The Year of Living Dangerously
by
Tom Engelhardt
by Tom Engelhardt
2006 is sure
to be the year of living dangerously for the Bush administration
and for the rest of us. In the wake of revelations of warrantless
spying by the
National Security Agency, we have already embarked on what looks
distinctly like a constitutional crisis (which may not come to a
full boil until 2007). In the meantime, the President, Vice President,
Secretaries of Defense and State, various lesser officials, crony
appointees, acolytes, legal advisors, leftover neocons, spy-masters,
strategists, spin doctors, ideologues, lobbyists, Republican Party
officials, and congressional backers are intent on packing the Supreme
Court with supporters of an "obscure
philosophy" of unfettered Presidential power called "the unitary
executive theory" and then foisting a virtual cult of the imperial
presidency on the country.
On the other
hand, determined as this administration has been to impose its version
of reality on us, the President faces a traffic jam of reality piling
up in the environs of the White House. The question is: How long
will the omniscient and dominatrix-style fantasies of Bushworld,
ranging from "complete victory" in Iraq to non-existent constitutional
powers to ignore Congress, the courts, and treaties of every sort,
triumph over the realities of the world the rest of humanity inhabits.
Will an unconstrained presidency continue to grow or not?
Here are just
a few of the explosive areas where Bush v. Reality is likely to
play out, generating roiling crises which could chase the President
through the rest of this year. Keep in mind, this just accounts
for the modestly predictable, not for the element of surprise which
as with Ariel Sharon's recent stroke remains ever present.
Who, after
all, can predict what will hit our country this year. From a natural-gas
shock to Chinese
financial decisions on the dollar, from oil terrorism to the
next set of fierce fall hurricanes, from the bursting of the housing
bubble to the arrival of the avian flu, so much is possible but
one post-9/11 truth, revealed with special vividness by hurricane
Katrina, should by now be self-evident: Whatever the top officials
of this administration are capable of doing, they and their cronies
in various posts throughout the federal bureaucracy are absolutely
incapable of (and perhaps largely uninterested in) running a government.
Let's give this phenomenon a fitting name: FEMAtization. You could
almost offer a guarantee that no major problem is likely to arise
this year, domestic or foreign, that they will not be quite incapable
of handling reasonably, efficiently, or thoughtfully to hell
with compassionately (for anyone who still remembers that museum-piece
label, "compassionate conservative," from the Bush version of the
Neolithic era). So here are just four of the most expectable crisis
areas of 2006 as well as three wild cards that may remain in the
administration's hand and that could chase all of us through this
year adding up, in one way or the other, to the political tsunami
of 2006.
1. Iraq.
Bush's war (and occupation) of choice has shadowed him like a boogeyman
from the moment that banner over his head on the aircraft carrier
USS Abraham Lincoln announced "Mission Accomplished" and
he declared "major combat operations" at an end on May 2, 2003.
On that very day, in news hardly noticed by a soul, one of the first
acts of insurgency against American troops occurred and seven
GIs were wounded in a grenade attack in Falluja. As either a
prophet of the future or a master of wish-fulfillment, the President
was never more accurate than when, in July 2003, he taunted the
Iraqi guerrillas, saying, "Bring
'em on." Well, they've been bringing it on ever since.
Unwilling
to face the realities of its trillion-dollar
folly of a war and dealing with presidential polling figures
entering free fall, the administration did the one thing it has
been eternally successful at it launched a fantasy offensive,
not in Iraq, but here at home against the American people and especially
the media. A series of aggressive speeches, news conferences, spin-doctored
policy papers, and attacks on the opposition as "defeatists
who refuse to see that anything is right," all circling around an
election likely to put an Islamic theocratic regime in power in
Baghdad, pumped up the President's polling numbers modestly and,
more importantly, caused reporters and pundits to back off, wondering
yet again whether we weren't finally seeing the crack of light at
the end of that tunnel. (Wasn't the President implicitly admitting
to the odd mistake in Iraq policy? Wasn't he secretly preparing
his own version of withdrawal? Weren't the Iraqis turning some corner
or other?)
It's been
a strange, brain-dead media era in which, far more than the American
people, the pundits never seem to learn. Most pathetic of all, in
what might have been a straightforward parody of the famed moment
when a group of senior advisors from past administrations ("the
Wise Men") met with President Lyndon Johnson and urged him to reconsider
his Vietnam policy, the Bush administration gathered together 13
former secretaries of state and defense (including Robert McNamara
and Melvin Laird from the Vietnam era) for
a photo with the President. Also offered was an Iraq dog-and-pony
show involving painfully upbeat reports from Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs Gen. Peter Pace and Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalizhad.
In return, the 13 former officials, including Colin Powell and Madeleine
Albright, got a full 510 minute "interchange" with the President
or (as the
Dreyfuss Report did the math) all of 23 seconds of consultation
time per secretary. It was the Wise Men (and Woman) Photo Op and
it caught something of Bushworld and its peculiar allure.
