Legislating
Tyranny
by
Paul Craig Roberts
and Lawrence M. Stratton
by Paul Craig Roberts and Lawrence
M. Stratton
DIGG THIS
The
George W. Bush administration responded to the 9/11 attack on the
World Trade Center and Pentagon with an assault on U.S. civil liberty
that Bush justified in the name of the war on terror.
The government assured us that the draconian measures apply only
to terrorists. The word terrorist, however, was
not defined. The government claimed the discretionary power to decide
who is a terrorist without having to present evidence or charges
in a court of law.
Frankly, the
Bush administrations policy evades any notion of procedural
due process of law. Administration assurances that harsh treatment
is reserved only for terrorists is meaningless when the threshold
process for determining who is and who is not a terrorist depends
on executive discretion that is not subject to review. Substantive
rights are useless without the procedural rights to enforce them.
Terrorist legislation
and executive assertions created a basis upon which federal authorities
claimed they were free to suspend suspects civil liberties
in order to defend Americans from terrorism. Only after civil liberties
groups and federal courts challenged some of the unconstitutional
laws and procedures did realization spread that the Bush administrations
assault on the Bill of Rights is a greater threat to Americans than
are terrorists.
The alacrity
with which Congress accepted the initial assault from the administration
is frightening. In 2001, the USA PATRIOT Act passed by a vote of
98 to 1 in the Senate and by 357 to 66 in the House. The act was
already written and waiting on the shelf before the 9/11 attack.
Indeed, the FBI and Department of Justice have tried for years to
introduce PATRIOT Act provisions into the law. That act was introduced
immediately after the attacks, and few members of Congress read
its contents prior to passing it.
Federal courts
declared some provisions of the legislation to be unconstitutional.
Vague language criminalizing expert advice or assistance
as material support for terrorism was thrown out, as were gag orders
and National Security Letters used to obtain private
information without judicial oversight. Despite challenges from
the American Civil Liberties Union and resolutions passed in 8 states
and 396 cities and counties condemning the act for its attack on
civil liberties, Congress reauthorized the act in March 2006, making
most of it permanent and sending a clear signal that the war
on terror takes precedence over civil liberty.
The PATRIOT
Acts infringements of civil liberty are serious, but they
pale by comparison to the Bush administrations assertion of
executive power to set aside habeas corpus protection for both citizens
and noncitizens declared by the executive branch to be enemy
combatants. The Bush administration claimed and exercised
the power to hold indefinitely anyone so designated without access
to legal representation. In other words, the Bush administration
claimed the discretionary and unaccountable power to imprison whomever
it wished.
In keeping
with its self-declared powers, the Bush administration quickly rounded
up hundreds of detainees whom it claimed without evidence to
be enemy combatants. Four detainees, Rasul, Hamdi, Padilla,
and Hamdan, consisting of a British citizen, two American citizens,
and an Afghan, respectively, challenged the administration in federal
court cases that reached the Supreme Court.
In Rasul
v. Bush the Supreme Court ruled in June 2004 that, contrary
to Bush administration assertions, the courts have jurisdiction
over Guantánamo and that detainees must be allowed to challenge
their detention.
Also
in June 2004, the Supreme Court ruled in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld
that Hamdi, an American citizen, was deprived of due process and
had the right to challenge his detention. However, the ruling was
far from a clean sweep for civil liberty. Both noted civil libertarian
Harvey Silverglate (Reason, January 2005) and John Yoo, a
Department of Justice apologist for the new tyranny, agree that
the Supreme Court decision left flexibility and room for the government
to maneuver and prevail in the end.
In December
2003, an appellate court ruled that U.S. citizen José Padilla could
not be denied habeas corpus protection. To forestall another Supreme
Court ruling against the Bush administration, the administration
withdrew Padillas status as enemy combatant and
filed criminal charges that bore no relationship to the administrations
original assertions that Padilla was plotting to explode a dirty
bomb in an American city. As Harvey Silverglate has documented
(Boston Phoenix, September 16, 2005), the Padilla case is
also an extraordinary story of forum shopping (picking
a court where judges are friendly to its case) by the Department
of Justice.
Forced by the
federal judiciary to release José Padilla from years of illegal
detention or to put him on trial, the Bush administration had to
scramble to put together some kind of charges. The best that the
Bush administration could do was to charge Padilla not with any
terrorist acts, but with wanting to be a terrorist a terrorist-wannabe
to use the words of Andrew Cohen (WashingtonPost.com, August 16,
2007).
