Despite our nominal constitutional protections, Cohn recounts
how the history of the country was marked by abuses of power going back
to the Alien and Sedition Acts under John Adams. They were enacted to
stifle dissent in time of possible war, but, in fact, were used against
Republican opponents to deny them what Jefferson called "the highest
form of patriotism" - the right to dissent.
Our reputed
greatest President, Abraham Lincoln, followed in Adams' tradition
during the Civil War. He suspended habeas and other civil liberties,
instituted an unfair draft, blatantly abused his power overall and
functioned ad libitum as a virtual dictator. Woodrow Wilson was no
different, and so was Franklin Roosevelt, both of whom justified their
right to set aside constitutional protections in time of war. No
evidence suggests doing it helped. There's plenty, however, to prove
they weakened the republic making it easier for future Presidents to
take even greater liberties interpreting the law as they wished. Enter
George Bush. Case closed.
Cohn notes that few Americans
understand international law, or the Constitution either, for that
matter, aside from some pro forma words they can recite perfunctorily
but not explain. They also don't know international law is US law as
well under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution. It states all
treaties "shall be the supreme Law of the Land." They include the UN
Charter, four Geneva Conventions, the UN Convention Against Torture
banning any form of the practice at all times for any reason, and all
other treaties the nation signs. Sadly, Cohn observes, constitutional
and international law "didn't prevent a series of executive branch
violations in the 1960s (under Lyndon Johnson mostly) and 1970s
(egregiously under Richard Nixon) when the executive branch" operated
outside the limits of the law they were sworn to uphold but didn't.
Cohn then gets into the meat of her important book recounting George
Bush's six specific appalling abuses of power still raging unrestrained
out of control and in recent days got even worse as explained below.
A War of Aggression
International law bans premeditated aggressive war under any
conditions. The UN Charter clearly states a nation may only use force
under two conditions: when authorized to do it by the Security Council
or under Article 51 that allows the "right of individual or collective
self-defense if an armed attack occurs against a Member....until the
Security Council has taken measures to maintain international peace and
security." In other words, self-defense is permissible but an
unprovoked attack on another nation violates sacred international law
and constitutes what the Nuremberg Charter called "the supreme
international crime against peace."
Clear evidence exists that
the Bush administration intended to attack Afghanistan and Iraq prior
to 9/11. All that was needed (as laid out in 2000 by the
neoconservative Project for a New American Century - PNAC) was "some
catastrophic and catalyzing event - like a New Pearl Harbor" to
militarize the nation and wage aggressive war. On 9/11, the Bush
administration got its wish and "swung into action" by going to war
based on deceit and lies about invalid threats and for reasons other
than stated.
Former CIA head of counterintelligence, Vincent
Cannistraro, later acknowledged it was based on "cooked intelligence."
And CIA analyst Michael Scheuer said the agency was resigned "that we
were going to war" and no facts or analysis would stop it. In addition,
an August 6 John Conyers-ordered report found that "members of the Bush
administration misstated, overstated, and manipulated intelligence with
regards to linkages between Iraq and Al Queda; the acquisition of
nuclear weapons" along with other lies to justify war including
so-called WMDs known not to exist years earlier.
In July, 2002,
the New York Times got access to a highly classified document titled
"CentCom Courses of Action" containing what the Pentagon called a "war
plan" to invade Iraq. It began in earnest as a secret air war in May,
2002 that by end of August "had become a full air offensive," according
to the London Sunday Times. British MI 6 chief Richard Dearlove then
revealed the secret contents of the so-called Downing Street memo based
on a July, 2002 Washington meeting where "the facts (to justify war
with Iraq) were being fixed around the policy."
Earlier on
September 18, 2001, the administration set off on the road to war with
the joint House-Senate resolution passage of the Authorization for Use
of Military Force (AUMF). It authorized "the use of United States Armed
Forces against those responsible for the recent attacks launched
against the United States." Then in October, 2002, Congress surrendered
its authority to George Bush by passing the Joint Resolution to
Authorize the Use of United States Armed Forces Against Iraq to "defend
the national security of the United States against the continuing
threat of Iraq." Republicans and Democrats acted together knowing Iraq
posed no threat and that its action violated the UN Charter.
Cohn explains the real motive behind attacking, invading and occupying
Iraq that by now a bright ten year old understands. Paul Wolfowitz
finally admitted using WMDs as an excuse was "for bureaucratic reasons"
and the one pretext everyone could agree on. He later had to admit what
everyone already knew. The real issue is oil and the fact that Iraq
potentially has more of the cheap light sweet easily accessible kind
than any other country on earth, including Saudi Arabia. One Wall
Street oil analyst calls the country "the most valuable real estate on
the planet" and the last of the "low-hanging fruit."
Solidifying a huge military presence in the region is also key with the
US well-entrenched now on 106 known sites, including four super bases
(with more planned) as large as small towns and with all their
amenities, and a Vatican-sized largest embassy in the world. The Middle
East is where two-thirds of proved oil reserves are located, and that
fact was never lost on present and prior US planners. Notions of WMDs,
removing a dictator, protecting national security, preventive
self-defense, establishing democracy and conducting a humanitarian
mission were all concocted rubbish. Sadly, it was believed by most
people and too many still do, the result of lots of forced-fed dominant
media hyperventilating help round the clock and on board with the
administration to the bitter end for an illegal venture gone sour.
