
Sites of Interest
(courtesy Empire Burlesque)
Arthur Silber
Angry Arab
Antiwar.com
A Tiny Revolution
Gore Vidal
William Blum/Killing Hope
Baltimore Chronicle
Buzzflash
Magnificent Valor
The Distant Ocean
Glenn Greenwald
Horton/Harper's
Informed Comment
Vast Left
TomDispatch
Truthdig
Welcome to the Sideshow
Winter Patriot
Andy Worthington
Alicublog
Counterpunch
Mark Crispin Miller
Dennis Perrin
Booman Tribune
Crooks and Liars
ConsortiumNews
Eschaton
Black Agenda Report
LRB Blog
The Raw Story
Sadly, No!
James Wolcott
William Bowles
European Tribune
Iraq Vets Against the War
Blues and Dreams
Bright Terrible Spirit
Take the administrations of George W. Bush and Barack Obama. The conservative American Bar Association sent three white papers to President Bush describing his continual unconstitutional policies. Then and now civil liberties groups and a few law professors, such as the stalwart David Cole of Georgetown University and Jonathan Turley of George Washington University, have distinguished themselves in calling out both presidents for such violations and the necessity for enforcing the rule of law.
The drones have killed civilians, families with small children,
and even allied soldiers in this undeclared war based on secret
“facts” and local grudges (getting even). These attacks are
justified by secret legal memos claiming that the president,
without any Congressional authorization, can without any
limitations other than his say-so, target far and wide
assassinations of any “suspected terrorist,” including American
citizens.
The bombings by Mr. Obama, as secret prosecutor, judge, jury and
executioner, trample proper constitutional authority, separation
of powers, and checks and balances and constitute repeated
impeachable offenses. That is, if a pathetic Congress ever
decided to uphold its constitutional responsibility, including
and beyond Article I, section 8’s war-declaring powers.
As if lawyers needed any reminding, the Constitution is the
foundation of our legal system and is based on declared, open
boundaries of permissible government actions. That is what a
government of law, not of men, means. Further our system is
clearly demarked by independent review of executive branch
decisions – by our courts and Congress.
What happens if Congress becomes, in constitutional lawyer Bruce
Fein’s words, “an ink blot,” and the courts beg off with their
wholesale dismissals of Constitutional matters on the grounds
that an issue involves a “political question” or that parties
have “no-standing-to-sue.” What happens is what is happening.
The situation worsens every year, deepening dictatorial
secretive decisions by the White House, and not just regarding
foreign and military policies.
The value of The New York Times article is that it added
ascribed commentary on what was reported. Here is a sample:
- The U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan, Cameron P. Munter, quoted by
a colleague as complaining about the CIA’s strikes driving
American policy commenting that he: “didn’t realize his main job
was to kill people.” Imagine what the sidelined Foreign Service
is thinking about greater longer-range risks to our national
security.
- Dennis Blair, former Director of National Intelligence, calls
the strike campaign “dangerously seductive.” He said that
Obama’s obsession with targeted killings is “the politically
advantageous thing to do — low cost, no US casualties, gives the
appearance of toughness. It plays well domestically, and it is
unpopular only in other countries. Any damage it does to the
national interest only shows up over the long term.” Blair, a
retired admiral, has often noted that intense focus on strikes
sidelines any long-term strategy against al-Qaeda which spreads
wider with each drone that vaporizes civilians.
- Former CIA director Michael Hayden decries the secrecy: “This
program rests on the personal legitimacy of the president and
that’s not sustainable,” he told the Times. “Democracies do not
make war on the basis of legal memos locked in a D.O.J.
[Department of Justice] safe.”
Consider this: an allegedly liberal former constitutional law
lecturer is being cautioned about blowback, the erosion of
democracy and the national security by former heads of
super-secret spy agencies!
Secrecy-driven violence in government breeds fear and surrender
of conscience. When Mr. Obama was campaigning for president in
2007, he was reviled by Hillary Clinton, Joseph Biden Jr. and
Mitt Romney – then presidential candidates – for declaring that
even if Pakistan leaders objected, he would go after terrorist
bases in Pakistan. Romney said he had “become Dr. Strangelove,”
according to the Times. Today all three of candidate Obama’s
critics have decided to go along with egregious violations of
our Constitution.
The Times made the telling point that Obama’s orders now “can
target suspects in Yemen whose names they do not know.” Such is
the drift to one-man rule, consuming so much of his time in this
way at the expense of addressing hundreds of thousands of
preventable fatalities yearly here in the U.S. from occupational
disease, environmental pollution, hospital infections and other
documented dangerous conditions.
Based on deep reporting, Becker and Shane allowed that “both
Pakistan and Yemen are arguably less stable and more hostile to
the United States than when Obama became president.”
In a world of lawlessness, force will beget force, which is what
the CIA means by “blowback.” Our country has the most to lose
when we abandon the rule of law and embrace lawless violence
that is banking future revenge throughout the world.
The people in the countries we target know what we must
remember. We are their occupiers, their invaders, the powerful
supporters for decades of their own brutal tyrants. We’re in
their backyard, which more than any other impetus spawned
al-Qaeda in the first place.
Ralph Nader is a consumer advocate, lawyer, and author.