By the time
Padilla went to trial, he had been demonized for years in the media
as an enemy combatant who intended to set off a radioactive
bomb. Peter Whoriskey (Washington Post, August 17, 2007)
described the Padilla Jury as a patriotic jury that appeared in
court with one row of jurors dressed in red, one in white, and one
in blue. It was a jury primed to be psychologically and emotionally
manipulated by federal prosecutors. No member of this jury was going
to return home to accusations of letting off the dirty bomber.
Evidence, of
which there was little, if any, played no role in the case. The
chief FBI agent, James T. Kavanaugh, testified in court that the
intercepted telephone conversations were innocuous and contained
no references to terrorism or Islamic extremism, but the jury wasnt
listening. The judge allowed prosecutors to show the jury a ten-year-old
video of Osama bin Laden that had no relevance to the case, but
which served to arouse in jurors fear, anger, and disturbing memories
of September 11, 2001. The jury convicted Padilla on all counts,
despite the total absence of any evidence that he had ever committed
a terrorist act or had agreed to commit such an act.
By convicting
Padilla, the jury opened Pandoras box and created a Benthamite
precedent for imprisoning U.S. citizens on the suspicion that they
might commit a terrorist act.
In July 2006,
in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, the Supreme Court ruled that Bushs
military tribunals violate U.S. military law and the Geneva Conventions.
Republicans,
who tend to regard civil liberties as devices that coddle criminals
and terrorists, turned to legislation in attempts to subvert the
Supreme Courts defense of the U.S. Constitution. In November
2005, the Senate Republicans passed an amendment to the Defense
Authorization Act offered by Lindsay Graham of South Carolina authorizing
the president to deny habeas corpus protection to Guantánamo detainees.
The fact that it was known by this time that the vast majority of
the detainees were hapless individuals who were captured by Afghan
warlords and sold to the Americans, who were paying a bounty for
terrorists, carried no weight with the Republican senators.
The Republicans
replied to Hamdan v. Rumsfeld with the Military Commissions
Act passed in September 2006 and signed by Bush in October. The
act strips detainees of protections provided by the Geneva Conventions:
No alien unlawful enemy combatant subject to trial by military
commission under this chapter may invoke the Geneva Conventions
as a source of rights. Other provisions of the act strip detainees
of speedy trials and of protection against torture and self-incrimination.
This heinous law has a breathtaking provision that retroactively
protects torturers against prosecution for war crimes.
The act explicitly
denies habeas corpus protection and access to federal courts to
any alien detained by the U.S. government as an enemy combatant
and any alien awaiting determination of his status. The act reads:
No court, justice, or judge shall have jurisdiction to hear
or consider an application for a writ of habeas corpus filed by
or on behalf of an alien detained by the US who has been determined
by the US to have been properly detained as an enemy combatant or
is awaiting such determination.
This act is
as atrocious a piece of legislation as the world has ever seen.
It permits people to be sentenced to death on the basis of hearsay,
secret evidence, and on a confession extracted by torture. Indeed,
detainees could be shot in the back of the head without undergoing
the kangaroo tribunal and no one would ever know or be held legally
responsible.
A number of
legal experts have concluded that there is no assurance that the
act cannot be applied to U.S. citizens. Although language in the
act refers to alien unlawful enemy combatant, other
language in the document does not limit the acts applicability
only to aliens. Legal scholars have warned that the legislation
defines enemy combatant in such broad language that the act applies
to any person whom the executive branch declares has purposefully
and materially supported hostilities against the United States.
No evidence for the charge is necessary. By seizing the power
to decide who is and who is not an enemy combatant,
the executive branch has seized the power to decide who shall and
who shall not be permitted the protections guaranteed by the U.S.
Constitution. The Bush administration has resurrected the dungeons
and torture chambers that Blackstones Rights of Englishmen
banished from the English-speaking world.
It is too early
to know how the act will be interpreted and applied to American
citizens or whether it can be challenged and overturned on constitutional
grounds, but forebodings are severe. What we can say is that the
act is draconian and dangerous legislation that is completely unnecessary.
If the U.S. government has enough correct information to designate
a person truthfully to be an enemy combatant, the U.S. government
has enough information to put the person on trial in open court
with all the rights guaranteed by the Constitution to defendants.
