The State Spies on the Union
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Elizabeth de
la Vega
by Tom Engelhardt and
Elizabeth de la Vega
DIGG THIS
State of the
what? Let's see, 28%,
31%,
33%,
35%.
That pretty much sums up the State of the President or, at
least, of his ever more dismal approval
ratings in four of the latest major polls (and don't even mention
his state of approval in similar nose-diving
polls abroad). Only two Presidents, on the eve of a State of
the Union Address have ever scored lower and one was Richard
Nixon at 26%, seven months before he resigned his Presidency. (The
other was Truman at 23% and mired in the Korean War.) Unbelievably
enough, those aren't even the worst figures around for this administration.
Try 26%, 29%, 29%, 30%; that's about how many Americans now think
any presidential State of Iraq plan or strategy makes the slightest
sense according to polls by Newsweek, CBS, the Washington
Post/ABC News, and NBC/the Wall Street Journal. A little
lower and you're in the polling basement, the sort of place not
normally accessible even to a bunker-busting President.
Basically,
if the networks didn't cut off all prime-time programming for the
State of the Union Address, I suspect that the percentage of Americans
bothering to listen to George W. Bush's words might prove infinitesimal.
After all, as the latest polls all essentially indicate, but Mark
Murray wrote of the
NBC/WSJ poll, "Nearly two-thirds of Americans appear
to have given up on success in Iraq and also on [George Bush's]
presidency."
In fact, we
would undoubtedly do better to stop listening to any of the official
words of this administration, since they bear next to no relationship
to administration acts. This State of the Union Address, which will
be analyzed to death in the press and on TV, matters not a whit.
Never has an administration reached for its dictionaries faster
or more often to redefine reality to fit its needs. Seldom has the
media spent more time parsing (and then generally passing on) words
that were meant to do little but promote fantasies, escape responsibility,
and confuse the public. It's the acts all aggrandizing, all
aimed at promoting the unfettered
power of a President and Vice President who never learned the
word "enough" that matter, as former federal prosecutor Elizabeth
de la Vega, shows in exploring the latest administration maneuvers
to slip past any congressional or judicial oversight of, or responsibility
for, its illegal program to spy on Americans.
If you want
to read some words that do matter, check out De la Vega's remarkable
new book, United
States v. George W. Bush et al., which, in the form of a
hypothetical
indictment of the President and his key officials and fictional
grand jury testimony, brilliantly dissects the way the administration
used language to defraud the Congress and the American people into
war in Iraq. This Tomdispatch book is, as Chalmers Johnson has said,
"Much more powerful than the 9/11 Report. A tour de force." (You
can order it from Amazon,
so don't miss it.)
Now, as a
bow to the real state of our tattered, battered union, which will
go unaddressed tonight, Tomdispatch turns to de la Vega to explore
a few of the acts for which this administration should be held responsible.
~ Tom
Lying
and Spying: How the Administration Slip-Slides Away
By Elizabeth
de la Vega
I hope I can
be forgiven if animal images kept coming into my mind during the
Senate Judiciary Committee hearing last week. On the eve of the
first such hearing to be held by the newly-elected Democratic majority,
Attorney General Alberto Gonzales sent a letter
to Committee Chairmen Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and Arlen Specter (R-PA)
announcing that, henceforth, the President's Terrorist Surveillance
Program would be conducted under the supervision of the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court. Listening to Alberto Gonzales "answering"
questions about this development during the hearing,
the thoughts I kept having were of seals and snakes: Had the administration
really flip-flopped on warrantless electronic surveillance
like, say, a seal or was it merely attempting to slither
away like, say, a snake?
Unfortunately,
it appears to be the latter. As with so many of its other activities
pre-invasion intelligence fraud, detention of enemy combatants,
systematic torture the closer the Bush administration comes
to intersecting with the law and with Congress on its illegal spying,
in the words of Paul Simon, "the more you're slip-slidin' away."
Well, Where
Have We Been?
