Obama's Efforts To Block a Judicial Ruling on Bush's Illegal Eavesdropping
by Glenn Greenwald
by
Glenn Greenwald
The
Obama DOJ's embrace of Bush's state secrets privilege in the Jeppesen
(torture/rendition) case generated substantial outrage, and rightly
so. But it's now safe to say that far worse is the Obama DOJ's conduct
in the Al-Haramain case the only remaining case against the
Government with any real chance of resulting in a judicial ruling
on the legality of Bush's NSA warrantless eavesdropping program.
Here's the first paragraph from the
Wired report on Friday's appellate ruling, which refused
the Obama DOJ's request to block a federal court from considering
key evidence when deciding whether Bush broke the law in how he
spied on Americans:
A federal
appeals court dealt a blow to the Obama administration
Friday when it refused to block a judge from admitting top secret
evidence in a lawsuit weighing whether a U.S. president may bypass
Congress, as President George W. Bush did, and establish a program
of eavesdropping on Americans without warrants.
And here are
the two paragraphs from the
AP report:
The Obama
administration has lost its argument that a potential threat
to national security should stop a lawsuit challenging the government's
warrantless wiretapping program. . . .
The Obama
administration, like the Bush administration before it, claimed
national security would be compromised if a lawsuit brought
by the Oregon chapter of the charity, Al-Haramain Islamic Foundation,
was allowed to proceed.
Let's just
pause for a moment to consider how remarkable those statements are.
One of the worst abuses of the Bush administration was its endless
reliance on vast claims of secrecy to ensure that no court could
ever rule on the legality of the President's actions. They would
insist that "secrecy" prevented a judicial ruling even
when the President's actions were (a) already publicly disclosed
in detail and (b) were blatantly criminal as is the case
with the NSA warrantless eavesdropping program, which The New
York Times described on its front page more than three years
ago and which a federal statute explicitly criminalized. Secrecy
claims of that sort to block judicial review of the President's
conduct, i.e., to immunize the President from the rule of law
provoked endless howls of outrage from Bush critics.
Read
the rest of the article
|