The U.S. government only needs indefinite detention, torture, and
secret evidence when it has no evidence. Every American should be
concerned that John Yoo, one of the Justice Department authors of
this totalitarian legislation, is now a law professor at the University
of California. Liberty has no future in America if law schools provide
legitimacy to those who would subvert the U.S. Constitution.
The Assault
on the Constitution
We concluded
the first edition of this book with a call for an intellectual
rebirth, a revival of constitutionalism. Alas, far from a
rebirth of constitutionalism, we are witnessing a rending that we
would not have imagined. On January 17, 2007, the attorney general
of the United States, Alberto Gonzales, declared in testimony before
the Senate Judiciary Committee that the Constitution doesnt
say every individual in the United States or every citizen is hereby
granted or assured the right of habeas. The chairman of the
committee, Arlen Specter (R-Pennsylvania) was incredulous when Gonzales
insisted that there is no express grant of habeas in the Constitution.
In June 2007,
Dick Cheney astonished Americans with his claim that the Office
of Vice President is independent of both the executive branch and
Congress and is accountable to neither.
Americans should
pay attention to the power that the Bush administration is claiming
over them. If Americans are not protected by habeas corpus, the
government can pick us up at its will and cast us into dungeons
for the rest of our lives without ever giving any accountability
of its action. If the Constitution does not grant habeas corpus
protection, the administration is under no compulsion to provide
indictments, evidence, and trial. The government can simply imprison
at will.
The Bush administration
is using every strategy to push aside the remains of the legal principles
that shield the people from arbitrary government power. It is a
short step from denying Americans constitutional right to
a public trial by an impartial jury to denying every other constitutional
right. Clearly, on the basis of an indefinite war against
an indefinite terrorist enemy, the Bush regime is attempting
to claim powers that are not limited by the Constitution, Congress,
or the courts. It is a life-and-death matter for Americans to understand
that the Bush administration is seeking to undermine all
rights by shutting off the procedural avenues for enforcing rights.
Few Americans
seem alarmed. Conservative attorneys, such as members of the Federalist
Society who present themselves as defenders of original intent,
are pushing for more power to be concentrated in the executive.
One of the tools used to obtain this goal is Bushs misuse
of signing statements. Scholars, such as Phillip J.
Cooper of Portland State University writing in the September 2005
issue of Presidential Studies Quarterly, warn that Bush uses
signing statements not only as illegal line-item vetoes that evade
congressional override but also as wide-ranging assertions
of exclusive authority and court-like pronouncements that redefine
legislative powers under the Constitution. They reveal a systematic
effort to define presidential authority in terms of the broad conception
of the prerogative both internationally and domestically under the
unitary executive theory.
Signing statements
deserve a closer look than they are receiving. There is no provision
in the Constitution for signing statements. Courts often look to
congressional debates and proceedings to ascertain legislative intent
when a statutes meaning is not obvious. The Bush administration
is endeavoring to establish the judicial practice of also looking
to the presidents signing statements in the same way, an absurd
idea as the president does not enact legislation. President Bushs
use of signing statements signals the refusal of the executive branch
to abide by the rule of law, a frightening prospect.
A growing number
of thoughtful Americans believe, rightly or wrongly, that the war
on terror is a hoax that is providing cover for what former
President Nixons White House counsel, John W.
Dean, says is an assault on American liberty by authoritarian
conservatives. Time will tell whether Americans will continue
to tolerate the neoconservatives wars and attacks on civil
liberty.
The Case
of Sami Al-Arian
The demise
of the Rights of Englishmen, the unaccountability of police and
prosecutors, the witch-hunt atmosphere created by the war
on terror, the governments need to find terrorist suspects
in order to maintain the publics alarm, and the sadistic and
bigoted attitudes of many prison guards and even federal prosecutors
and judges toward Muslims have resulted in the use of law for persecution.
The case of Sami Al-Arian, who was a professor of computer science
at the University of South Florida, is a pure example of the use
of law as a weapon for persecution.
Most Americans
know only the Israeli side of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
The Palestinian side is rarely heard. Even prominent Americans,
such as former president Jimmy Carter, who point out that there
are two sides to the story, are subjected to demonization and name-calling.
Sami Al-Arian was gaining success as a voice for a more even-handed
Middle East policy. He spoke to intelligence personnel and military
commanders at MacDill Air Force Central Command. He gave interviews.
He even invited the FBI to attend meetings where he spoke.
