On October 17, George W. Bush signed into law the Military
Commissions Act of 2006. This new law gives Bush power similar to that of
Stalin or Hitler, and grants agencies within the executive branch powers
similar to those of the KGB or Gestapo.
Bush justifies this act by claiming he needs it to fight the
�war on terror,� but a number of critics, including former counterterrorism
officials, have said the administration has greatly exaggerated the threat and
used illogical methods to combat terrorism. (Examples are listed below.)
Except for MSNBC�s Keith Olbermann, few television news
reporters have bothered to mention that the Military Commissions Act has
changed the U.S. justice system and our approach to human rights. As Olbermann
said of the new law on his October 17 Countdown program, the new act
�does away with habeas corpus, the right of suspected terrorists or anybody
else to know why they have been imprisoned.�
Jonathan Turley, George Washington University Constitutional
Law Professor, was Olbermann�s guest. Olbermann asked him, �Does this mean that
under this law, ultimately the only thing keeping you, I, or the viewer out of
Gitmo is the sanity and honesty of the president of the United States?�
Turley responded, �It does. And it�s a huge sea change for
our democracy. The framers created a system where we did not have to rely on
the good graces or good mood of the president . . . People have no idea how significant
this is. What really a time of shame this is for the American system. What the
Congress did and what the president signed today essentially revokes over 200
years of American principles and values.�
Although we have a free press, rather than follow
Olbermann�s good example, most television news reporters have responded to this
nullification of America�s fundamental principles by avoiding the subject. News
networks, which voluntarily relinquish their right and duty to challenge
government officials function more as the Soviet Union�s Pravda or Hitler�s
Nazi press program than as a genuinely free press.
Just as the mainstream media failed to adequately question
the Bush administration�s many shifting rationales for invading Iraq in the lead-up
to the war, they�re now failing to challenge Bush�s logic and motives as he
justifies eviscerating the Constitution in the name of his ever-expanding �war
on terror.� How realistic is this so-called war, and is the Bush administration
conducting it effectively?
Robert Dreyfuss covers national security for Rolling Stone. He
interviewed nearly a dozen former high-ranking counterterrorism officials about
Bush�s approach to the war on terrorism. In his article, �The Phony War,�
(Rolling Stone, 9/21/06) Dreyfuss says these officials conclude:
- The
war on terror is bogus. Terrorism shouldn�t be treated as if it were a
nation to be battled with the military, but should instead be fought with
police work and intelligence agencies.
- Terrorism
is not an enemy, but a method. Even if the United States were to wipe out
every terrorist cell in the world today, terrorism would be back tomorrow.
- Bush
lacks a clear understanding of the nature of the �enemy� and has no real
strategy for dealing with it.
- The Bush
administration confuses the issue by grouping �Al Qaeda� with everything
from Iraq�s resistance movement to states such as Syria and Iran.
- Today,
there�s virtually no real �Al Qaeda threat� to Americans.
- Bush�s
policies have spawned a new generation of �amateur terrorists,� but there
are few of them, and they�re not likely to pose a major threat to the U.S.
- Though
Bush has said he will fight his �war� until every last terrorist is
eliminated, terrorism can never be defeated, merely �contained and reduced.�
Dreyfuss says, �In the short term, the cops and spies can
continue to do their best to watch for terrorist threats as they emerge, and
occasionally, as in London, they will succeed. But they are the first to admit
that stopping a plot before it can unfold involved, more than anything, plain
dumb luck.�
Not only has the Bush administration falsely characterized
and exaggerated the threat of terrorism; they have gone out of their way to
mislead the public by claiming credit for preventing attacks. Dreyfuss points
out that although Bush has claimed we�ve fended off 10 terrorist plots since
9/11, �on closer examination all 10 are either bogus or were to take place
overseas.�
Dreyfuss also notes that although, in 2002, the Bush
administration leaked to the press that Al Qaeda had 5,000 �sleepers� in the
U.S., there were, in fact, none. (Or, as Dreyfuss says, not a single one has
been found.) If the administration believes the facts bolster their case for a
war on terrorism, why do they find it necessary to leak false information?
The administration has done little to secure U.S. borders,
ports, airports and nuclear facilities. What could logically explain their
inattention to these vulnerabilities if they believe a terrorist threat here is
likely? Bush has said he�ll do anything it takes in order to protect the
American people. Why hasn�t he secured our nuclear facilities?
Exaggerating the terrorist threat does give the Bush team an
excuse to seize more power for the Executive and shred the Constitution. In an
article for Foreign Affairs (September/October 2006), political science
professor John Mueller supports Dreyfuss�s view that the war on terrorism is
bogus.
