The Martial Law Act of 2006
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
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Martial law
is perhaps the ultimate stomping of freedom. And yet, on September
30, 2006, Congress passed a provision in a 591-page bill that will
make it easy for President Bush to impose martial law in response
to a terrorist incident. It also empowers him to effectively
declare martial law in response to what he or other federal officials
label a shortfall of public order whatever that
means.
It took only
a few paragraphs in a $500 billion, 591-page bill to raze one of
the most important limits on federal power. Congress passed the
Insurrection Act in 1807 to severely restrict the presidents
ability to deploy the military within the United States. The Posse
Comitatus Act of 1878 tightened those restrictions, imposing a two-year
prison sentence on anyone who used the military within the United
States without the express permission of Congress. (This act was
passed after the depredations of the U.S. military throughout the
Southern states during Reconstruction.)
But there
is a loophole: Posse Comitatus is waived if the president invokes
the Insurrection Act.
The Insurrection
Act and Posse Comitatus Act aim to deter dictatorship while permitting
a narrow window for the president to temporarily use the military
at home. But the 2006 reforms basically threw any concern about
dictatorial abuses out the window.
Section 1076
of the Defense Authorization Act of 2006 changed the name of the
key provision in the statute book from Insurrection Act
to Enforcement of the Laws to Restore Public Order Act.
The Insurrection Act of 1807 stated that the president could deploy
troops within the United States only to suppress, in a State,
any insurrection, domestic violence, unlawful combination, or conspiracy.
The new law expands the list of pretexts to include natural
disaster, epidemic, or other serious public health emergency, terrorist
attack or incident, or other condition and such a condition
is not defined or limited.
One might
think that given the experience with the USA PATRIOT Act and many
other abuses of power, Congress would be leery about giving this
president his biggest blank check yet to suspend the Constitution.
But that would be naïve.
The new law
was put in place in response to the debacle of the federal response
to Hurricane Katrina. There was no evidence that permitting a president
far more power would avoid future debacles, but such a law provides
a comfort blanket to politicians. The risk of tyranny is irrelevant
compared with the reduction of risk of embarrassment to politicians.
According to Washington, the correct response to Katrina is not
to recognize the failure of relying on federal agencies a thousand
miles away but rather to vastly increase the power of the president
to dictate a solution, regardless of whether he knows what he is
doing and regardless of whether local and state rights are trampled.
The new law
also empowers the president to commandeer the National Guard of
one state to send to another state for as many as 365 days. Bush
could send the South Carolina National Guard to suppress anti-war
protests in New Haven. Or the next president could send the Massachusetts
National Guard to disarm the residents of Wyoming, if they resisted
a federal law that prohibited private ownership of semi-automatic
weapons. Governors control of the National Guard can be trumped
with a simple presidential declaration.
Section 1076
had bipartisan support on Capitol Hill, including support from Sen.
Carl Levin (D-Mich.), Sen. John Warner (R-Va.), Sen. Ted Kennedy
(D-Mass.), and Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-Calif.), chairman of the House
Armed Services Committee. Since the law would give the feds more
power, it was very popular inside the Beltway.
On the other
hand, every governor in the country opposed the changes. Sen. Patrick
Leahy (D-Vt.), the ranking Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee,
warned on September 19, 2006, that we certainly do not need
to make it easier for presidents to declare martial law. Leahys
alarm got no response. Ten days later, he commented in the Congressional
Record, Using the military for law enforcement goes against
one of the founding tenets of our democracy.
A U.S. Enabling
Act
The new law
vastly increases the danger from the actions of government provocateurs.
If there is an incident now like the first bombing of the World
Trade Center in February 1993, it would be far easier for the president
to declare martial law even if, as then, it was an FBI informant
who taught the culprits how to make the bomb. Even if the FBI masterminds
a protest that turns violent, the president could invoke the incident
to suspend the Constitution.