This was too
much for the Israeli Lobby, which has enjoyed a total monopoly on
the explanation of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the United
States. The hysteria following 9/11 created the opportunity to destroy
Sami Al-Arian. Alexander Cockburn (CounterPunch, March 3,
2007) reports that at the direct instigation of Attorney General
Ashcroft trumped-up terrorism and conspiracy charges were
leveled at Al-Arian.
The neoconservative
media and right-wing talk radio went to work on Al-Arian. Pushed
by Gov. Jeb Bush, the university fired him. He was arrested and
deemed too dangerous for bail. He was held in solitary confinement
for two and a half years while the federal government tried to manufacture
some evidence against him. Wikipedia reports that Amnesty
International said Al-Arians pre-trial conditions appeared
to be gratuitously punitive and stated the restrictions
imposed on Dr. Al-Arian appeared to go beyond what were necessary
on security grounds and were inconsistent with international standards
for humane treatment.
The government
failed to produce any evidence. The jury acquitted Al-Arian on all
serious charges and voted 102 for acquittal on all other charges.
The jury acquitted him despite U.S. District Court judge James Moodys
many biased rulings against Al-Arian.
Knowing that
Al-Arian and his family could not stand the strain of solitary confinement
for another two and a half years while a new case was prepared,
the U.S. Department of Justice announced that it would retry him.
His attorney urged him to make a plea in order to end the ordeal.
Al-Arians
plea is innocuous and bears no relationship to the serious charges
on which he was tried. According to Wikipedia, as part of the plea
agreement the government acknowledged that Al-Arians
activities were non-violent and that there were no victims to the
charge in the plea agreement.
Under the plea
agreement, Al-Arians sentence amounted essentially to time
served, but he was double-crossed by Judge Moody, who according
to Alexander Cockburn used inflamed language about Al-Arian
having blood on his hands (a charge rejected by the jury)
and handed down the maximum sentence.
The terrorist
prosecutors had yet more in store for Al-Arian. In October 2006,
federal prosecutor Gordon Kromberg, reportedly notorious as
an Islamophobe, demanded, in violation of the plea agreement,
that Al-Arian testify before a grand jury in Alexandria, Virginia,
investigating an Islamic research center. According to Wikipedia,
in a verbal agreement that appears in court transcripts, federal
prosecutors agreed [as part of the plea agreement] that Al-Arian
would not have to testify in Virginia.
Al-Arians
lawyers saw Krombergs subpoena of their client as a setup,
and Al-Arian refused to testify. On January 22, 2007, Al-Arian was
brought before a federal judge on contempt charges. He described
to the judge the extraordinary abuse he had suffered at the hands
of federal prison officials. The guards and officers all felt free
to abuse Al-Arian, because they had heard the lie on right-wing
talk radio and from neoconservative media that he was a terrorist
who hated Americans. The hostile judge sentenced Al-Arian to eighteen
months more on a civil contempt charge for refusing to testify about
a case that he knew nothing about.
Kromberg contrived
to put Al-Arian in a situation in which truthful answers in court
under oath could be turned into a perjury charge by offering the
defendants reduced charges in exchange for their testimony that
Al-Arian was involved with them in some alleged activity and lied
under oath. Alternatively, Al-Arian would be cited for civil contempt
for refusal to testify. The ease with which Kromberg violated the
plea agreement and abused the prosecutorial power in full view of
federal judges should give pause to every American.
When a university
professor, who has done nothing but try to correct the one-sided
story Americans are fed about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
can be treated in this way by the U.S. Department of Justice, civil
liberty in the United States is in a precarious condition.
The ease with
which Al-Arian was transformed into a terrorist should be a lesson
to us all. People in charge of Homeland Security are no less inclined
than police and prosecutors to make expansive interpretations of
their mandate and what constitutes terrorism and suspect behavior.
On May 28, 2007, the Associated Press reported that the Alabama
Department of Homeland Security had included among terrorist groups
listed on its Web site environmentalists, antiwar protesters, abortion
opponents, and gay- and animal-rights advocates. It is an ancient
practice of government to hype fear in order to gain arbitrary power
that can be turned against anyone. Perhaps this expansive definition
of terrorist explains the eighty thousand names on the governments
no-fly list.
Another problem
with arbitrary and undefined power is that it ends up being exercised
by people who tend to receive low marks for good judgment and intelligence.