Along with so many other violations of international law, Cohn noted
the Bush administration ignored the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights (ICCPR) that's part of US law "under the Supremacy
Clause of the Constitution." Article I (1) says: "All people have the
right of self-determination. By virtue of that right they (can) freely
determine their political status and (can) freely pursue their
economic, social and cultural development." Cohn stated the US had no
"legal authority to intervene in the affairs of the Iraqi people and
choose their leadership for them."
The Bush administration set
about doing it in March, 2003. It followed the secret air war it waged
months earlier as a softening up action for the "shock and awe" to come
that the New York Times praised as "almost (having) biblical power."
The entire corporate media also ignored the use of illegal weapons like
depleted uranium, white phosphorous, and cluster bombs that keep
killing and maiming long after the end of battle. In addition,
experimental weapons are freely used, some targeting innocent civilians
to inflict terror, and all intended to subdue a population hostile to a
foreign occupier.
These are "weapons of mass destruction,"
stated Cohn. She also cited the Geneva Convention Relative to the
Protection of Civilian Persons in time of War (Geneva IV). It calls
"willfully causing great suffering or serious injury to body and
health" a grave breach of law. The Bush administration deliberately
flouts the law and "is committing war crimes with its use of these
weapons." The result since March, 2003 alone has been mass deaths in
appallingly high numbers, immeasurable human misery and suffering, and
destruction on an enormous scale - all of which is still ongoing daily
with innocent civilians afflicted most.
Has it made the US and
world safer? Hardly, by any measure and quite the opposite, in fact,
according to an April, 2006 National Intelligence Estimate Cohn quoted.
It stated the Iraq conflict became "a 'cause celebre' for jihadists,
breeding deep resentment (against the US) in the Muslim world (and)
shaping a new generation of terrorist leaders and operatives." In
committing "the supreme international crime against peace" against two
nations, the US has become "the greatest menace of our times," quoting
Nuremberg chief Justice Robert Jackson's reference to the crime of
aggression and by implication any nation committing it.
The Torture of Prisoners
Post-9/11, "the gloves came off" said former CIA Counterterrorism
Center chief, Cofer Black, now part of the paramilitary mercenary
operation at Blackwater, USA operating freely outside the law as
thuggish hired guns in Iraq, New Orleans and coming soon to a
neighborhood near you. Cohn noted "Soon after 9/11, senior
administration lawyers wrote memoranda to redefine and justify torture"
along with most everything else they planned outside domestic and
international law. George Bush announced Geneva Conventions didn't
apply to Guantanamo prisoners, and Alberto Gonzales (as White House
legal council) sweepingly called them "quaint" and "obsolete" in 2002.
What they had in mind is anything goes and that includes torture even
though it's widely known not to elicit useful information. It's also
known as an effective terror weapon and a useful means of social
control.
The practice is also abhorrent and violates at least
two US laws - the 1996 War Crimes Act and 1994 Torture Statute. That's
along with numerous widely accepted international ones, even though all
too frequently many countries, including so-called "civilized" ones,
don't observe them. We all know what happened since from the appalling
abuses at Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib and at secret CIA and Pentagon 'black
sites" around the world. They're in countries known to use torture and
are now in league with US agencies doing it for whatever favors they're
getting in return.
Cohn reviewed some of the laws banning
torture including the 1994 Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment than bans mistreatment as
well as torture. The US is also "party to the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)" that guarantees the right to life
and prohibits cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment. She then notes
"the most famous anti-torture treaties are the four Geneva Conventions
(of 1949). The first two provide for the protection of sick and wounded
(forces in battle)." The third one defines who is a prisoner of war
"and establishes minimum standards" for POW treatment. The fourth
convention applies to civilians and affords them protections during war
that require they be treated humanely.
All four conventions
have a common thread called Common Article Three. "It requires that
persons taking no active part in hostilities (including the detained)
be treated humanely at all times." War crimes are grave breaches under
Geneva, and the 1996 War Crimes Act provides up to life imprisonment or
the death penalty for persons convicted of committing war crimes within
or outside the US. Administration memos from officials like Gonzales as
well as John Yoo and Jay Bybee (writing for the DOJ Office of Legal
Council) advised Al-Queda and Taliban interrogators were exempt from
these laws "under the President's commander-in-chief powers." Cohn
explained "the Torture Convention permits no such exemption, even
during wartime."
As bad or worse was narrowing and distorting
definitions with Yoo and Bybee writing psychological harm must last
"months or even years" to be torture. Cohn noted Yoo was the architect
of the repressive Patriot Act and domestic surveillance program. Bybee
was later appointed to the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
proving lawlessness is rewarded as long as lawbreakers have friends in
high places.
Cohn reviewed how torture was authorized at the
highest level with damning evidence from human rights organizations
like Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). They've shown how widespread it's
been in Iraq, Guantanamo and at all secret "black sites." Human Rights
Watch also documented that its use is "systematic" and known "at
varying levels of command" with explicit testimony proving it.
The human consequences are devastating and widespread with the ICRC
saying as many as 90% of persons detained were arrested by mistake.
Seton Hall University Law School professor Mark Denebeaux and others
analyzed unclassified government data gotten through FOIA requests,
basing their report on evidentiary summaries from 2004 military
hearings. They learned the majority of Afghan prisoners at Guantanamo
weren't accused of hostile acts and 95% of them were seized by Afghan
bounty hunters who "sold" them to US forces for $5000 per claimed
Taliban and $25,000 for supposed Al-Queda members.
