FOLEY: BUSH IS DEADLY SERIOUS ABOUT KUWAIT

December 24, 1990

President Bush is genuinely adamant that Saddam Hussein must withdraw from Kuwait or face the military consequences, says US House Speaker Thomas Foley. ``I sit next to him at meetings,'' the Speaker. ``I am convinced that he's deadly serious. I don't think there's any posturing at all,'' he told reporters at a Monitor breakfast.

If President Bush intends to move militarily against Iraqi forces ``I think [he] should come to Congress and ask for'' its backing before initiating any attack, Foley said. The Washington State Democrat added that the president ``has a constitutional and legal obligation'' to ask for such support, probably in the form of a congressional resolution.

If a resolution were introduced in Congress that sought support for presidential policies in the Gulf, ``it is more likely that it would [pass] than that it would not,'' Foley said carefully.

``What he would clearly not get,'' Foley said of the president at another point, is unanimity. ``It will not be an overwhelming, total consensus supporting the president's going to offensive military action.''

How would he himself vote on such a resolution? Foley ducked the question: ``I don't think I'm going to make a decision on a resolution that hasn't been offered yet.'' He did point out that he has ``made no secret'' that he personally has supported the economic embargo.

If American troops moved against the Iraqi military, Congress would back them, Foley added: ``There is no question that if the president actually engages forces, the Congress will support the forces in the field.''

``The president has the clear power to make war,'' Foley said. ``Whether that's constitutionally appropriate or not is another question, a political and legal question.''