English film director Mike Figgis was held for five hours in an
interrogation cell at Los Angeles International Airport because
U.S. immigration officers are unfamiliar with the professional language
of television show producers and lacked the common sense to avoid
a misunderstanding. When asked the reason for his visit, Figgis
said: Im here to shoot a pilot. Shoot,
of course, means to film, and pilot is the first episode
of a new TV show. The people providing our security concluded that
Figgis had voluntarily confessed to a plot to come to America in
order to murder an airline pilot. Figgis survived his assumption
that people in Los Angeles understood movie talk, but the desire
of people empowered to thwart terrorism to use their power is great.
Any excuse will do.
Sliding
Toward Dictatorship
The assaults
of the Bush regime on civil liberty, the Constitution, and the separation
of powers are more determined and more successful than its military
assaults on the Middle East, which provide the war time
justification for the attack on civil liberty in the United States.
The regime and its supporters are determined to raise the president
to dictatorial powers, at least in times of war, the initiation
of which is being turned into a presidential prerogative.
On May 9, 2007,
President Bush signed the National Security and Homeland Security
Presidential Directive. If in the presidents opinion a catastrophic
emergency occurs, the directive places all governmental power
in the hands of the president, effectively abolishing the checks
and balances in the Constitution. Underlying this directive is the
unitary executive doctrine, a theory pushed by the Federalist
Society, an important source of law clerks, DOJ appointees, and
judicial nominees for the Republican Party. The doctrine, supported
by Supreme Court justices such as Samuel Alito, claims that the
executive power of the president is completely separate and independent
of the legislative and judicial powers and not subject to infringement
by them. The manner in which this doctrine is being institutionalized
is creating the additional claim that executive power is the supreme
power. In effect, unitary executive theory is elevating the president
to a dictator with the power to ignore or suspend laws.
The unitary
executive doctrine is a direct attack on the constitutional separation
of powers established by the Founding Fathers. One of the alleged
advantages of the unitary executive is that the president can act
more quickly and efficiently if he is not subject to interference
from Congress and the judiciary. However, as Justice Louis Brandeis
explained in 1926, the doctrine of the separation of powers
was adopted by the convention of 1787 not to promote efficiency
but to preclude the exercise of arbitrary power. The purpose was
not to avoid friction, but, by means of the inevitable friction
incident to the distribution of the governmental powers among three
departments, to save the people from autocracy.
News reports
that the Bush administration has contracted with Halliburton to
build detention centers in the United States at a cost of $385 million
revive memories of the World War II detention of Japanese American
citizens. It has not been explained who are the intended detainees
for the new detention centers. Do the American people want to trust
with detention centers an executive branch, which claims the power
to set aside habeas corpus, statutory law, due process, and the
prohibition against torture?
Polls show
that 36 percent of the American public and more than half of New
Yorkers lack confidence in the 9/11 Commission Report. Despite a
significant percentage of the publics disbelief in the explanation
of the event that took America to war in the Middle East, Congress
and the media continue to tolerate the Bush administrations
aggressive rhetoric, which seeks to widen the war on terror
from Afghanistan and Iraq to Iran, Syria, and Lebanon. The diligence
with which Vice President Cheney and the neoconservatives press
for an attack on Iran, and the extreme position that the Bush administration
has taken on executive power, raise the question whether the Bush
administration has an agenda that takes precedence over Americas
constitutional democracy.
Never
in its history have the American people faced such danger to their
constitutional protections as they face today from those in the
government who hold the reins of power and from elements of the
legal profession and the federal judiciary that support energy
in the executive. An assertive executive backed by an aggressive
U.S. Department of Justice and unobstructed by a supine Congress
and an intimidated corporate media has demonstrated an ability to
ignore statutory law and public opinion. The precedents that have
been set during the opening years of the twenty-first century bode
ill for the future of American liberty.
Excerpted
from The
Tyranny of Good Intentions by Paul Craig Roberts and Lawrence
M. Stratton. Excerpted by permission of Three Rivers Press, a division
of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt
may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from
the publisher.
June
7, 2008
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall
Street Journal,
has been reporting shocking cases of prosecutorial abuse for two
decades. Lawrence M. Stratton is a Ph. D. candidate in Christian
Ethics at Princeton Theological Seminary and a former adjunct professor
of Georgetown University Law Center. He is currently on the adjunct
Ethics faculty at Villanova University. A new edition of their book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
a documented account of how Americans lost the protection of law,
has just been released by Random House.
Copyright
© 2008 Paul Craig Roberts
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