No Associated Press content was harmed in the writing of this post
On most issues I am firmly in the liberal camp, but have recently voiced disagreements with some on the left I usually agree with. The responses have been somewhat surprising. There are issues concerning the presidency and the executive branch in general, and Barack Obama should not be above criticism if he contributes to them. Defenders have said he is just getting started so it is too early to make even preliminary evaluations, that relatively minor retreats from Bush administration policies are sufficient concessions to civil libertarians, that the economic mess crowds out consideration of other issues, or that we ought to give him the benefit of the doubt as he works out his stance towards the Constitution in the expectation he will eventually end up in the right place.
I understand he has been in office for just over a month but his decisions on detainees at Bagram and the State Secrets privilege should not be ignored. They are noteworthy in and of themselves; moreover, early decisions give us the best indication of what to expect. If the first ones are hostile towards human rights and transparency what reason is there to expect better? Does it make any sense to say that he has been so busy getting the stimulus bill together that he has not had time to think about how we treat those who have been warehoused for years in extrajudicial limbo? When would that time arrive? What reason is there to expect additional reflection would change his first thoughts? While the broad outlines so far sketched out (such as closing Guantánamo in a year) have been good the early details have not.
Even rolling back Bush’s power grabs all the way to January 20th, 2001 would not be sufficient to restore our traditional honoring of civil liberties and human rights. The environment that Bush inherited was the foundation from which his abuses were launched. Removing them would just leave the platform on which the next Bush (God help us) could rebuild. While you could argue that the Clinton administration’s use of rendition was generally valid – though I do not agree – there can be no question that it operated outside of judicial or Congressional oversight. That in turn forces those defending it to use qualified language, such as saying the Clinton administration "generally used the practice to allow suspects to face criminal prosecutions, rather than solely to undergo interrogation". The absence of a formalized extradition treaty creates a loophole big enough to rationalize using it for a much wider variety of purposes. You "generally use" it one way, we’ll generally use it another.
If we want to reduce the chance of history repeating itself we should look at our assumptions prior to Bush. We may have had a certain amount of complacency, naïveté or indifference to the precedents that would later be used to justify activities that outraged us. What we know now should make us willing to question items that have long been considered as settled, and two recent developments are greatly encouraging examples of that. In the first Steven Aftergood reports (via) that Judge T.S. Ellis, III has overruled an executive branch classification claim in an ongoing lawsuit. Judges have typically been very deferential towards government classification, allowing it to do so largely unchallenged. Ellis has ruled that not only will he review the documents but so will the jury, and it will decide whether they remain classified. It is an almost astonishing display of good sense: The overwhelming bulk of evidence suggests that secrecy is invoked to quash embarrassing, unethical or criminal behavior. Finding a way for the courts to check these claims instead of accepting them at face value seems several decades overdue.
The second is the announcement by senators Sheldon Whitehouse and Patrick Leahy that a commission on torture during the Bush years may be formed. Now, I have been sorely disappointed by Leahy in the past and thought his unwillingness to play Constitutional Hardball with the Bush administration made him look impotent and clownish. Also, Congressional committees seem to take forever and produce reports instead of action. Those reservations aside it seems possible the Senate will proceed regardless of the White House’s position. Whitehouse said "When push comes to shove, we are the legislative branch of government. We have oversight responsibilities. And we don’t need the executive branch’s approval to look into these things just as a constitutional matter." If that really is his and the Senate’s position it would mark a welcome return of a kind of principled but adversarial check on the president that has been missing much longer than eight years. Here’s hoping the attitude is contagious.



8 Comments







wonderful post. thank you.
and if the first ones do not illicit push back from supporters, then there are not only likely to be more – responsibility for them will in some measure also be ours.
Thanks for the feedback, selise! Glad you liked it.
A Constitutional lawyer who becomes President, and does not get rid of the Patriot Act and FISA as it was re-written, is someone who likes the power of both acts. The power of the Constitution should be recognized in America; not the Patriot Act which makes a large part of the Constitution null and void.
