Crime Blotter: 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
While serving
as President Bush’s White House lawyer, Alberto Gonzales advised
Bush that the president’s war time powers permitted Bush to ignore
the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) and to use the
National Security Agency (NSA) to spy on US citizens without obtaining
warrants from the FISA court as required by law. Under an order
signed by Bush in 2002, NSA illegally spied on Americans without
warrants.
By spying on
Americans without obtaining warrants, Bush committed felonies under
FISA. Moreover, there is strong, indeed overwhelming, evidence that
justice was obstructed when Bush and Gonzales blocked a 2006 Justice
Department investigation into whether Gonzales acted properly as
Attorney General in approving and overseeing the Bush administration’s
program of spying on US citizens. Also at issue is whether Gonzales
acted properly in advising Bush to kill an investigation of Gonzales’
professional actions with regard to the NSA spy program.
We are faced
with the almost certain fact that the two highest law enforcement
officials of the United States are criminals.
The evidence
that Bush and Gonzales have obstructed justice comes from internal
Justice Department memos and exchanges of letters between the Justice
Department’s Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR), an investigative
office, and members of Congress. The documents were leaked to the
National Journal, and the story was reported in the March
15, 2007, issue by Murray Waas, who also relied on interviews with
both current and former high ranking DOJ officials. Ten months previously
on May 25, 2006, Waas broke the story in the National Journal
about the derailing of the OPR investigation.
From Waas’s
report it is obvious that many current and former Justice Department
officials have serious concerns about the high-handed behavior of
the Bush administration. The incriminating documents were leaked
to the National Journal, the only remaining national publication
that has any credibility. The New York Times and Washington Post
have proven to be supine tools of the Bush administration and are
no longer trusted.
When the Bush
administration’s violation of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance
Act was leaked to the New York Times, the paper’s editors
obliged Bush by spiking the story for one year, while Bush illegally
collected information that he could use to blackmail his critics
into silence. As I wrote at the time, the only possible reason for
violating FISA is to collect information that can be used to silence
critics. The administration’s claim that bypassing FISA was essential
to the "war on terror" is totally false and is a justification
and practice that the Bush administration, no longer able to defend,
abandoned in January of this year.
The known
facts: After keeping the information from Congress and the public
for one year, on Dec. 16, 2005, the New York Times reported
that Bush was spying on Americans without complying with the FISA
statute. In response to a request from members of Congress, the
Justice Department’s Office of Professional Responsibility launched
an investigation into the Bush administration’s decision to ignore
FISA and to conduct domestic spying on American citizens without
obtaining the warrants required by law. On January 20, 2006, Marshall
Jarrett, the Justice Department official in charge of OPR, informed
senior Justice Department officials of his investigation and its
scope.
Gonzales informed
President Bush about the OPR investigation, and Bush shut down the
investigation by refusing security clearances to the Justice Department
officials in OPR. In a response to Senate Judiciary Committee chairman
Arlen Specter on July 18, 2006, Gonzales disclosed that President
Bush had halted the OPR investigation.
This is
the first and only time in history that DOJ officials have been
denied security clearances necessary to conduct an investigation.
The Bush administration claimed that the secret spying was too crucial
to our national security to permit even Justice Department officials
to learn about it. However, even as Bush was denying clearances
to OPR, he granted identical clearances to: (1) the FBI agents ordered
to find who leaked the administration’s secret spying to the New
York Times, (2) DOJ officials in the Civil Division who had to respond
to legal challenges to the illegal spy program, and (3) five private
sector individuals who sit on the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight
Board.
Obviously,
the unprecedented denial of security clearances to OPR was done
in order to prevent the investigation.
On March 21,
2006, Marshall Jarrett wrote to Deputy Attorney General Paul McNulty
that OPR was being "precluded from performing its duties."
In May, 2006,
Jarrett informed Congress: "On May 9, 2006, we were informed
that our requests had been denied. Without these clearances, we
cannot investigate this matter and therefore have closed our investigation."
The National Journal reports: "[Rep. Maurice] Hinchey
and other Democratic House members asked Jarrett why he was unable
to obtain the necessary clearances; Jarrett’s superiors, according
to government records and to interviews, instructed him not to inform
Congress that President Bush had made the decision."
When the illegal
domestic spying program was launched in 2002, Gonzales was still
White House Counsel. Documents and interviews show that most high
ranking Justice Department officials opposed the illegal program.
Attorney General Ashcroft, Deputy Attorney General James Comey,
Assistant Attorney General Jack Goldsmith in charge of the Office
of Legal Counsel, and James A. Baker, counsel for the Office of
Intelligence Policy and Review all raised objections to the illegality
and propriety of Bush’s National Security Agency eavesdropping program.
Baker went so far as to warn the presiding judge of the FISA court
that authorities were improperly obtaining information and bypassing
the court. On learning that the administration was violating FISA,
one of the federal judges on the FISA court resigned in protest.
Goldsmith was
troubled by Bush’s claim that the "war on terror" gave
the president virtually unlimited powers. Goldsmith’s objections
to the Bush-Cheney-Gonzales view that the president is above the
law during time of war brought him under fierce attack from Vice
President Dick Cheney and Cheney’s two principal henchmen, Scooter
Libby, now a convicted felon, and David Addington.
Goldsmith found
an ally in Deputy Attorney General Comey. Comey defied the White
House in March 2004 when he refused to reauthorize Bush’s spying
on American citizens unless the program was brought within the law.
Comey incurred additional Bush-Cheney enmity when he appointed Patrick
J. Fitzgerald to investigate the leak of Valerie Plame’s identity,
an investigation that resulted in the arrest and conviction of Vice
President Cheney’s chief of staff.
In his lengthy
and detailed report in the National Journal, Waas quotes
a former White House Official: "Comey showed us that he was
a guy who wouldn’t be kept on a leash in an administration that
likes to keep everybody on a short leash."
A criminal
political administration has no choice but to keep everyone on a
short leash in order to keep its illegal acts under wraps. Americans
have never experienced an administration so replete with crimes
as the Bush Regime.
This
criminal regime must now be brought to an end. Impeachments of Bush,
Cheney, and Gonzales, followed by felony indictments and trials
are imperative if the rule of law in the United States is to be
preserved.
March
19, 2007
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] wrote the Kemp-Roth bill and was Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He was Associate Editor
of the Wall
Street Journal
editorial page and Contributing Editor of National
Review. He
is author or coauthor of eight books, including The
Supply-Side Revolution
(Harvard University Press). He has held numerous academic appointments,
including the William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy, Center
for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University and
Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
He has contributed to numerous scholar journals and testified before
Congress on 30 occasions. He has been awarded the U.S. Treasury's
Meritorious Service Award and the French Legion of Honor. He was
a reviewer for the Journal
of Political Economy
under editor Robert Mundell. He
is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
He is also coauthor with Karen Araujo of Chile: Dos Visiones
– La Era Allende-Pinochet (Santiago: Universidad Andres Bello,
2000).
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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