Mueller points out that not only have there been no
terrorist incidents here in the past five years, but there were none in the
five years before 9/11. Mueller asks: �If it is so easy to pull off an attack
and if terrorists are so demonically competent, why have they not done it? Why
have they not been sniping at people in shopping centers, collapsing tunnels,
poisoning the food supply, cutting electrical lines, derailing trains, blowing
up oil pipelines, causing massive traffic jams, or exploiting the countless
other vulnerabilities that, according to security experts, could be so easily
exploited?�
He also bolsters Dreyfuss�s conclusion that the Bush
administration can�t take credit for the fact that we haven�t been attacked
again. He says that �the government�s protective measures would have to be
nearly perfect to thwart all such plans. Given the monumental imperfection of
the government�s response to Hurricane Katrina, and the debacle of FBI and
National Security Agency programs to upgrade their computers to better
coordinate intelligence information, that explanation seems far-fetched.�
Mueller addresses Bush�s irrational argument that we�re
�fighting terrorists in Iraq so we don�t have to fight them here.� He points
out that terrorists with Al Qaeda sympathies have managed to carry out attacks
in a variety of countries (Egypt, Jordan Turkey, the United Kingdom), not
merely in Iraq.
He adds that a reasonable explanation for the fact that no
terrorists have attacked since 9/11 is that the terrorist threat �has been
massively exaggerated.� He notes that �it is worth remembering that the total
number of people killed since 9/11 by Al Qaeda or Al Qaeda-like operatives
outside of Afghanistan and Iraq is not much higher than the number who drown in
bathtubs in the United States in a single year, and that the lifetime chance of
an American being killed by international terrorism is about one in 80,000 --
about the same chance of being killed by a comet or a meteorite.�
Although Bush�s justification for the war on terror has been
illogical and deceptive, the administration has used it as an excuse to abuse
the U.S. military in Iraq, tear down our system of government at home and seize
power on his own behalf. As Jonathan Turley told Keith Olbermann on his October
17 program, with the signing of the Military Commissions Act, �Congress just
gave the president despotic powers . . . I think people are fooling themselves
if they believe that the courts will once again stop this president from taking
-- overtaking -- almost absolute power.�
Bush�s many power grabs and refusal to submit to usual
constitutional checks and balances indicates he prefers monarchy or
dictatorship to the government set up by America's founders. The framers of our
Constitution provided checks on tyranny by writing into law separation of
powers, granting the legislative and judicial branches of government the
ability to curb abuses by the executive. Today, the Congress has abdicated its
constitutional obligation and serves only as a rubber stamp for the despotic
president, and to date, the courts have done much the same.
Can George W. Bush be trusted with absolute power? Here are
some things he has done with his unchecked power:
- Stolen
two presidential elections.
- Exaggerated
and falsely characterized the terrorist threat.
- Misled
the country into war with Iraq.
- Urged
the U.S. intelligence agencies to fix the intelligence around the Iraq war
policy (as confirmed by the Downing Street Memo and other sources) in
order to mislead the Congress and public into supporting war with Iraq.
- Abused
human rights by promoting the use of torture and setting up virtual
gulags.
- Suspended
habeas corpus for some.
- Tried
to silence political opposition by pronouncing them �weak on terrorism� or
somehow �with the terrorists,� and
- Placed
himself above the law by issuing more legislation-challenging signing
statements (around 800) than all of his predecessors put together.
Bush�s unnecessary invasion of Iraq alone has cost nearly
3,000 American lives. An October 11 article
by Greg Mitchell in Editor & Publisher says that a new study
from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, �suggests that more
than 600,000 Iraqis have met a violent or otherwise war-related end since the
U.S. arrived in March 2003.�
The Bush administration�s policies have not only resulted in
high death counts, but also in widespread, out of control torture. A September
22 Christian
Science Monitor report says:
�The United Nation�s special investigator on torture said
Thursday that torture may now be worse in Iraq than it was during the regime of
deposed leader Saddam Hussein. The Associated Press reports that Manfred Nowak,
who was making a brief to the United Nations Human Rights Council about the
treatment of detainees at the U.S. prison in Guantanamo Bay Cuba, said the
torture situation in Iraq was �totally out of hand.��
The CS Monitor mentions the fact that the recent compromise
between the Bush White House and dissident Republicans (including Senator John
McCain) allows torture to continue. The article quotes a Washington Post piece:
�The bad news is Mr. Bush, as he made clear yesterday,
intends to continue using the CIA to secretly detain and abuse certain
terrorist suspects . . . It�s hard to credit the statement by [McCain]
yesterday that �there�s no doubt that the integrity and letter and spirit of
the Geneva Conventions have been preserved.� In effect, the agreement means
that U.S. violations of international human rights law can continue as long as
Mr. Bush is president, with Congress�s tacit assent.�
Congress has given Bush a blank check as he�s bulldozed
toward an imperial presidency. We have the outward forms of democratic
institutions such as Congress and a so-called free press. However, the people
currently managing those institutions behave as if they�re being forced to
serve a totalitarian dictator.