What they
endure as a result is horrific with Cohn detailing how they're treated
that's reminiscent of the Spanish Inquisition or the worst abuses under
the Nazis. They amount to a menu of "sadistic, blatant, and wanton
criminal" acts against innocent people, including women and children.
One particularly appalling procedure is force-feeding applied to as
many as one-third of Guantanamo detainees and an unknown number of
prisoners elsewhere. The practice is so violent, it amounts to torture.
Tubes, at times the thickness of fingers, are inserted in the nose and
thrust all the way down throats and into stomachs causing extreme pain,
vomiting up blood, and even greater pain when tubes are removed with
blood gushing out in the process.
One victim of this practice
described the pain as "unbearable," and attorney Julia Tarver
(representating Guantanamo clients) explained physicians violated their
Hippocratic Oath to do no harm by being a part of it. The 53-nation UN
Human Rights Commission also confirmed in 2006 that "doctors and other
health professionals are participating in force-feeing detainees" by
this method that amounts to horrific torture.
Cohn noted an
August, 2004 Independent Panel to Review Department of the Defense
Detention Operations report called the Schlesinger Report. It concluded
"Policies approved for use on al Queda and Taliban detainees (who never
got Geneva protection but should have)....(are also) applied to
detainees who did fall under" Geneva. Another August, 2004 Army report
indicated the most extreme abuses "are, without question criminal."
They're also done "by proxy" at "black sites" and through the illegal
practice of "extraordinary rendition" with victims secretly sent to
other countries where they disappear into torture-prison hellholes, out
of sight and mind. The Convention against Torture prohibits what's
called "refoulement - expelling, returning, or extraditing a person to
another country where there are substantial grounds to believe he would
be in danger of being tortured." Popular sites include Egypt, Syria,
Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Pakistan, Uzbekistan, Morocco, Ethiopia and other
repressive countries. Cohn quoted a former CIA agent saying: "If you
want a serious interrogation, you send a prisoner to Jordan. If you
want them to be tortured, you send them to Syria. If you want someone
to disappear....you send them to Egypt."
With the Bush
administration earmarking $63 billion in arms sales or giveaways to
client Middle East countries like Israel, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and
others, things are guaranteed to get worse and may become explosive and
out of control. Increased violence will follow deliveries and with it
abusive torture and much more.
On July 19, 2007, after the
publication of Cohn's book, George Bush's arrogance, contempt for the
law and hypocrisy were on display again in one package contained in
another sweeping executive order (EO). According to AP, he "breathed
new life into the CIA's terror interrogation program (aka no holds
barred torture) that would allow harsh questioning of suspects limited
in public only by a vaguely worded ban (signifying none whatever) on
cruel and inhuman treatment."
The order pretends to prohibit
some practices, "to quell international criticism," describes them only
vaguely, and doesn't say what practices are still allowed. The Bush
administration insists its interrogation operation is one of its most
important tools in the "war on terrorism." Bottom line - ugly business
as usual will continue unchanged and unchecked, except for the
doublespeak language signifying only deception from a President exposed
as a serial liar.
Summary Execution and Willful Killing
Summary executions, or extra-judicial murders, have long been practiced
by past US governments with rogue agencies like CIA masters of the
black art and skilled at covering its tracks. The Bush regime cares
little about subtleties, so its operatives wantonly and openly engage
in this simple way of removing adversaries even though Cohn stated:
"Willful killing is a grave breach of the Geneva Conventions (and)
punishable as a war crime under the US War Crimes Act."
In the
wake of the Vietnam war and Watergate, Gerald Ford (because of
necessity, not conviction) issued an executive order banning
assassinations, but George Bush revoked it secretly in December, 2001.
He established a "special-access program" authorizing "clandestine
Special Forces to snatch or assassinate anyone considered a 'high
value' al-Queda operative, anywhere in the world."
George
Bush, with roguish intent, turned a blind eye to willful murder,
opening the door to mass, indiscriminate slaughter in Iraq, Afghanistan
or anywhere in the world he chooses, including targets at home. In
occupied countries, it's allowed the military to operate in so-called
"free-fire zones" with orders to shoot anything that moves. It
sanctioned the use of terror weapons against resistance and civilian
targets with casualties in the latter instance brushed off as
"collateral damage."
All Iraq is a "free-fire zone" even though
the Fourth Geneva Convention bans collective punishment against an
occupied people. The results have been horrific with cities like
Fallujah suffering most. The US November, 2004 attack there killed as
many as 6000 civilians, the result of vengeful indiscriminate assaults
against defenseless people who just happened to live there. In
November, 2005 a smaller massacre took place in Haditha where US
Marines slaughtered 24 unarmed civilians "execution-style."
Authorizations for these and other banned practices come right from the
top with troops in the field likely believing they're licensed to kill
by their commander-in-chief, DOD boss and top Pentagon brass. They're
right.
Cohn noted allegations are that "US troops have
engaged in (routine) summary executions and willful killing (across the
country in cities like) Qaim, Abu Ghraib, Taal Al Jal, Mukaradeeb,
Mahmudiya, Hamdaniyah, Samarra, Salahuddin and Ishaqi" along with
British forces doing the same thing in Basra and southern Iraq where
they're based. It's so simple and common a practice that one US soldier
described it as easy as "squashing an ant" with no greater price to pay
for it. The Bush administration and military command are contemptuous
of Iraqis and show it by the huge numbers of innocent people they
slaughter daily. In so doing, they commit the worst kinds of war crimes
along with torture, abuse and neglect discussed above.
