served in senior roles at the FCC and in the U.S. House of Representatives
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