Deified Caesar
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
As 2006 begins,
we seem to be at a not-completely-unfamiliar crossroads in the long
history of the American imperial presidency. It grew up, shedding
presidential constraints, in the post-World War II years as part
of the rise of the national security state and the military-industrial
complex. It reached its constraint-less apogee with Richard Nixon's
presidency and what became known as the
Watergate scandal an event marked by Nixon's attempt
to create his own private national security apparatus which he directed
to secretly commit various high crimes and misdemeanors for him.
It was as close as we came until now to a presidential
coup d'état that might functionally have abrogated the Constitution.
In those years, the potential dangers of an unfettered presidency
(so apparent to the nation's founding fathers) became obvious to
a great many Americans. As
now, a failed war helped drag the President's plans down and,
in the case of Nixon, ended in personal disgrace and resignation,
as well as in a brief resurgence of congressional oversight activity.
All this mitigated, and modestly deflected, the growth trajectory
of the imperial presidency for a time.
The "cabal,"
as Lawrence
Wilkerson, Colin Powell's chief of staff at the State Department,
has called Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and various of their neoconish
pals, stewed over this for years, along with a group of lawyers
who were prepared, once the moment came, to give a sheen of legality
to any presidential act. The group of them used the post-9/11 moment
to launch a wholesale campaign to recapture the "lost" powers of
the imperial presidency, attempting not, as in the case of Nixon,
to create an alternate national security apparatus but to purge
and capture the existing one for their private purposes. Under George
Bush, Dick Cheney, and their assorted advisers, acolytes, and zealots,
a virtual cult of unconstrained presidential power has been constructed,
centered around the figure of Bush himself. While much has been
made of feverish Christian fundamentalist support for the President,
the real religious fervor in this administration has been almost
singularly focused on the quite un-Christian attribute of total
earthly power. Typical of the fierce ideologues and cultists now
in the White House is Cheney's new Chief of Staff David Addington.
The Washington
Post's Dana Milbank described him this way back in 2004
(when he was still Cheney's "top lawyer"):
"[A]
principal author of the White House memo justifying torture of terrorism
suspects... a prime advocate of arguments supporting the holding
of terrorism suspects without access to courts[,] Addington also
led the fight with Congress and environmentalists over access to
information about corporations that advised the White House on energy
policy. He was instrumental in the series of fights with the Sept.
11 commission and its requests for information... Even in a White
House known for its dedication to conservative philosophy, Addington
is known as an ideologue, an adherent of an obscure philosophy called
the unitary executive theory that favors an extraordinarily powerful
president."
For these
cultists of an all-powerful presidency, the holy war, the "crusade"
to be embarked upon was, above all, aimed at creating a President
accountable to no one, overseen by no one, and restricted by no
other force or power in his will to act as he saw fit. And so, in
this White House, all roads have led back to one issue: How to press
ever harder at the weakening boundaries of presidential power. This
is why, when critics concentrate on any specific issue or set of
administration acts, no matter how egregious or significant, they
invariably miss the point. The issue, it turns out, is never primarily
to take just two areas of potentially illegal administration
activity torture or warrantless surveillance. Though each
of them had value and importance to top administration officials,
they were nonetheless primarily the means to an end.
This is why
the announcement of (and definition of) the "global war on terror"
almost immediately after the 9/11 attacks was so important. It was
to be a "war" without end. No one ever attempted to define what
"victory"
might actually consist of, though we were assured that the war itself
would, like the Cold War, last generations. Even the recent sudden
presidential announcement that we will now settle only for "complete
victory" in Iraq is, in this context, a distinctly limited goal
because Iraq has already been defined as but a single "theater"
(though a "central" one) in a larger war on terror. A war without
end, of course, left the President as a commander-in-chief-without-end
and it was in such a guise that the acolytes of that "obscure philosophy"
of total presidential power planned to claim their "inherent"
constitutional right to do essentially anything. (Imagine what might
have happened if their invasion of Iraq had been a success!)
Having established
their global war on terror, and so their "war powers," in the fall
of 2001, top administration officials then moved remarkably quickly
to the outer limits of power by plunging into the issue of
torture. After all, if you can establish a presidential right to
order torture (no matter how you manage to redefine
it) as well as to hold captives under a category of warfare
dredged up from the legal dustbin of history in prisons
especially established to be beyond the reach of the law or the
oversight of anyone but those under your command, you've established
a presidential right to do just about anything imaginable. While
the get-tough aura of torture may indeed have appealed to some of
these worshippers of power, what undoubtedly appealed to them most
was the moving of the presidential goalposts, the changing of the
rules. From Abu Ghraib on, the results of all this have been obvious
enough, but one crucial aspect of such unfettered presidential power
goes regularly unmentioned.
As you push
the limits, wherever they may be, to create a situation in which
all control rests in your hands, the odds are that you will create
an uncontrollable situation as well. From torture to spying, such
acts, however contained they may initially appear to be, involve
a deep plunge into a dark and perverse pool of human emotions. Torture
in particular, but also unlimited forms of surveillance and any
other acts which invest individuals secretly with something like
the powers of gods, invariably lead to humanity's darkest side.