The Guantanamo Gulag
Cohn noted that Amnesty International described this hellhole as "the
gulag of our times." Already discussed is the fact that most people
sent there, and still held, were innocent bystanders snatched in
Afghanistan by bounty hunters able to cash in on a huge payday at the
cost of an innocent human being's freedom.
Cohn explained that
holding detainees at Guantanamo violates US and international law, and
the prison camp itself is illegal. She recounted how "the Gitmo story
start(ed) in 1903, when the US Army occupied Cuba after its war of
independence against Spain." The Platt Amendment, authorizing US
intervention, "was included in the Cuban Constitution as a prerequisite
for the withdrawal of US troops from the rest of Cuba." However, it
only allowed for the right to use Guantanamo Bay "as coaling or naval
stations, and for no other purpose." Franklin Roosevelt then signed a
new treaty with the island state in 1934 for the same purpose with no
provision to use the territory as an offshore prison camp or military
base. Franklin Roosevelt never met George Bush.
Cohn explained
it's "no accident that the Bush gang" chose this spot for its gulag,
one of many offshore. All along, the administration "maintained that
Guantanamo Bay is not a US territory" so US courts and US law have no
jurisdiction there. The result is what Cohn called "indescribable
torture," and she listed some of the barbaric methods used.
She
also discussed "due process" the Bush administration denied all
Guantanamo detainees with the Supreme Court disageeing in Rasul v.
Bush. In the decision, the Court "settled the jurisdictional question"
saying the US exercises "complete jurisdiction and control" at the base
with all aliens held there "entitled to invoke the federal courts'
authority" under their habeas rights. The Court also rebuked the Bush
administration in Hamdi (a US citizen) v. Rumsfeld with Justice
O'Conner saying "a state of war is not a blank check for the President
when it comes to rights of the Nation's citizens."
In response,
the administration established Combatant Status Review Tribunals (CSRT)
"ostensibly to comply" with Rasul. They do not as prisoners under them
were only entitled to a "personal representative," not a trained
attorney able to defend their due process rights. Detainees were also
only allowed to see summaries of unsubstantiated classified evidence
against them, requests for witnesses were rarely granted, and their
"representatives" ill-served them in tribunal hearings. As a result,
they got no justice.
Cohn quoted attorney Joseph Margulies
saying: "The CSRT is the first time in US history in which the
lawfulness of a person's detention is based on evidence secured by
torture that's not shared with the prisoner, that he has the burden to
rebut and without the assistance of council." Cohn then added: "CSRT
violates the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights which
prohibits arbitrary detention and guarantees a detainee the right to be
informed of the reason for his detention," the right to council, to
examine witnesses, to call witnesses, and "the right to the presumption
of innocence."
Shamefully, the Republican-led Congress backed
the administration by passing the Detainee Treatment Act (DTA) in
December, 2005. It prevents US courts from hearing habeas petitions
filed after the date of DTA. Cohn explained "the Supreme Court (then)
stepped in again in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld after the Bush administration
charged this man (supposedly bin Laden's driver) with one count of
conspiracy "to commit....offenses triable by military commission." It
held that Congress didn't intend to deny detainees like Hamdan their
right to federal court jurisdiction, and that Geneva Conventions do
apply.
Cohn then reviewed the outrageous Military Commissions
Act (MCA) of 2006, aka "the torture authorization act." It grants the
administration extraordinary unconstitutional powers to detain,
interrogate and prosecute alleged terror suspects and anyone claimed to
be their supporters. In addition, it allows the President the right to
call anyone anywhere in the world an "unlawful enemy combatant" and
empowers him to arrest and incarcerate those accused indefinitely in
military prisons without corroborating evidence proving guilt.
It also annuls habeas for anyone charged, lets the President decide
what constitutes torture, grants US officials retroactive immunity from
past crimes, prohibits detainees from invoking Geneva rights, allows
"unlawful enemy combatants" and civilians to be tried by military
commissions that can impose death sentences with no right of appeal,
makes torture-extracted and hearsay evidence permissible, sanctions
indefinite and secret detentions and more.
Cohn asked:
"So how unconstitutional is the Military Commissions Act? Let us count
the ways. MCA violates the Suspensions Clause of the Constitution by
denying non-US citizens (and citizens, too) any meaningful opportunity
to challenge the legality of their detention." It also violates Geneva
plus the Fifth and Sixth Amendments. Above all, it violates the spirit
and letter of the law and a nation claiming a tradition of respecting
it. No longer under George Bush, who flouts the law openly, but it
happened often earlier as well whenever past Presidents like Adams,
Lincoln, Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, Nixon, Johnson, Reagan and others
ignored or twisted the law for political purposes. None, however, did
it as brazenly, openly and systematically as George Bush who as chief
executive believes the law is what he says it is. And never before was
Congress and the courts as willing to go along with him as now.
Cohn quoted a former military linguist saying "A stench of despair
hangs over Guantanamo," and one detainee told his lawyer he'd rather
die than stay there. Many have tried taking their lives and a few
succeeded. The National Lawyers Guild, Association of American Jurists,
Amnesty International and other human rights organizations all agree
that Guantanamo (and all "black site" and other torture-prison
hellholes) are a blight on the soul of America, they should be closed,
and all detainees held at them released or charged with criminal
offenses "in accordance with international legal norms."