However complicated
the situation in Iraq may be, here's an uncomplicated formula for
considering administration policy there in the coming year. After
every "milestone" from the killing of Saddam Hussein's sons and
the capture of Saddam himself through the "handing over" of sovereignty
and various elections, things have only gotten worse. Remind me
why it should be different this time? In fact, while the President
warned endlessly about violence before the recent election,
the violence since has been far worse with 28 Americans and hundreds
of Iraqis dying in just a single tumultuous four-day period. Or
put another way, whatever government may be formed in Baghdad's
Green Zone, it will preside over a Bush-installed failed state,
utterly corrupt (billions of dollars have already been stolen from
it) and thoroughly inept, incapable of providing its people with
anything like security. In fact, just the other day, two
suicide bombers, dressed in the uniforms of "senior police officers"
and with the correct security passes, made it through numerous checkpoints
and into the well-guarded compound of the Interior Ministry where
they blew themselves and many policemen up. Iraq's government, such
as it is, has also proved incapable of delivering electricity or
potable water, or of running its only industry of significance,
the oil business (overseen by, of all people, Ahmed Chalabi), which
is now producing less energy than in the worst moments of the Saddam
Husseinsanctions era. The country is already in a low-level
civil war; its American-supported military made up of rival
militias preparing to engage in various forms of ethnic cleansing;
its police evidently heavily infiltrated by the insurgency; and
its most important leaders are Shiite theocrats closely allied with
Iran. The insurgency itself shows not the slightest sign of lessening.
Meanwhile,
at home, figures as disparate as Congressman John Murtha and former
National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski are demanding a military
disengagement by the end of 2006 and in Brzezinski's case calling
on the Democrats to come out against the war. ("Finally,
Democratic leaders should stop equivocating while carping. Those
who want to lead in 2008 are particularly unwilling to state clearly
that ending the war soon is both desirable and feasible.")
Iraq is a
minefield for the Bush administration. Prepare for it to blow this
year.
2. Trials
(and Tribulations) of Every Sort. Of course some of the description
of Iraq above has become increasingly applicable to the Bush administration
as well. It is, after all, run by fundamentalists and presidential
cultists, presiding over what increasingly looks like a FEMA-tized,
failed state, riddled with corruption, and at war with itself. In
2006, Bush and his associates face a quagmire of potential scandals,
exposures of corrupt and illegal practices, and trials and tribulations
of all sorts. There is, as a start, Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald,
still on the Plame case job.
After a brief
flurry of activity in November when the National
Law Journal's 2005 "lawyer of the year" convened a new grand
jury to hear further evidence, the Fitzgerald investigation dropped
off just about everyone's radar screen. Fitzgerald, however, is
a dogged character, playing things very close to the vest. No one
can know what exactly he will do, but he is reportedly
preparing material on Karl Rove for the new grand jury. It would
be reasonable to expect that, sometime in the next two or three
months, he might indeed indict "Bush's brain" and then, rather than
winding down his investigation, turn from those who attempted to
obstruct his view of the Plame case to the case itself. In other
words, if you happen to be a betting soul, you might consider putting
your money on the possibility that the Plame case investigation
will reach ever higher in the administration and Fitzgerald
seems carefully shielded within the Justice Department from administration
tampering.
At the same
time, even though former House Majority Leader Tom (the Hammer)
DeLay got hammered and officially ended his bid to regain his leadership
post last week, the Texas and Washington parts of the Delay corruption
scandal are likely only to grow and spread. In Texas, DeLay's money-laundering
case was not, despite his deepest wishes, thrown out of court and
is now expanding into an
election spending scandal involving the National Republican
Congressional Committee and linked to the Abramoff case. Lobbyist
Jack Abramoff, who plied endless (mostly
Republican) congressional reps with favors and perks in return
for influence, pled guilty last week to public corruption charges
and turned state's evidence. He has claimed he possesses incriminating
material on 60
congressional lawmakers (as well as many of their aides).
Last week,
the Washington
Post reported, federal prosecutors turned "up the pressure on
a former senior aide to Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Tex.) in the clearest
signal yet that the sprawling public corruption investigation is
now focusing on House Republican leadership offices." Though the
career prosecutors from the Justice Department's Office of Public
Integrity who turned Abramoff, seem to have been reasonably insulated
from administration pressure, the case threatens to hit the Republican
Congress hard, just as the Plame case threatens to empty the higher
realms of administration power. It looks like at least a limited
number of cases will be brought against lawmakers this election
year. Unlike Fitzgerald, however, the career prosecutors in the
Abramoff case are overseen by a notorious Bush recess appointee,
Alice
Fisher. Her nomination was opposed even in a Republican-controlled
Senate as she is without prosecutorial experience (though she has
some experience in the subject area of Guantanamo interrogations
and is tied to Tom DeLay's defense team). So look for future fireworks,
conflicts, scandals, and plenty of leaks on this one.
