Barack Obama entered the presidency as one of the most
rhetorically pro-civil liberties politicians in recent memory. And shortly
after taking office, he drew applause from friends of liberty for promulgating
executive orders closing Guantanamo and CIA secret prisons, ending CIA torture,
suspending kangaroo proceedings at military tribunals, and pledging more
openness than the secretive Bush administration. Unfortunately, instead of
prosecuting Bush administration officials, including George W. Bush, for
violating criminal statutes against torture, illegal wiretapping of Americans,
and other misdeeds -- thus avoiding the bad precedent of giving a president a
free pass on illegal acts -- Obama appears ready to vindicate the prior
administration�s anti-terrorism program by adopting Bush Lite.
Warning signs that Obama was softer on civil liberties than
advertised came even before he took office, when as a senator, he voted for
blatantly unconstitutional legislation that allowed federal snooping into some
e-mail messages and phone calls without a warrant. The Constitution implies
that all government searches and seizures of private property require a
judicially approved warrant based on probable cause that a crime has been
committed -- with no exceptions mentioned, including for national security.
Politicians love symbolic acts and Obama�s rapid pledge to
shutter the high profile prison at Guantanamo and secret CIA prisons was widely
praised. But if civil liberties continue to be violated elsewhere, have we made
much progress?
Obama�s nominees have said the administration will continue
the CIA�s policy of �extraordinary rendition� of terrorism suspects -- a euphemism
for secret kidnapping without the legal nicety of extradition or any other
procedural due process rights. Prior to the Bush administration, such
government-sanctioned kidnapping was authorized only to return the suspects to
their home countries. The Bush administration began using such renditions to
abduct suspects and send them to third party nations that practiced torture -- presumably
to keep U.S. hands (relatively) clean. Leon Panetta, Obama�s CIA director, has
said that the new administration will continue the Bush administration�s
practice of rendition to third party countries and relying on those countries�
suspect diplomatic promises not to torture.
Also, Obama supposedly banned CIA torture by executive
order, but such orders are not laws and can be reversed with the stroke of a
pen. What�s worse, although CIA Director Panetta has admitted that water
boarding (simulated drowning) is torture, he has also asserted publicly that if
regular interrogation techniques did not produce information from a prisoner
suspected of being involved in an imminent attack, he would request the
authority to use harsher methods.
In perhaps the most important of the civil liberties
waffling, Elena Kagan, the administration�s nominee for solicitor general at
the Justice Department, pledged to continue detaining indefinitely prisoners
without trial, even if they were noncombatant terrorist financiers arrested far
from a combat zone. Ominously, the Obama administration is stalling on taking a
position on the even more important Bush-era policy of perpetually
incarcerating �enemy combatants� without trial on U.S. territory. To stay
within the U.S. Constitution, such vital habeas corpus rights, one of the
pillars of the rule of law, should only be suspended by Congress in areas where
combat has rendered the civilian courts inoperable -- hardly the case in the
United States during the never-ending �war on terror.�
Although Obama�s executive order suspended the Bush
administration�s kangaroo military tribunals, which have insufficient legal
procedural safeguards, it has kept its options open on their resumption.
Finally, the new administration has mimicked the Bush
administration�s use of the �state secrets� doctrine to try to nix lawsuits by
former CIA detainees and, for the same reason, pressured another country�s
court not to release information about U.S. torture of a prisoner.
Traditionally, the doctrine was usually used to withhold specific evidence in a
legal proceeding, not to nix entire cases against the government for
malfeasance. So much for a more open government.
The Obama administration is new and should be given a chance
to do the right thing. Although certainly better than the lawless Bush
administration, the new boss unsurprisingly resembles the old boss.
Historically, party label has been a less good indicator
about actual presidential policies than the era in which the chief executive
served. For example, in terms of actual programs, Richard Nixon was the last
liberal president, a chief executive who largely continued Lyndon Johnson�s
government penetration into American society and even further expanded it.
Similarly, Jimmy Carter started the move back to the right and Ronald Reagan
continued it (but in practice he really wasn�t all that conservative). Civil
liberties follow the general trend. After the first Word Trade Center bombing
in 1993 and the Oklahoma City and Tokyo subway attacks in 1995, Bill Clinton
signed the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, which
augmented the government�s powers of surveillance on Americans and paved the
way for the further vast expansion of such authority (and other aforementioned
dramatic civil liberties violations of the Bush administration) after 9/11.
Typically in American history, any crisis -- such as 9/11 --
causes an expansion of government power. After the crisis recedes, a public
reaction to government excesses usually ensues -- as now exists with Bush
policies. Yet government power never quite recedes to its pre-crisis level.
Unfortunately, what we are likely to see from a post-9/11 Obama presidency is
that same historical phenomenon playing out.
Ivan
Eland is Director of the Center
on Peace & Liberty at The Independent Institute and Assistant Editor
of The Independent
Review. Dr. Eland is a graduate of Iowa State
University and received an M.B.A. in applied economics and Ph.D. in national
security policy from George Washington University. He has been Director of
Defense Policy Studies at the Cato Institute, Principal Defense Analyst at the
Congressional Budget Office, Evaluator-in-Charge (national security and
intelligence) for the U.S. General Accounting Office, and Investigator for the
House Foreign Affairs Committee and Principal Defense Analyst at the
Congressional Budget Office. He is author of the books, The Empire
Has No Clothes: U.S. Foreign Policy Exposed, and Putting
�Defense� Back into U.S. Defense Policy.