Spying on Americans
Cohn recounted how on December 16, 2005, the New York Times "unleashed
a bombshell" its editors knew about a year earlier but suppressed at
the request of the administration. It reported "George W. Bush had been
secretly spying on Americans without warrants since late 2001. The next
day, Bush confirmed that he had authorized the National Security Agency
(NSA) 'to intercept the international communications of people with
known links to al Queda' and related terrorist organizations." The
operation was called the "Terrorist Surveillance Program."
Cohn noted "wiretapping without probable cause or judicial oversight
violates both the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) and the
Fourth Amendment." Thousands have been affected by it, and Cohn
believes the administration used the program to target its critics.
It's a throwback to "the bad old days of FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover"
and his domestic spying programs begun in the 1940s or earlier. It was
used then, later and now to monitor, threaten and silence Americans (or
anyone else) with "unorthodox political views" meaning they disagreed
with government policies like McCarthy witch-hunts, racial abuse, the
Vietnam war and most everything George Bush does.
The FBI
began its COINTELPRO (counterintelligence program) in 1956 to "expose,
disrupt, misdirect, discredit and otherwise neutralize" political and
activist groups like the American Indian Movement, Black Panthers,
Martin Luther King, and Vietnam war protesters. Richard Nixon later
used national security wiretaps and illegal break-ins to target his
political enemies. He had a long list of them.
Congress
responded in 1978 to stop these practices with the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act (FISA) "to regulate electronic surveillance (while
also) protecting national security." The law established the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC). Its judges are appointed by the
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. They meet in secret "to consider
applications for wiretap orders" when government must convince a judge
probable cause exists to believe the target in question is a foreign
power or its agent. FISA wiretap limitations don't apply for foreign
nationals abroad. "Its restrictions are triggered only when the
surveillance targets a US citizen or permanent resident or when the
surveillance is obtained from a wiretap physically located within the
United States. Also, FISA specifically covers warrantless wiretaps
during wartime," only for the first 15 days after war is declared, and
can't be used against US citizens.
Nothing deters George Bush,
his Justice Department and compliant spy agencies. As Cohn put it, he
made "and end run around FISA" and now can do it "legally" as of August
5 with more on that below. Earlier in late 2001, he sidelined FISC with
a secret executive order establishing his Terrorist Surveillance
Program. It authorized NSA to monitor phone and computer communications
of Americans in the US at NSA's discretion - in other words, illegal
warrantless spying on domestic communications of anyone for any reason,
law or no law. Cohn noted Bush (as far as we know) is the first
President to defy FISA since its 1978 enactment. He's now set a
shameless precedent for others later on.
He also ignores the
Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and seizure
to protect against police state practices. Cohn explained the Supreme
Court "consistently declared that a judge must determine whether
probable cause exists." George Bush flouts this ruling with impudence
and arrogance. It's of no concern to him that the American Bar
Association and the National Lawyers Guild declared his warrantless
surveillance program violates the law of the land. He believes he's the
law and can do what he pleases.
Alberto Gonzales is a war
criminal marching in lockstep with his boss and continues to shame the
Justice Department he heads. He falsely and criminally maintains
Congress' Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF) in
September, 2001 provided legal justification for warrentless su
rveillance
outside of FISA. Former Senator Gary Hart called such actions "a repeat
of the Nixon years." Back then, he justified it because of civil unrest
in protest against the Vietnam war. Today, it's the phony "war on
terrorism" and raging ones in Iraq and Afghanistan. Cohn emphasized
"Bush has already gone far beyond what the Constitution authorizes, and
FISA makes it a crime." At least that was so until August 5.
The Terrorist Surveillance Program isn't the only secret spying the
Bush administration authorized, but now it's got a Congress-sanctioned
warrantless open field to do it without court oversight at the
discretion of the Attorney General (AG) and/or Director of National
Intelligence (DNI). Prior to its August recess, Democrats and
Republicans cravenly caved to the politics of fear and hastily passed
the White House crafted Protect America Act 2007 amending FISA in
doublespeak language Orwell would love.
It will supposedly
close so-called "communication gaps" but will allow virtual
unrestricted mass data-mining monitoring and intercept of domestic and
foreign internet, cell phones and other new technology as well as
transit international phone call traffic and emails. The Act claims to
restrict surveillance to foreign nationals "reasonably believed to be
outside the United States" and will sunset in six months unless
renewed. In fact, the new law targets everyone including US citizens
inside the country if the AG or DNI claim they pose a potential
terrorist or national security threat, and no evidence is needed to
prove it. Further, in an election year, renewal is absolutely
guaranteed, possibly with even harsher provisions added.
In
point of fact, this law allows virtual unrestricted warrantless spying
targeting anyone for any claimed national security reason. It thus
renders any notion of illegal searches and privacy rights null and
void. This hellish Act effectively legalizes illegality by Fourth
Amendment standards that Patriot Act provisions pretty much swept away
earlier. This is how things work in a police state where laws render
privacy issues (and all other freedoms) null and void and everyone is
under constant surveillance and stripped of their rights.
Even
without the new law, however, the administration had in place a menu of
past and current programs that combined amount to "big brother" writ
large and now is getting larger. In May, 2006, it was learned Verizon
Communications, AT & T, and BellSouth provided NSA with telephone
and internet communications flowing into and out of the country having
nothing to do with national security. Cohn quoted the New York Times
reporting a senior government official saying the program confirmed NSA
was able to access most all phone calls in the country. It means
everyone is being listened to illegally so the spy agency knows
everything about us from the health of our family to what toppings we
like on our takeout pizza.
