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Torture,
War, and Presidential Powers
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
A
Wall Street Journal article last week detailed a Department
of Defense memo that discusses the legality of interrogation and
torture methods in the wake of events at Abu Gharib. The document
reportedly advises that the president has authority to order almost
any action, including physical or psychological torture, despite
federal laws to the contrary. The Pentagon lawyers who drafted the
memo were not shy about blatantly asserting that the Commander-In-Chief
can break the law when necessary, as evidenced by this quote from
the memo: Sometimes the greater good for society will be accomplished
by violating the literal language of the criminal law.
The
Justice department, for its part, is depressingly silent on the
issue. Attorney General Ashcroft refuses to release an existing
Justice department memo on the matter to Congress. Why cant
the American people, much less Congress, see how the Justice department
interprets presidential powers and federal torture laws? Why the
secrecy? The Justice department is charged with enforcing federal
laws, not suspending them or advising federal agencies to ignore
them.
Legal
issues aside, the American people and government should never abide
the use of torture by our military or intelligence agencies. A decent
society never accepts or justifies torture. It dehumanizes both
torturer and victim, yet seldom produces reliable intelligence.
Torture by rogue American troops or agents puts all Americans at
risk, especially our rank-and-file soldiers stationed in dozens
of dangerous places around the globe. God forbid terrorists take
American soldiers or travelers hostage and torture them as some
kind of sick retaliation for Abu Gharib.
The
greater issue presented by the Defense department memo, however,
is the threat posed by unchecked executive power. Defense department
lawyers essentially argue that a presidents powers as Commander-In-Chief
override federal laws prohibiting torture, and the Justice department
appears to agree. But the argument for extraordinary wartime executive
powers has been made time and time again, always with bad results
and the loss of our liberties. War has been used by presidents to
excuse the imprisonment of American citizens of Japanese descent,
to silence speech, to suspend habeas corpus, and even to control
entire private industries.
It
is precisely during times of relative crisis that we should adhere
most closely to the Constitution, not abandon it. War does not justify
the suspension of torture laws any more than it justifies the suspension
of murder laws, the suspension of due process, or the suspension
of the Second amendment.
We
are fighting undeclared wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and an open-ended
war against terrorism worldwide. If the president claims extraordinary
wartime powers, and we fight undeclared wars with no beginning and
no end, when if ever will those extraordinary powers lapse? Since
terrorism will never be eliminated completely, should all future
presidents be able to act without regard to Congress or the Constitution
simply by asserting Were at war?
Conservatives
should understand that the power given the president today will
pass to the presidents successors, who may be only too eager
to abuse that unbridled power domestically to destroy their political
enemies. Remember the anger directed at President Clinton for acting
above the law when it came to federal perjury charges?
An imperial presidency threatens all of us who oppose unlimited
state power over our lives.
A
strong separation of powers is at the heart of our constitutional
liberties. No branch of government should be able to act unilaterally,
no matter how cumbersome the legislative process may be. The beauty
of the Constitution is that it encourages some degree of gridlock
in government, making it harder for any branch to act capriciously
or secretly. When we give any president one man too much power,
we build a foundation for future tyranny.
June
15, 2004
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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