Viet Dinh vs. Paul Craig Roberts
Viet Dinh's Letter
Dear Mr. Roberts,
I write as
a bewildered fan. A fan because I truly admire your past service
to our nation as a government official and your past contributions
to our intellectual culture. Bewildered because your recent posting
on LewRockwell.com
compares America’s defense against terrorism to Nazi Germany and
because, even more inexplicably, your opinion appears to be based
on total fiction.
I woke up this
last Saturday to the following message on my email:
"Last week's
annual Conservative Political Action Conference signaled the transformation
of American conservatism into brownshirtism. A former Justice Department
official named Viet Dinh got a standing ovation when he told the
CPAC audience that the rule of law mustn't get in the way of President
Bush protecting Americans from Osama bin Laden" Paul Craig Roberts
If you are
so enamored with totalitarianism, maybe you ought to return to
your ancestral home.
I resisted
the temptation to dismiss the message as another bigoted attack
and asked for a source citation to what I assumed to be a made-up
quotation. No reply. So I researched and to my surprise discovered
that the cowardly email had indeed quoted your post on LewRockwell.com.
As it is obvious
that you are writing without any first-hand knowledge of the facts,
let me be very clear about what was said and what was not said.
I did not, nor did anyone at CPAC to my knowledge, say that "the
rule of law mustn't get in the way of President Bush protecting
Americans from Osama bin Laden." Nor was there any standing
ovation. I would have thought, before your post, that an accusation
against an individual, an entire audience, and indeed a nation’s
anti-terror strategy of being akin to Nazism would require a bit
more responsibility to the facts.
Assuming some
fealty to the truth remains, let me recount what I said during my
debate with Bob Barr at CPAC. I acknowledged that conservatism derives
from a tradition of healthy skepticism of governmental power. However,
I said, "At times that healthy skepticism must unfortunately
yield to a greater threat to our national security." I posit
that the question is not whether the President is above the law
but rather whether anyone, including Congress, is above the Constitution,
and specifically noted that "no one without operational knowledge
of the details of the NSA program can come to a definitive conclusion
as to its propriety or legality."
Finally, I
concluded, "At this time, the greatest threat to American liberty
comes from al Qaeda and its associates who would seek to destroy
this nation, not from the brave men and women who defend America
and her people."
If you disagree
with any of the above points, I would love to engage you in a conversation.
If you were there and differ in your recollection, I would ask to
see your notes or better, that you check your facts with Bob Barr.
If you were not at CPAC and did not observe that which you purported
to describe, I hope you will come clean.
But nothing – nothing, sir – justifies your spurious accusation of "brownshirtism"
against anyone, least of all against one who has suffered the tyranny
of totalitarianism.
Thank you.
Viet D. Dinh
Paul Craig
Roberts's Response
I stand by my characterization
of Viet Dinh’s remarks in his debate with Bob Barr at the recent
CPAC annual meeting and by my statement that conservatism has morphed
into brownshirtism.
Viet Dinh is one of the authors
of the so-called "PATRIOT Act," an anti-American piece
of legislation recognized throughout the civil libertarian community
as an assault on American civil liberties. Former Republican
congressman Bob Barr has fought to restrain the act’s more egregious
intrusions into the constitutionally protected privacy of American
citizens.
Even Republican
US senators, such as Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter,
are concerned about the Bush regime’s proclivity for warrantless
spying in violation of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
Senator Specter is drafting legislation with which he hopes to curtail
President Bush’s illegal activity. As far as I can tell, the legal
community recognizes that Bush’s warrantless spying is illegal,
except for members of the Republican Federalist Society, a group
of lawyers dedicated to concentrating unaccountable powers in the
executive.
There are several news reports
on the CPAC conference and the debate between Bob Barr and Viet
Dinh. My observations follow from these news reports.
Writing in
the Washington Post on February 11, "Bob Barr, Bane
of the Right?," Post reporter Dana Milbank, for example,
reports that Barr asked the CPAC audience, "Are we losing our
lodestar, which is the Bill of Rights" to the Bush regime’s
zeal in its war against terror?
Barr confronted the conservatives:
"Do we truly remain a society that believes that every president
must abide by the law of this country" or "are we in danger
of putting allegiance to party ahead of allegiance to principle?"
Barr’s questions
were greeted with silence followed by booing. According to
Milbank, "Dinh brought the crowd to a raucous ovation when
he judged: ‘The threat to Americans’ liberty today comes from al
Qaeda and its associates and the people who would destroy America
and her people, not the brave men and women who work to defend this
country!’"
How else are we to interpret Viet
Dinh’s words? Clearly, he is saying that it is more important
for Bush to seize powers to protect America from Osama bin Laden
than to obey the law and abide by the separation of powers.
The entire position of the Bush regime is that protecting the country
from terrorists is more important than loyalty to habeas corpus,
the Geneva Conventions, the proscription against torture, open government,
and an accountable executive.
Dinh himself endorsed the Führer
Principle and urged it upon the conservatives when he declared,
"The conservative movement has a healthy skepticism of governmental
power, but at times, unfortunately, that healthy skepticism needs
to yield." Yield to what? To the Leader who works "to
defend this country."
That’s exactly what Hitler said
following the Reichstag fire, a staged incident that he used to
remove himself from accountability.
Milbank notes
that by turning the debate into the issue of who do you fear –
George Bush or Osama bin Laden, Viet Dinh employed "the sort
of tactic that has intimidated Democrats and the last few libertarian
Republicans who question the program’s legality."
Milbank reports
that Viet Dinh’s tactic did not work on Bob Barr who nailed Dinh:
"That, folks, was a red herring. This debate is very
simple: It is a debate about whether or not we will remain a nation
subject to and governed by the rule of law or the whim of men."
In fairness
to Viet Dinh, coming as he does as an immigrant from a country without
a constitutional tradition, without a Bill of Rights, and without
a judiciary empowered to enforce civil liberties, Dinh may only
naturally confuse patriotism with loyalty to leader. Trust the Leader,
Dinh told the conservatives. They seemed to agree. This
certainly is not America’s way.
Destroying
America does not mean blowing up buildings. It means destroying
the US Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the separation of powers.
Al Qaeda is powerless to bring about such destruction. Only
our own government, enabled by the public’s and Viet Dinh’s and
Attorney General Gonzales’ endorsements of the Führer Principle
can destroy America.
February
23, 2006
Dr.
Roberts [send him mail]
is
Chairman of the Institute for Political Economy and Research Fellow
at the Independent Institute.
He is a former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal,
former contributing editor for National Review, and a former
assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury. He is the co-author of
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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