Data mining violates the 1986 Stored
Communications Act, but there's lots more. The "Bush gang" secretly
collects our most personal information from an operation called the
Terrorist Finance Tracking System. With no court-approved
authorization, they've been accessing records from a huge international
database to examine the banking, credit card and other financial
transactions of many thousands of Americans in the country. It amounts
to a secret end run around bank privacy laws requiring the government
to show cause for why these records are relevant to an investigation.
Still more civil liberties have been lost the result of Patriot act
justice. It targets anti-war protesters and political activists hostile
to Bush administration policies. The new law makes their actions crimes
of domestic terrorism when they're only, in fact, expressions of
constitutionally guaranteed freedoms, including our most sacred First
amendment ones.
Post-9/11, other unconstitutional
speech-related monitoring began as well, including the short-lived
Terrorism Information and Prevention System (Operation TIPS). The idea
was to use civilian informers like postal employees to report "unusual"
neighborhood activities, police-state style. The scheme flopped when
the postal service refused to be spies.
Then, there was the
Pentagon's Total Information Awareness (TIA) renamed Terrorism
Information Awareness to monitor anything about anyone under the
spurious cover of it relating to "terrorism." TIA came under
considerable congressional flack but some or all of its activities
continue under new names relating to other Pentagon projects and
initiatives so illegal military spying continues unabated.
One
such program is called the Threat and Local Observation Notice (TALON)
to collect domestic intelligence by amassing a huge database, again
spuriously related to "terrorism." It focuses on war protesters
targeted by police state monitoring of their constitutional right to
freely oppose the nation's illegal wars of aggression the Bush
administration says are justified to protect against threats to
national security. The Pentagon had second thoughts about it after
drawing flack for illegally targeting peace activists. Its spokesperson
called the program's results disappointing and doesn't warrant being
continued as currently constituted in light of its image in Congress
and the media as of last spring.
What's likely is that TALON's
activities are now rebranded and continuing like all the other illegal
intrusive spying known about or still secret. They include those run by
the Pentagon now authorized to operate freely on US soil in the
aftermath of last year's Defense Authorization Act revising the 1807
Insurrection Act and 1887 Posse Comitas. The change gives the President
the right to deploy the military on US soil in the name of national
security or "war on terrorism." It means, for the first time ever,
federal troops can legally operate inside the country any time George
Bush gives the order.
It gets even worse. On May 30, 2002, John
Ashcroft and FBI Director Robert Mueller revealed sweeping new
surveillance powers for this agency with a wide latitude to spy more
effectively on law-abiding US citizens. The new "diktat" lets the FBI
conduct investigations up to a year without having to show suspicion of
criminal activity. They can target anyone they choose, peering anywhere
they wish into our personal lives, that's none of their business, to
document trips we take, books and publications we read, internet sites
visited, political and charitable contributions made, meetings attended
and more. Anyone seen criticizing the government is fair game,
especially if it relates to the Iraq and Afghan wars.
Another
new data mining program is being used by police and federal authorities
in some states. It's called MATRIX standing for the Multistate
Anti-Terrorism Exchange Program. An ACLU 2004 White Paper explained "it
involves not the attempt to learn more facts about known suspects, but
(is a form of) mass scrutiny of the lives and activities of innocent
people.... to see whether each of them shows any signs of being a
terrorist or other (type) criminal."
MATRIX creates a
"terrorism quotient" or High Terrorist Factor (HTF) measuring the
likelihood individuals in the database are terrorists. The ACLU
believes the program is "an effort to recreate the discredited Total
Information Awareness (TIA) data mining program at the state level." It
shows the federal authorities are deep into efforts at all levels to
spy on US citizens. MATRIX is another unprecedented effort to do it
within or outside the law and constitutes a massive invasion of privacy
and violation of our rights in a free society, along with all other
post-9/11 unconstitutional spying invasions by any of the nation's 16
spy agencies.
The Constitution doesn't specifically mention a
right to privacy, but Supreme Court decisions affirmed it over the
years as a fundamental human right. As such, it's protected under the
Ninth Amendment as well as the Third prohibiting the quartering of
troops in homes, the Fourth affording protection from unreasonable
searches and seizures, and the Fifth protecting against
self-incrimination. MATRIX and other intrusions enhance Patriot Act
powers allowing them to persist outside of congressional oversight and
judicial review. It's another part of the overall scheme to subvert the
rule of law under George Bush police state justice.
It advanced
another step on July 17, after "Cowboy Republic" was published, when
George Bush issued another of his many presidential "one-man" decrees.
It was titled "Executive Order: Blocking Property of Certain Persons
Who Threaten Stabilization Efforts in Iraq." This unconstitutional
action effectively criminalizes dissent and shifts the nation another
perilous step closer to tyranny. It targets the anti-war movement in an
effort to further weaken and defuse it. It also adds another
unconstitutional layer onto the repressive Patriot Act author, analyst
and activist Jennifer Van Bergen says has been built on to "establish a
permanent framework for repression of free speech and dissent." All
"activists (now) = terrorists" as the administration cracks down hard
to control, suppress and remove all opposition.