The permission to commit such acts, once released into the world,
mutates and spreads like wildfire from top to bottom in any command
structure and across all boundaries. You may start out with a relatively
small program of secret imprisonment, torture, spying or whatever,
meant to achieve limited goals while establishing certain prerogatives
of power, but in no case is the situation likely to remain that
way for long. This was, perhaps, the true genius of the American
system as imagined by its founders the understanding that
any form of state power left unchecked in the hands of a single
person or group of people was likely to degenerate into despotism
(or worse), whatever the initial desires of the individuals involved.
Sooner or
later, the hubris of taking all such powers up as your own is likely
to prove overwhelming and then many things begin to slip out of
control. Consider the developing scandal over the National Security
Agency's wiretapping and surveillance on presidential order and
without the necessary (and easily obtained) FISA court warrants.
In this case, the President has proudly admitted to everything.
He has essentially said: I did it. I did it many times over. We
are continuing to do it now. I would do it again. ("I've
reauthorized this program more than 30 times since the September
the 11th attacks, and I intend to do so for so long as our nation
is for so long as the nation faces the continuing threat
of an enemy that wants to kill American citizens.") In the process,
however, he has been caught in a curious, potentially devastating
Presidential lie, now being used against him by Democratic pols
and other critics.
While in Buffalo,
New York, for his reelection campaign in April 2004, in one of those
chatty "conversations" this one about the Patriot Act
that he had with various well-vetted groups of voters, the President
said the following:
"There
are such things as roving wiretaps. Now, by the way, any time you
hear the United States government talking about wiretap, it requires
a wiretap requires a court order. Nothing has changed, by
the way. When we're talking about chasing down terrorists, we're
talking about getting a court order before we do so. It's important
for our fellow citizens to understand, when you think Patriot Act,
constitutional guarantees are in place when it comes to doing what
is necessary to protect our homeland, because we value the Constitution."
By that time,
as he has since admitted, the President had not only ordered the
warrantless NSA wiretapping and surveillance program and recommitted
to it many times over, despite resistance
from officials in the Justice Department and even, possibly,
from then-Attorney General John Ashcroft, but had been deeply, intimately
involved in it. (No desire for classic
presidential "plausible deniability" can be found here.) So
this, as many critics have pointed out, was a lie. But what's more
interesting and less noted is that it was a lie of
choice. He clearly did not make the statement on the spur of the
moment or in response to media questioning (despite
the claims in some reports). He wasn't even "in conversation"
in any normal sense. He was simply on stage expounding in a prepared
fashion to an audience of citizens. So it was a lie that, given
the nature of the event (and you
can check it out yourself on-line), had to be preplanned. It
was a lie told with forethought, in full knowledge of the actual
situation, and designed to deceive the American people about the
nature of what this administration was doing. And it wasn't even
a lie the President was in any way forced to commit. No one had
asked. It was a voluntary act of deception. Now, he is claiming
that these comments were meant to be "limited" to the Patriot act
as the NSA spying program he launched was "limited" to only a few
Americans both surely absurd claims. ("I
was talking about roving wiretaps, I believe, involved in the
Patriot Act. This is different from the N.S.A. program. The N.S.A.
program is a necessary program. I was elected to protect the American
people from harm. And on Sept. 11, 2001, our nation was attacked.
And after that day, I vowed to use all the resources at my disposal,
within the law, to protect the American people, which is what I
have been doing, and will continue to do.")
In other words,
by his own definition of what is "legal" based on that "obscure
philosophy" (and with the concordance of a chorus of in-house lawyers),
but not on any otherwise accepted definition of how our Constitution
is supposed to work, the President has admitted to something that,
on the face of it, seems to be an impeachable act and he
has been caught as well in the willful further act of lying to the
American people about his course of action. Here, however, is where
– though so many of the issues of the moment may bring the Nixon
era to mind things have changed considerably. Our domestic
politics are now far more conservative; Congress is in the hands
of Republicans, many of whom share the President's fervor for unconstrained
party as well as presidential power; and the will to impeach is,
as yet, hardly in sight.
In
his news conference defending his NSA program, the President took
umbrage when a reporter asked:
"I
wonder if you can tell us today, sir, what, if any, limits you believe
there are or should be on the powers of a President during a war,
at wartime? And if the global war on terror is going to last for
decades, as has been forecast, does that mean that we're going to
see, therefore, a more or less permanent expansion of the unchecked
power of the executive in American society?"
"To
say ‘unchecked power,'" responded an irritated Bush, "basically
is ascribing some kind of dictatorial position to the President,
which I strongly reject."
How the nation
handles this crossroads presidential moment will tell us much about
whether or not "some kind of dictatorial position" for our imperial,
imperious, and impervious President will be in the American grain
for a long, long time to come.
January
5, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel and The
End of Victory Culture.
Copyright
© 2006 Tom Engelhardt
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