Pre-Bush was pre-internet for many. Unfortunately, the majority of Americans still have no idea of the corruption that has been rampant in previous administrations. Those who use the internet to research no longer have the excuse of pretending not to know. There are many groups that are actively pushing Obama to do the right thing on all important issues. He used the internet and the public support it gained him, to get elected. Never forget that it was the money of the corporations and AIPAC that paid for the majority of his campaign expenses; not you the people. He swore to uphold the Constitution; is he? Is he using his position to expose corruption, or is he using it to protect those who are corrupt?
It is a good idea not to ever blindly trust anybody who has power. Not now, not ever.
Leahy’s choices who will testify next week in regards to setting up a truth commission.
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Thomas Pickering served as Under Secretary of State from 1997-2000, and served as Ambassador to the United Nations for President George H.W. Bush. He holds the personal rank of Career Ambassador, the highest in the United States Foreign Service. Pickering is a member of the International Institute of Strategic Studies and the Council on Foreign Relations.
Retired Vice Admiral Lee Gunn served in the military for 35 years. He was Inspector General of the Navy, and on the board of the American Security Project. Gunn has been outspoken about his opposition to detention and interrogation policies that have permitted torture.
John Farmer served as a senior counsel and team leader for the 9/11 Commission. Farmer is a former State Attorney General for New Jersey. Through his work with the Constitution Project, Farmer has expressed support for an independent commission to examine Bush administration detainee and interrogation policies and practices.
http://www.pubrecord.org/polit…..aring.html
WASHINGTON (AP) – “The Obama administration has lost its argument that the state secrets privilege is a good enough reason to stop a lawsuit over the government’s warrantless wiretapping program.
A federal appeals court in San Francisco has rejected the Justice Department’s request for an emergency stay. The Obama administration, like the Bush administration before it, claimed that national security would be compromised if a lawsuit brought by the U.S. chapter of an Islamic charity was allowed to proceed.
…
The appeals court decision is a setback for the new Obama administration as it adopts some of the same positions on national security and secrecy as the Bush administration.” ~Devlin Bartlett,AP 02/27/09
http://www.breitbart.com/artic….._article=1
Setback or clarification? Sometimes it is most efficient to let the courts rule before deciding how to address that which seemingly will stand. Why take on more work when it isn’t necessary? Our courts did, and continue to, uphold justice sometimes. Remember?
At least that’s what I hope I’m seeing here.
Thanks for the link, carolbeth. I read those tea leaves as a setback for the Obama administration – it seems to be embracing the Bush policies on secrecy and executive authority, so this isn’t what they had in mind. And while it’s good for the courts to push back like that it’s annoying for the Obama admin to make such pushback necessary. Just drop the claim for God’s sake!
Also, the 9th Circuit is famously liberal and seems to get overturned at the Supreme Court more than any other one. Not sure if that’s the case, it just seems like it. Roberts er. al. could easily do so again.
” Britain may have broken international law on torture, ministers have been warned by the United Nations. Professor Manfred Nowak, the UN’s special rapporteur on torture, has alerted ministers to a range of concerns, including claims that MI5 officers were complicit in the maltreatment of suspects.
“We must get away from the use of the state secrecy privilege as a way of quashing court cases and litigation from victims of torture being heard in public.”
The Foreign Office said it had examined all claims of mistreatment involving British officials. It added that it did not object to the release of the Mohamed documents if the US agreed. “
http://www.guardian.co.uk/worl…..orture-mi5
” The Government is refusing to release minutes of Cabinet meetings before the Iraq War because they would reveal there was no discussion on the issue.
Details surrounding two crucial meetings on the eve of the conflict were laid bare for the first time yesterday when former Cabinet Minister Clare Short, who was present at both, gave a full account of what happened.
She told The Mail on Sunday the main reason for the ‘scandalous’ decision not to publish the minutes was not to protect confidential discussions about the war, but to cover up the fact there was no such discussion. “
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/new…..nutes.html