In the meantime,
the courts will be busy indeed. Just count a few of the ways: The
question of whether Bush's warrantless NSA wiretaps have polluted
other terrorism cases will hit the courts this year, while the kangaroo
"military" tribunals in Guantanamo have just started up again, and
various cases having to do with the limits of presidential power
(or the lack of them) are likely to arrive, not to speak of the
four Texas gerrymandering cases (think, once again, Tom DeLay) the
Supreme
Court has agreed to take up before the 2006 elections that could
put five now-Republican seats in the House up for grabs. (A court
already tarred by the 2000 election might rule surprisingly on this
one.)
3. War
with the Bureaucracy. Until quite recently, with an oppositionless
Congress, increasingly right-wing courts, and a cowed media, traditional
Constitutional checks and balances on administration claims of massive
presidential powers and prerogatives have been missing in action.
However, the founding fathers of this nation, who could not have
imagined our present National Security State or the size of this
imperial presidency, could have had no way of imagining the governmental
bureaucracy that has grown up around these either. So how could
they have dreamed that the only significant check-and-balance in
our system since September 11, 2001 has been that very bureaucracy?
Parts of it have been involved in a
bitter, shadowy war with the administration for years now. It's
been a take-no-prisoners affair, as Tomdispatch has recorded in
the first
two posts in its Fallen
Legion series, focusing on the startling numbers of men and
women who were honorable or steadfast enough in their governmental
duties that they found themselves with little alternative but to
resign in protest, quit, retire, or simply be pushed off some cliff.
This administration has done everything in its power to take control
of the bureaucracy. As hurricane Katrina showed with a previously
impressive federal agency, FEMA, Bush and his officials have put
their pals ("Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job"), often without
particular qualifications other than loyalty to this President,
into leading positions, while trying to curb or purge their opponents.
At the CIA, for instance, just before the last election former Representative
Porter Goss, a loyal political hack, was installed to purge and
cleanse what had become an agency of leakers and bring it into line.
Administration officials have, in fact, conducted little short of
a war against leaks and leakers. To give but a single example, the
origins of the Plame case lie in part in an attempt by top officials
to administer punishment to former Ambassador Joseph Wilson for
revealing administration lies about an aspect of Saddam Hussein's
nonexistent weapons of mass destruction program. What those officials
(as leakers, of course) did to his wife was clearly meant as a warning
to others in the bureaucracy that coming forward would mean being
whacked.
And yet, despite
the carnage, as Frank Rich pointed out last Sunday (The
Wiretappers That Couldn't Shoot Straight), the New York Times
reporters who finally broke the NSA story did so based not on one
or two sources but on "nearly a dozen current and former officials."
Doug
Ireland laid out at his blog recently how, despite fears of
possible prosecution the first thing the President did in the
wake of these revelations was to denounce the
"shameful act" of leaking and the Justice Department almost
immediately opened an investigation into who did it one of them,
former NSA analyst Russell Tice, has gone very public with his discontent.
He has already been on Democracy Now! and ABC's Nightline,
saying that "he is prepared to tell Congress all he knows about
the alleged wrongdoing in these programs run by the Defense Department
and the National Security Agency in the post-9/11 efforts to go
after terrorists." He claims that the NSA spied on "millions" of
Americans, including, it was revealed recently, a
Baltimore peace group.
The war with
the bureaucracy and even, to some extent, with the military high-level
officers, for instance, clearly leaked crucial information to Rep.
Murtha before his withdrawal news conference will certainly continue
this year, probably at an elevated level. The CIA has been a sieve;
the NSA clearly will be; at the first sign of pressure, expect the
same from career people in the Justice Department; and an unhappy
military has already been passing out administration-unfriendly
Iraq info left and right. Administration punitive acts only drive
this process forward. Any signs of further administration weakness
will do the same.
The "warriors"
in the bureaucracy will, in turn, fuel further media and congressional
criticism. Congress, worried about next year's election, is an exceedingly
fragile pillar of support for the President. Conservatives, as
Todd Gitlin pointed out in a recent Los Angeles Times
op-ed, are alienated or worse; certain Republican senators are
angry over the way the administration is sidelining Congress.
Even some right-wing judges have been acting out. And, of course,
there's the possibility that, in some chain-reaction-like fashion,
the dike will simply burst and we will catch sight of something
closer to the fullness of Bush administration illegality sure
to be far beyond anything we now imagine.
4. Election
2006. Count on it being down and dirty. This could be a street
brawl because, with the Republican loss of even one house of Congress,
the power to investigate is turned over to the Democrats as we head
into a presidential election cycle.