A perfect example of this surrender to Bush�s virtual
despotism is Congress�s and the mainstream media�s compliance regarding Bush�s
Military Commissions Act. While Keith Olbermann and Jonathan Turley see the
extreme danger posed by Bush�s authoritarian moves, Congress has done little to
challenge Bush, and, overall, the press is eerily silent.
In The Rise And Fall
Of The Third Reich, William L. Shirer said the Reich Press Law of October
4, 1933, ordered editors not to publish (among other things) anything which
�tends to weaken the strength of the German Reich or offends the honor and
dignity of Germany.� According to Shirer, Max Amman, Hitler�s top sergeant
during the war and head of the Nazi Party�s publishing firm and financial head
of its press, said that after the Nazis seized power in 1933, it was �a true
statement to say that the basic purpose of the Nazi press program was to
eliminate all the press which was in opposition to the party.�
The U.S. mainstream press doesn�t have to be coerced by a
government Press Law to avoid publicly opposing Bush�s most egregious policies.
Television news networks, in particular, have voluntarily held back serious
scrutiny. They have not only failed to discuss the recent Military Commissions
Act at length, but in the run-up to the Iraq war, liberal talk show host Phil
Donahue and comedian Bill Maher were fired for challenging the White House spin
about Iraq and the 9/11 attacks.
Shirer also describes the ease with which the German
Reichstag gave Hitler the power to change the nature of Germany�s parliamentary
democracy. He writes:
�One by one, Germany�s most powerful institutions now began
to surrender to Hitler and to pass quietly, unprotestingly, out of existence . .
. It cannot be said they went down fighting. On May 19, 1933, the Social
Democrats -- those who were not in jail or in exile -- voted in the Reichstag
without a dissenting voice to approve Hitler�s foreign policy.�
Shirer concludes: �The one-party totalitarian state had been
achieved with scarcely a ripple of opposition or defiance, and within four months
after the Reichstag had abdicated its democratic responsibilities.�
The U.S. Congress, like the German Reichstag, has abdicated
its democratic responsibilities by granting Bush an inordinate amount of power --
�with scarcely a ripple of opposition or defiance.� The U.S. press has
abandoned its role as democracy�s watchdog by failing to question this
development. Both of these institutions have failed the American people.
Considering Bush is using the war on terror to justify
seizing undue power, both Congress and the media should question his reasoning
and offer opposition. Just as they didn�t effectively challenge the
administration�s shifting excuses for attacking Iraq, these institutions
haven�t scrutinized Bush�s claims about the need for the Military Commissions
Act and the apparently endless war on terrorism.
Among things Congress and the media should challenge is
George W. Bush�s false claim that the United States does not torture. In an
article published at the CommonDreams.org site,
journalist Molly Ivins reports that in one case of death from torture by
Americans, the military at first said the prisoner�s death was caused by a
heart attack. Ivins adds that the coroner later said the heart attack occurred
after the prisoner �had been beaten so often on his legs that they had
�basically been pulpified.��
She adds that the Bush administration�s officially
sanctioning torture �throws out legal and moral restraints as the president
deems necessary -- these are fundamental principles of basic decency, as well
as law.� Ivins isn�t inclined to hyperbole, yet she says of Americans� passive
acceptance of this new law: �Do not pretend to be shocked when the world begins
comparing us to the Nazis.�
As Jonathan Turley said on Olbermann�s program, �I think you
can feel the judgment of history. It won�t be kind to President Bush. But
frankly, I don�t think that it will be kind to the rest of us. I think that
history will ask, �Where were you? What did you do when this thing was signed
into law?� There were people that protested the Japanese concentration camps;
there were people that protested these other acts. But we are strangely silent
in this national yawn as our rights evaporate.�
Future generations will wonder why the U.S. Congress and
mainstream press helped Bush build up an imperial presidency and eliminate
constitutional protections. If they�re able to sort through the
administration�s fallacies and lies and clearly see what went wrong with
America during this time, they�ll wonder why there were so few Molly Ivinses,
Keith Olbermanns and Jonathan Turleys.
Coming generations will also ask why by comparison there
were so many who failed to notice the obvious holes in Bush�s logic and why so
many turned a blind eye to his numerous false assertions and cruel policies. They�ll
wonder why so many supported, whether by direct action or by silence, the Bush
administration�s changing the fundamental nature of the democratic Republic we
were given by America�s founders, based on the flimsy excuse of fighting a war
on terrorism -- a �war� Bush defines falsely and fights ineffectively.
Generations
to come might ask why this president who lied so often, about Iraq and other
critical matters, was ever entrusted with enough power to damage this country�s
founding principles and wage endless, unprovoked war on other nations. If
Congress and the media would ask these questions now, they might prevent Bush
from doing further harm. This might save many lives, prevent much unnecessary
suffering and possibly steer this country out of its present darkness.