The latest threat issued by US president Donald Trump—to strike Iran’s power plants, bridges, and essential civilian infrastructure—should alarm not only America’s adversaries, but its own institutions. This is not a display of strength. It is a test of whether the United States still respects the legal and constitutional limits it so often demands of others.
Under
international humanitarian law, the deliberate targeting of civilian
infrastructure—especially facilities indispensable to civilian survival—raises
grave legal concerns.
Experts such
as Adil Haque have warned that such actions could cross into the territory of
war crimes if principles of distinction and proportionality are ignored.
The
consequences are not abstract. Amnesty International has outlined a grim chain
reaction: power outages leading to water shortages, hospitals incapacitated,
food systems disrupted, and millions exposed to preventable suffering. This is
not collateral damage; it is predictable human cost.
Equally
troubling is the rhetoric surrounding these threats—provocative, inflammatory,
and dismissive of the humanitarian fallout. Such language risks accelerating a
cycle of escalation in an already volatile region.
Analysts
including Omar Baddar have cautioned that the immediate victims would be
Iranian civilians, but the broader consequences—energy disruption, regional
instability, and global economic shock—would not respect borders.
Yet the most consequential silence is emanating
from Capitol Hill. The US Constitution vests the power to declare war in
Congress, not in unilateral presidential impulses. At moments of potential
overreach, the Senate is not a spectator; it is a safeguard. Voices like Chris
Murphy and Bernie Sanders have warned of the dangers of unchecked escalation,
but warnings alone do not constitute action.
This is a
defining institutional test. If the Senate fails to assert its authority now,
it risks normalizing a precedent where threats of large-scale attacks on
civilian infrastructure pass without scrutiny or restraint. That would not only
erode constitutional balance at home but also weaken America’s moral standing
abroad.
The choice
before the Senate is stark: act to uphold law and accountability, or remain
passive as dangerous lines are approached—and potentially crossed. History
rarely absolves inaction at such moments.