Consider points
13 above: Iraq as a rolling, roiling, ongoing disaster, Republican
congressional representatives and administration figures under indictment,
bureaucrats leaking madly, possible seats put into play in Texas,
presidential polls dropping all having the potential to threaten
an administration already filled with the biggest gamblers in our
history and capable of doing almost anything if they think themselves
in danger. So what can the President and his pals draw on?
Administration
Wildcards
Court-packing:
As Noah Feldman pointed out recently in
the New York Times Magazine, the rise of the imperial
presidency has a history that goes back to Thomas Jefferson's decision
to conclude the Louisiana Purchase, while the presidency's outsized
"war powers" go back at least to Abraham Lincoln. The President
has long had powers unimagined by the founding fathers, but the
Bush administration still represents a new stage in the obliteration
of a checks-and-balances system of government. Last week, in an
important, if somewhat overlooked, front-page piece in the Wall
Street Journal ("Judge Alito's View of the Presidency: Expansive
Powers"), Jess Bravin reported on a speech Sam Alito gave to the
right-wing Federalist Society in 2000 in which he subscribed to
the "unitary executive theory" of the presidency ("gospel," he called
it) which puts its money on the supposedly unfettered powers of
the President as commander-in-chief. This theory has been pushed
by administration figures ranging from the Vice President and his
Chief of Staff David
Addington to former assistant attorney general and torture-memo
writer John
Yoo. As Alito put the matter in his speech: "[The Constitution]
makes the president the head of the executive branch, but it does
more than that. The president has not just some executive powers,
but the executive power the whole thing." And Yoo
put it even more bluntly while debating the unitary executive
theory recently. In answering the question, "If the president deems
that he's got to torture somebody, including by crushing the testicles
of the person's child, there is no law that can stop him?" he responded,
"No treaty."
Evidently,
John Roberts
subscribes to the same view of presidential powers (as Harriet Meirs
certainly did, at least when it came to George Bush). In other words,
the administration is trying to pack the Supreme Court with judges
who are, above all, guaranteed to come down on the side of the President
in any ultimate face-off with Congress or the courts. This is surely
the real significance of the Alito nomination, should it go through.
In any Constitutional crisis-to-come the "commander-in-chief" is
trying to predetermine how things will fall out if his own power
is at stake.
Terrorism:
From September 11, 2001, the terrorism/fear card has certainly been
the most powerful domestic weapon in the administration's arsenal.
In the event of a major (or several smaller) terrorist strikes in
this country, the Bush administration could certainly be the major
beneficiary, but even that is no longer a given. History tends not
to happen quite the same way twice and no one knows whether, under
the shock of such an event or events, the post-9/11 moment would
simply be repeated or whether Americans might feel that this administration
had completely betrayed them. A terrible war, lousy government,
hideous crisis management, and then, on the one thing they
swore they did best protecting the country from terror
failure. Still this is certainly an administration wild card.
Wag the
Dog Strategies: In a crisis of power, there is no reason to
believe that the officials who already led us into Iraq might not
be willing to gamble on a Wag
the Dog strategy – that is, launching an operation they had
been hankering for anyway that might also turn attention elsewhere.
Rumors
and speculation about a massive air attack on Iran (or on "regime
change" in Syria) have been kicking around since at least the spring
of 2005. These have begun circulating again recently. Such a thing
is certainly possible (more so, obviously, should Benjamin Netanyahu
happen to win the Israeli election in March), but whether the effect
of this on the administration's fortunes would be positive for long
is also unknown. It certainly seems one path to madness, not just
in Iraq but also on the oil markets. (If you happen to be a devotee
of oil at $100 a barrel, you might quickly get your wish.)
Is a Constitutional
Crisis in the Cards?
Until 2005,
it wasn't that the Bush administration didn't make more than its
share of mistakes; thanks to 9/11, it simply had plenty of wiggle
room. It could always turn attention elsewhere. It always had the
fear and terror cards ready to be played. These days, turn people's
attention elsewhere and they're likely to see yet more disaster,
corruption, incompetence, and illegality. In 2006, the administration
has a lot less wiggle room than it used to. Polling figures reflect
that vividly. When new disasters hit, whether in Iraq or New Orleans,
it's becoming harder to take American eyes off them.
Let
me then offer one of those predictions surrounded by qualifications
and caveats that all writers should be wary of. If in a bitter,
dirty mid-term election, filled with "irregularities," one house
of Congress or both nonetheless go to the Democrats, which I believe
possible (despite their low polling figures at the moment), expect
the investigations to begin. Expect as well that the Bush administration
will then trot out that "obscure" presidential philosophy of power
and claim that the Congress has no right to investigate the President
in his guise as Commander-in-Chief.
That
is why the Alito nomination is so crucial and why 2007 may prove
the year of constitutional crisis in the United States.
January
13, 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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