In his
important and revealing 1980 book "Cracks in the Constitution,"
Ferdinand Lundberg stated the US Constitution "nowhere implicitly or
explicitly gives the President (the) power (to make) new law" by
issuing "one-man", often far-reaching" executive order decrees. But,
Lundberg explained "the President in the American constitutional system
is very much a de facto king....(he is) by far the most powerful
formally constituted political officer on earth." He has "vast power
(and) stands in a position midway between a collective executive (like
in the UK) and an absolute dictator."
George Bush proves
Lundberg was right and then some. He's taken full advantage, within and
outside the law, of what Lundberg called the "essence of presidential
power....in a single (vaguely worded) sentence." Specifically, Article
II, Section 1 reads: "The executive power shall be vested in a
President of the United States of America." That simple statement,
easily passed over and misunderstood, means the near-limitless power of
this office is "concentrated in the hands of one man" free to abuse it
if he chooses. Article II, Section 3 then almost nonchalantly adds:
"The President shall take care that the laws be faithfully executed"
while not saying Presidents are virtually empowered to make laws as
well as execute them although nothing in the Constitution permits this
practice.
Presidents also have no authority to stifle dissent,
but that hasn't deterred George Bush. Post-9/11, former press secretary
Ari Fleischer laid out the new "war on terrorism" rules of engagement
saying Americans "need to watch what they say, watch what they do." It
includes showing up for anti-war rallies and protesting military
recruitment. They're now considered "political terrorist activit(ies)."
We're being watched if we go and subject to future recrimination at the
whim of a rogue President and criminal administration meting out police
state justice.
Refusing to Execute the Law
Cohn quoted
James Madison from the Federalist Papers writing: "The preservation of
liberty requires that the three great departments of power should be
separate and distinct. The accumulation of all powers, legislative,
executive and judiciary, in the same hands... may justly be pronounced
the very definition of tyranny." George Bush proves the truth of
Madison's words. Since taking office, he systematically sought to usurp
all governing powers in his hands under his unconstitutional notion of
a "unitary executive" with the right to claim the law is what he says
it is. It isn't, never was, and never will be under a system of
constitutional law George Bush doesn't recognize in his continued
efforts to flout it recklessly.
Cohn stated: George Bush
"has....asserted unparalleled executive power by putting his stamp of
supremacy on more than one thousand provisions of law (more than all
past Presidents combined) enacted by Congress." He "quietly attached
147 'signing statements' to 1132 (law provisions) passed by Congress"
even though nothing in the Constitution permits this practice, and the
Supreme Court banned line-item vetoes. He abused his power to rewrite
laws to conform to administration policies and wishes, and Congress and
the courts have done nothing to stop him.
Cohn gave some
examples of this practice. "He issued his most notorious one" in
December, 2005 after signing the Detainee Treatment Act that prohibits
subjecting prisoners to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment and
punishment. The statement attached declared the administration would
interpret the law "in a manner consistent with the constitutional
authority of the President (as a "unitary executive") and as Commander
in Chief and consistent with the constitutional limitations on the
judicial power." Cohn's translation: George Bush will do as he pleases,
law or no law. He kept his word in spite of the Supreme Court's ruling
in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld affirming habeas petitions of Guantanamo
detainees. "His gang continues" torturing prisoners in violation of the
Detainee Treatment Act and High Court ruling.
Another egregious
example followed Patriot Act II (the renewal of the Patriot Act in even
harsher form in spite of several new provisions regarding congressional
oversight). George Bush's signing statement reserved for him the right
to refuse to give Congress reports it mandated just as he did regarding
previous laws. Contempt for the law, arrogance and extreme secrecy have
been hallmarks of his administration. This is one of the many ways he
shows it.
Another one came after Congress enacted a 2003 law
requiring the Inspector General in Iraq inform Congress whenever
officials won't cooperate with its investigations. Bush's signing
statement said the IG had no obligation to keep Congress informed.
Other signing statements flouted laws that:
-- Ban US combat troops being used against Colombian rebels,
-- Forbid uses of military intelligence that violate the Fourth Amendment,
-- Require retraining prison guards under Geneva Convention standards of humane treatment,
-- Mandate Iraq civil contractors undergo background checks,
-- Prohibit firing or punishing DOE and NRC whistle-blowers,
-- Require more minorities be recruited for Foreign Service and Civil Service jobs, and much more.
Cohn noted that the Task Force on Presidential Signing Statements and
the Separation of Powers Doctrine of the American Bar Association (ABA)
condemned the administration's use of signing statements as "contrary
to the rule of law and our constitutional system of separation of
powers." ABA president Michael Greco added: "We will be close to a
constitutional crisis if this issue....is left unchecked." Wharton
School of the University of Pennsylvania professor emeritus Edward
Herman warned about the same thing saying: "The brazeness of Bush's use
of (this practice) is remarkable. But even more remarkable (is that) it
fails to elicit sustained criticism and outrage (anywhere, and as a
result) We are in deep trouble (and getting increasingly deeper)."
