Our greatest criminals are never charged with their greatest crimes
By Robert Higgs
Online
Journal Guest Writer
Nov 1, 2005, 20:09
(Independent Institute)—Special Prosecutor Patrick J. Fitzgerald has
now relieved, for the moment at least, the suspense about where his
prosecutorial finger was going to point. At Fitzgerald’s request, a grand jury
has indicted Vice President Dick Cheney’s chief of staff I. Lewis “Scooter”
Libby on five counts: one count of obstruction of justice, two counts of making
false statements to FBI investigators, and two counts of perjury.
The offenses for
which Libby has been indicted pertain to the Bush administration’s efforts to
smear and retaliate against its critics, in this case by exposing that one such
critic, former Ambassador Joseph Wilson, was married to then-covert CIA agent
Valerie Plame. No indictment was handed up against the president’s right-hand
man Karl Rove, but Fitzgerald says that he will continue his investigation, so
Rove and others remain at risk of indictment later, most likely for the same
sorts of offenses.
Much has been made
of these proceedings; reporters and commentators have speculated for months
about what Fitzgerald might do and what the repercussions of his actions might
be. At this juncture, however, it seems that the elephant has labored mightily
and borne only a mouse. Libby was not charged with violation of the law that
makes it a felony to knowingly expose the identity of a covert CIA agent—it’s
too difficult to prove that charge in court. The charges against him are
certainly not trivial—if convicted on all counts, he can be sentenced to 30
years in prison and fined $1.25 million—yet in view of the much greater crimes
in which he has long played such an integral part, the present charges are the
moral equivalent of a parking ticket. One almost suspects that such legal
proceedings are little more than the regime’s proven method of diverting
attention away from its greatest criminals and their greatest crimes.
After World War II,
the U.S. government joined the governments of the United Kingdom, the Soviet
Union, and France in establishing an International Military Tribunal to bring
to justice the leaders of the European Axis regimes. At a series of trials at Nuremberg
from 1945 to 1949, that tribunal tried more than one hundred defendants for
stipulated crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. The
tribunal’s charter declared that “leaders, organizers, instigators, and
accomplices participating in the formulation or execution of a Common Plan or
Conspiracy to commit any of the foregoing crimes are responsible for all acts
performed by any persons in execution of such plans.” At the most important of
the Nuremberg trials, the tribunal indicted 22 of the top surviving leaders of
Hitler’s government and found 19 of them to be guilty of one or more of the
counts against them. Twelve were sentenced to death by hanging and seven to
long prison terms. No appeals were permitted.
At Nuremberg,
crimes against the peace were defined to include the “planning, preparation,
initiation or waging of a war of aggression, or a war in violation of
international treaties.” In view of everything now known to the whole world,
can anyone deny that a large number of the leaders and important private
cheerleaders of the Bush administration constitute the “leaders, organizers,
instigators, and accomplices participating in the formulation or execution of a
Common Plan or Conspiracy to commit” a war of aggression against Iraq? Every
official rationale for planning, launching, and continuing this war has now
been revealed as bogus.
The Bush cabal
plainly wanted a war with Iraq, schemed to carry out such a war, and did carry
it out, notwithstanding the absence of a shred of reliable evidence that Iraq
posed a serious threat to the United States. Isn’t this sequence of actions
precisely what is meant by a “war of aggression”? If so, why is the same crime
for which German officials were indicted not an equally proper ground on which
to rest an indictment of U.S. officials? After all, the Germans too had excuses
and public rationales.
The U.S.
Constitution states in Article VI, “This Constitution, and the laws of the
United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof, and all Treaties made,
or which shall be made, under the Authority of the United States, shall be the
supreme Law of the Land.” One such treaty is the Charter of the United Nations,
signed by representatives of the United States and ratified by the Senate in 1945.
Among many other relevant provisions, that charter pledges its signatories as
follows: “All Members shall settle their international disputes by peaceful
means in such a manner that international peace and security, and justice, are
not endangered.” Further, “all Members shall refrain in their international
relations from the threat or use of force against the territorial integrity or
political independence of any state, or in any other manner inconsistent with
the Purposes of the United Nations.”
The UN Charter
recognizes each member state’s right of self-defense “if an armed attack occurs
against” that state, but it explicitly condemns preventive wars, which the Bush
administration has made the centerpiece of its national security strategy. In
current official U.S. parlance, “the best defense is a good offense.” As the
president himself has declared, “America will act against . . . emerging
threats before they are fully formed.” Indeed, before they even exist—can’t be
too careful, it seems.
By violating the UN
Charter, which the U.S. Constitution makes part of the supreme law of the land,
President George W. Bush has violated that law. He has further violated his
oath to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution by taking the armed
forces to war without a congressional declaration of war. The failure of
Congress to protest his impudence is immaterial to this violation, in which
Congress itself has chosen, by funding the war, to serve as the president’s
accomplice rather than checking and balancing his exercise of unconstitutional
power as the Framers intended. Inasmuch as President Bush has so clearly
violated his oath of office, exceeded his constitutional power, and contravened
the supreme law of the land, one wonders why he has not been impeached for his
high crimes. Can the answer be that we now live in a lawless society, where the
strong simply do as they please, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in
the Constitution or the laws?
In Iraq, U.S.
forces have brought death to tens of thousands, most of them noncombatants, and
physical injuries to countless others. They have wreaked vast damages to
property by bombing, shelling, shooting, and other violent means. They have
brought about conditions of life for ordinary Iraqis marked by rampant crime,
unemployment, impoverishment, and extreme insecurity of life, health, and
property, as well as criminal looting by everyone from the highest state
officials to the lowest street thugs. Such are the fruits of the U.S.
government’s war of aggression—war crimes and crimes against humanity laid atop
its crimes against the peace.
Yet, to date, all
we have to show for the legal process against top U.S. officials is an
indictment for one apparatchik’s workaday dirty tricks—the sort of thing
countless government flunkies do every day of the week. Be grateful for small
blessings, we might tell ourselves. All right: so far, so good, Mr. Fitzgerald.
You’ve gone the first yard. Still, you have miles and miles ahead of you if
justice is to be served.
Robert Higgs is Senior Fellow in Political Economy at The
Independent Institute, author of Against
Leviathan and Crisis and
Leviathan, and editor of the scholarly quarterly journal, The Independent Review.
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