US Senate moves to halt the war with Iran — a first in history
For the first time since 1973, both chambers pass a resolution directing the President to end a conflict. A rare institutional moment.
Something rare happened in Washington: the Senate passed a war powers resolution directing President Trump to end the conflict with Iran. The historic detail is this — for the first time since the War Powers Resolution of 1973, both chambers of Congress have approved a concurrent resolution telling a president to end a military action.
In parallel, on the diplomatic track, the head of the UN’s atomic agency said Iran’s nuclear enrichment sites would be inspected under an interim deal. So there’s domestic political pressure and there are channels opening abroad, all at once.
Why it matters
Without weighing in on who’s right, what you’re seeing is Congress reasserting a power it often leaves dormant: the say over war. Resolutions like this tend to run into a presidential veto, so the practical effect may be limited — but the institutional signal is large. Worth watching the next step.
Image: Wikimedia Commons