Unbeknownst
to the American people and Congress the phrase that should
begin so many stories about the Bush administration the President,
starting in late 2001, authorized a secret domestic surveillance
program to be run by the National Security Agency (NSA). By the
time the secret wiretapping was revealed in a New
York Times article on December 16, 2005, George W. Bush
had issued more than 30 orders authorizing surveillance for what
the administration claimed were foreign intelligence purposes, without
ever attempting to comply with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act ("FISA"). A law Congress enacted in 1978 to prevent the Executive
Branch from conducting such surveillance without any court supervision
whatsoever, FISA was simultaneously to provide a more expeditious
procedure than that required for a standard search warrant.
In the four
years between the inception of the program and its revelation, the
Bush administration affirmatively concealed its existence, with
the President, famously, even going so far as to preemptively
and falsely announce that "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."
Even worse,
in that time span, Attorney General John Ashcroft and then Alberto
Gonzales successfully negotiated with Congress four rounds of requested
changes to FISA, the very statute they were routinely violating.
Not once during the faux debate about security and civil
liberty generated by the amendments they sought did the administration
advise Congress in any official or unofficial way that it was violating
the statute on a daily basis; nor did it seek revisions that would
address the problems it later claimed existed.
Given such
egregious conduct conduct, in fact, unprecedented in our
history one would think Congress would take swift and decisive
action. Hardly. An astoundingly earnest debate ensued over the administration's
ever-changing rationales and frivolous legal arguments (superbly
reviewed at Glenn Greenwald's excellent blog, Unclaimed
Territory), but as Patrick
Leahy described this sorry state of affairs:
"On
March 31, 2006, the Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing on
Sen. Russ Feingold's call to censure the President. This was the
Committee's fourth hearing to consider the President's domestic
spying activities. But while the Committee has now heard from a
total of 20 witnesses, only one had any knowledge of the spying
activities beyond what was reported in the newspapers. That witness
was Alberto Gonzales, who flatly refused to tell us anything beyond
‘those facts the President has publicly confirmed, nothing more.'"
In short,
neither Congress, nor the public knew anything more at the end of
the Senate hearings in 2006 than they had known when the hearings
began. The administration slithered off without being held to account
for, or required even to superficially reveal, its activities. And
Congress itself simply slip-slided away.
Where Did
We Think We Were Going on January 17, 2006?
On January
17, it appeared that, under the leadership of Democratic Senator
Leahy, we might begin to get some answers from Alberto Gonzales
at the Senate Judiciary Committee Hearing scheduled for the next
day about the President's secret surveillance program: What is it?
When did it begin? Who does it target? How are its targets chosen?
Is it, as the law requires, particularized directed toward
a certain target or simply a data-mining program that collects
massive amounts of corporate and public online information and then
cross-references it against U.S. intelligence and law-enforcement
records? Who carries it out? What is the legal justification for
surveillance outside the FISA statute?
It also seemed
that we were proceeding in an orderly fashion towards a judicial
review of the NSA spying program. In August 2006, in the case of
ACLU
et al. v. NSA, United States District Judge Anna Diggs Taylor
of the Eastern District of Michigan ruled that the administration's
National Security Agency warrantless surveillance program must be
stopped, both because it violated FISA and because it constituted
an unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment right to free
speech and the Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable
searches and seizures. The United States appealed and, although
the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals stayed the execution of Judge
Taylor's order pending that appeal, it scheduled the oral arguments
on the case for January 31, 2007. How the Court would rule is impossible
to predict, but one possible outcome, of course, would be a decision
that the administration's domestic spying program is, as Judge Taylor
had found, both unconstitutional and illegal under the U.S. Criminal
Code; another would be a finding that the spying program was illegal
based on one of those grounds.
From the administration's
point of view, in other words, as of January 17, the NSA eavesdropping
plan was careening towards not one, but two very dangerous, intersections.
What does the Bush administration ever do under such circumstances?
Address its adversaries and make its arguments openly and honestly?
No. Its modus operandi is always the same. It evades; it
manipulates the system; it darts away or at least it tries
to.
