Here’s an excerpt from an interview that Congressman Cline recently did with WFIR News in Roanoke:
Interviewer: How do you feel about the double strike on the alleged drug running boat near Venezuela? It was going back to kill two survivors, allegedly. Some are calling it a war crime. Did it cross a line? And does Congress, Congressman, need to have a say in what’s going on in Venezuela, especially with President Trump threatening to put boots on the ground?
Cline: We absolutely do have a say in what happens. We are the body that has the power to declare war. So we’re going to decide what happens down in Venezuela in terms of whether it’s necessary to declare war. But drugs are a huge problem in this country, and there’s so many families in our district have been affected by drug abuse, and we need to tackle it at the source. And the source is South America, Central America, where the drugs are grown and made and brought up. And so by targeting drug runners, which is what our president has done effectively, is a way to stop the drugs from hurting families here in the district. So I commend the president for going to the source and trying to target these drug runners, these narco terrorists, which they are, the cartels are targeting innocent American civilians. And these are agents of these drug cartels. And so I trust our intelligence. I’m on the Intelligence Committee. I’m getting another briefing on this very subject this week. And we’ll continue to make sure that laws are followed, the Constitution adhere to, but that we stop these drugs from killing our families here at home.
Interviewer: Do you think before I throw you back to Joe, do you have a problem with the double strike or was that in the within the purview of the assignment?
Cline: As I said, I’m confident that we are following the Constitution and the letter of the law as we target these drug runners. And so I’m going to continue to get this intelligence and continue to make sure that we do that as we target the source of this cause of death for so many families here in the Roanoke Valley.
Leaving aside Cline’s reflexive deference to Trump (what makes him “confident” that the administration is “following the Constitution and the letter of the law” when there is so much evidence to the contrary?), his professed concern about Sixth District families affected by drug abuse rings hollow if he refuses to acknowledge Trump’s monumental hypocrisy when it comes to drug criminals.
The Washington Post reports:
On President Donald Trump’s first full day in office this year, he pardoned Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht, who was convicted of creating the largest online black market for illegal drugs and other illicit goods of its time.
In the months since, he has granted clemency to others, including Chicago gang leader Larry Hoover and Baltimore drug kingpin Garnett Gilbert Smith. And last week, he pardoned former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernández, who had been sentenced to 45 years in prison for running his country as a vast “narco-state” that helped to move at least 400 tons of cocaine into the United States.
Overall, Trump — who campaigned against America’s worsening drug crisis and promised to crack down on the illegal flow of deadly drugs coming across the border — has pardoned or granted clemency to at least 10 people for drug-related crimes since the beginning of his second term, according to a Washington Post analysis. He also granted pardons or commutations to almost 90 others for drug-related crimes during the four years of his first term, the analysis showed.
At the same time, Trump has threatened military action against Venezuela over accusations that the country’s government is supporting the drug trade and has pushed the Pentagon to conduct targeted strikes on boats suspected of smuggling drugs in the Caribbean. The contrasting actions have come under fire from Democrats and other critics, who say Trump’s broad use of clemency contradicts promises to get tough on drugs.
What say you, Congressman?