Martial
law is a euphemism for military dictatorship. When foreign
democracies are overthrown and a junta establishes martial law,
Americans usually recognize that a fundamental change has occurred.
Perhaps some conservatives believe that the only change when martial
law is declared is that people are no longer read their Miranda
rights before they are locked away. Martial law means:
Obey soldiers commands or be shot. The abuses of military
rule in Southern states during Reconstruction were legendary, but
they have been swept under the historical rug.
Section 1076
is an Enabling Act-type legislation something which purports
to preserve law and order while formally empowering the president
to rule by decree.
Bush can commandeer
a states National Guard any time he declares a state
has refused to enforce applicable laws. Does this refer to
the laws as they are commonly understood or to the laws
after Bush fixes them with a signing statement? Unfortunately,
it is not possible for Americans to commandeer the federal government
even when Bush admits that he is breaking a law (such as the Anti-Torture
Act).
Section 1076
is the type of law that would probably be denounced
by the U.S. State Departments Annual Report on Human Rights
if enacted by a foreign government. But when the U.S. government
does the same thing, it is merely another proof of benevolent foresight.
The comfort blanket on Section 1076 is that the powers
will not be abused because the president will show more concern
with the Bill of Rights than Congress did when it rubberstamped
this provision. This is the same pass the buck on the Constitution
that worked so well with the PATRIOT Act, the McCain Feingold Campaign
Reform Act, and the Military Commissions Act. As long as there is
hypothetically some branch of the government that will object to
oppression, no one has the right to fear losing his liberties.
The
military on the home front
Section 1076
is more ominous in light of the Bush administrations long
record of Posse Comitatus violations. Since 2001, the Bush administration
has accelerated a trend of using the military as a tool in the nations
domestic affairs. From its support of the Total Information Awareness
surveillance vacuum cleaner, to its use of Pentagon spy planes during
the Washington-area sniper shootings in 2002, to the Pentagons
seizures of Americans financial and other private information
without a warrant, the Bush administration has not hesitated to
use military force and intimidation at home whenever convenient.
And Americans may have little or no idea of how far the military
has actually gone on the home front, given the Bush teams
obsessive secrecy.
The
Pentagon has sent U.S. military intelligence agents on domestic
fishing expeditions. In 2004, two U.S. Army intelligence agents
descended on the University of Texass law school in Austin.
They entered the office of the Journal of Women and the Law
and demanded that the editors turn over a roster of the people who
attended a recent conference on Islam and women. The editors denied
having a list; the behavior of one agent was described as intimidating.
The agents then demanded contact information for the student who
organized the conference, Sahar Aziz. University of Texas law professor
Douglas Laycock commented,
We
certainly hope that the Army doesnt believe that attending
a conference on Islamic law or Islam and women is itself ground
for investigation.
Military
officials later declared that U.S. Army intelligence agents had
overstepped their bounds. But this did not stop the Bush administration
from having a provision inserted in a bill passed in secret session
by the Senate Intelligence Committee that would allow military intelligence
agents to conduct surveillance and recruit informants in the United
States. Wired.com reported,
Pentagon
officials say the exemption would not affect civil liberties and
is needed so that its agents can obtain information from sources
who may be afraid of government agents.
The
provision would authorize military agents to go undercover and never
inform their targets that they were dealing with a G-man. Kate Martin,
director of the Center for National Security Studies, denounced
the provision:
This ... is giving them the authority to spy on Americans. And its
all been done with no public discussion, in the dark of night.
The
controversy over the amendment scuttled its enactment, though it
is unclear whether that has deterred the military from expanding
its domestic spying.
There
is no Honesty-in-Absolute-Power mandate in the federal statute books.
The more power government seizes, the more easily it can suppress
the truth. There is nothing to prevent a president from declaring
martial law on false pretexts any more than there is to prevent
him from launching a foreign war on false pretenses. And when the
lies become exposed years later, it could be far too late to resurrect
lost liberties.
April
10, 2008
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation. Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2008 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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