The law of the land means nothing to George Bush and his band of
rogues. He keeps finding new ways to subvert it such as unilaterally
abrogating treaties and "courting nuclear disaster." Cohn noted he
"thumbed his nose at our obligations under the 1970 Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)" that's the "supreme law of the land
under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution." His abuses of power
also include:
-- claiming the right to develop new type nuclear weapons,
-- refusing to eliminate present ones,
-- reserving the right to test new nuclear weapons that will release radiation into the atmosphere,
-- abrogating the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty,
-- rescinding the subverting the Biological and Toxic Weapons Convention,
-- refusing to consider a Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty that would
prevent more nuclear bombs being added to present stockpiles,
-- provokingly challenging Russia and China by planning to situate
misnamed missile defense systems (intended for offense, not defense)
near their borders to give the US a nuclear first-strike advantage,
-- spending more on the military than all other nations combined with more large increases planned,
-- being the only nation opposed to the 2001 UN Agreement to Curb the International Flow of Small Arms,
-- Refusing to join 155 other countries as of February, 2007 in signing the 1997 Land Mine Treaty,
-- supplying rogue states with sophisticated weapons likely to be used
aggressively (and $63 billion more of them earmarked for selected
Middle East ones), and
-- claiming the unilateral right to wage
preventive wars of aggression under the Orwellian doctrine of
"anticipatory self-defense" using first-strike nuclear weapons.
These are the reckless acts of a rogue President claiming to be above
the law. Cohn has other ideas stating "The Constitution is unequivocal.
It is George W. Bush's job to enforce, not to rewrite, the laws
Congress has passed." Thomas Jefferson was also unequivocal in what he
wrote in the Declaration of Independence: "That to secure these
(unalienable) rights (of Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness)
Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their powers from the
consent of the governed, - That whenever any Form of Government becomes
destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to
abolish it, and to institute new Government (for) their Safety and
Happiness."
Conclusion
In response to growing public
opposition to the Iraq war, George Bush committed 50,000 more troops
with no set timetable for their drawdown or withdrawal. Even worse, he
stepped up rhetoric against Iran, pointing to a possible enlargement of
the Middle East conflict that will be catastrophic for the region and
US if it happens.
The Iraq war alone is an illegal act of
aggression and supreme international crime against peace. Along with
growing numbers in the public, those serving in the military have a
duty to disobey orders that violate international and constitutional
law. In addition, the Democrat-led Congress is obligated to "convene a
nonpartisan independent inquiry" to investigate prewar manipulated and
distorted intelligence. Cohn believes high government officials should
be held to account up to and especially George Bush and Dick Cheney.
She noted that DOJ regulations "call for the appointment of an outside
special counsel when (1) a criminal investigation of a person or matter
is warranted, (2) the investigation or prosecution of that person or
matter (within DOJ) would present a conflict of interest for the
Department," and (3) it's in the public interest to appoint an outside
Special Counsel because a criminal investigation of the administration
is essential.
From what's already known, the evidence
pointing to criminal wrongdoing (recounted above) is overwhelming and
demands action even though leading Democrats are conspiratorially
involved and should be held to account as well. Those found guilty (in
both parties)should be prosecuted. If US courts opt out, the
International Criminal Court (ICC) in the Hague should step in and act
as it's mandated to do. Although the US is not a signatory, it should
move ahead anyway in the name of humanity and grave threat it faces if
it won't. That's the current condition and danger. The world can't wait
for niceties or hoped for change that won't happen unless forced.
The ICC was established in 2002 (by the 1998 Rome Statute) as a
permanent world tribunal to prosecute individuals for genocide, war
crimes and crimes against humanity. They were defined by the 1945
Nuremberg Charter drafted by the US and its main WW II victorious
allies to try Nazi war criminals. The court was mandated to step in and
adjudicate in the kinds of high US officials' law violations now in
question, demanding redress. With world approval, it should act in
defiance of the American Servicemembers Protection Act of 2002 - aka
the Hague Invasion Act authorizing the President to send in the Marines
to rescue any American the ICC detains. He'll be hard-pressed to do it
if he and Dick Cheney are shackled inside ICC cells where they belong,
and not a moment too soon.
Cohn mentioned other prosecutorial
options as well. Under the principle of "universal jurisdiction," every
country has the authority to charge and prosecute anyone committing
grievous crimes of war or against humanity. None so far have acted,
it's unlikely a single one will be so bold, and that's why the ICC was
established to act for them.
The shameless Democrat-led 110th
Congress has defied the electorate and ignored its call for action as
well. The public demands what it has constitutional authority to do -
cut off all funding for two illegal wars of aggression and end them. In
defiance, Congress continues funding open-ended wars with only
disingenuous lip service paid to troop drawdowns and withdrawals.
Further, the Bush administration continues building a case for war
against Iran, with no just cause or legal standing for it, and
Democrats are rolling over in support shamelessly and dangerously.
Cohn ends her important book with an impassioned plea to "stop the
Cowboy Republicans" while there's still time. She points out what's
needed and clear. In the 1970s, Congress only ended the Vietnam war
after "tens of thousands of people marched in the streets" against it,
and a near-insurrection was seen possible inside the conscript
military. The anti-war movement today is large but tepid by comparison,
and the military is all-volunteer making the job harder.
Nonetheless, the need is urgent as the fate of a shaky republic and all
humanity hang in the balance. "Bush's hubris affects us all," Cohn
noted ominously. A way must be found "to demand truth, justice, and
accountability from the Cowboy Republicans....insisting the Bush gang
be held to account for its high crimes and misdemeanors." People must
demand an end to war and occupation and act to prevent another one.
What better reason is there than "Our lives....those of our children
(and all humanity) depend on it."
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also, visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to the
Steve Lendman News and Information Hour on TheMicroEffect.com Saturdays
at noon US central time.