In this case,
by preemptively announcing that it was no longer going to conduct
the program whose existence it had hidden completely for four years
and sparred with Congress about for the next 18 months
the administration clearly fervently hoped that it could wriggle
away from congressional and judicial oversight. The ploy was, in
other words, less a flip-flop than a slither. But the maneuver,
clever as it appears at first blush, is hardly a surefire remedy
for the administration's problems.
Where the
Heck Are We Now?
On the same
day that the Department of Justice announced its decision not to
reauthorize its unilateral, illegal wiretapping program, it notified
the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals that it would be submitting documents
setting forth its arguments regarding the effect of this decision
on the pending appeal. Clearly, the government lawyers intend to
argue that the case is moot: There's nothing left to decide because
we're not doing it anymore.
There are,
in fact, many legal counterarguments to this facile approach. For
one thing, even if one assumes, for the sake of discussion, that
the FISA problem has been addressed by the administration's new
plan, the constitutional questions might still remain. There is
another significant argument that weighs against the dismissal of
the case for which the administration has been so cleverly maneuvering
a doctrine holding that the court should still hear controversies
that may have been resolved when the issue under consideration is
"capable
of repetition, yet evading review." This doctrine is particularly
applicable to this situation, where neither the Court, nor Congress,
nor the public have any way of knowing whether the administration
has in fact abandoned its previous practices or whether it will
ever decide to reinstate them. For such determinations, everyone
has to rely on the word of Alberto Gonzales and the whims of the
Department of Justice. The American Civil Liberties Union and the
many diverse plaintiffs who have joined its lawsuit Greenpeace,
writer Christopher Hitchens, and Larry Diamond of the Hoover Institution,
to name a few will certainly make this powerful argument
in the weeks to come.
The same rationale
argues powerfully in favor of Congress forging ahead, regardless
of Gonzales's bland assurances. Not only do we not have any guarantee
that the administration is doing what it says its doing, or will
continue to do what it says it plans to do, we still don't have
the remotest idea what that plan is. As Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY)
pointed out during questioning of Gonzales, we don't know whether
the warrants now being issued involve specific targets, as is required
by FISA, or whether the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
has simply agreed to give blanket approval to warrants directed
at a large group of targets, the very problem that Congress has
theoretically been trying to address since early 2006: "If it's
a very broad-brush approval and again, because it's secret,
we have no way of knowing it doesn't do much good," Schumer
commented.
We do, however,
have a remarkably consistent track record on this matter, which
should tell us something. We know that none of the administration's
conduct with regard to Congress and the National Security Agency
domestic spying program has been undertaken in good faith. Indeed,
the second phase of this odyssey, from December 2005 when the secret
program was revealed, to the present, begins with the same phrase
as the first: Unbeknownst to the American people and Congress…
Unbeknownst
to the American people and Congress, during 2006, while everyone
else naïvely thinking we lived in a democracy – engaged in
this ongoing faux debate, earnestly trying to divine what
the administration was actually doing, discussing the pros and cons
of the nearly laughable arguments they were making in support of
whatever it was, and in good faith attempting to craft amendments
to FISA that would accommodate the unique requirements of whatever
it was that no one knew, the Bush administration was acting entirely
on its own as if neither the public, nor Congress even existed.
We
may still be stumbling around in the dark, struggling to get a grip
on what the administration is doing, but we are getting nearer
to the destination; this, then, is decidedly not a good time
for Congress to be slip-slidin' away. On the contrary, wouldn't
this be a good time to reach for a subpoena?
January
25, 2007
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, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Elizabeth de la Vega [send
her mail] is a former federal prosecutor with more than 20 years
of experience in both Minneapolis and San Jose. Her pieces have
appeared in the Nation Magazine, the Los Angeles Times,
and Salon, among other places. A regular contributor to Tomdispatch.com
and the author of United
States v. George W. Bush et al., she is poised to start on
a multi-state
book tour that begins January 31 at Shaman
Drum bookstore in Ann Arbor, Michigan, the scene of her college
"crimes."
Copyright
© 2007 Elizabeth de la Vega
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