Chertoff, who is not a part of the Texas Mafia, might not have been
quite so ready to cross the line into rank sycophancy and to play the
role of co-conspirator, particularly given that it would only be for
another 16 months.
Then again, Chertoff, in his short stint
at what is still referred to as the “Justice†Department, headed up the
anti-terrorism unit under Gonzales’ predecessor, John Ashcroft, and
willingly played along with the sham prosecution of John Walker Lindh,
the kid who was captured in Afghanistan and inflated by Ashcroft and
Chertoff into “the American Taliban.†It was Chertoff who successfully
deep-sixed evidence of Lindh’s weeks of torture at the hands of
American forces, by threatening Lindh with a treason prosecution, while
holding out the offer of a deal — “just†15 years in the can if he
agreed to sign a fraudulent statement saying he had “never been
mistreated†in US captivity, and to accept a gag order barring him from
talking about what had happened to him for the entire length of his
sentence — an unprecedented gag order.
That prosecution and
silencing of Lindh, which prevented the public from exploring the
deliberate campaign of torture that had been developed in Afghanistan,
later to “migrate†to Guantanamo and thence to Abu Ghraib and Iraq, was
in its way as damaging to the nation as was Chertoff’s other signal
disaster — his inept and callous mishandling of the catastrophe of the
Katrina flooding of New Orleans.
So count it as lucky that
Chertoff — a demonstrable failure both as an administrator and as a
defender of justice — didn't make the cut as a replacement for
Gonzales.
In the event, it is apparently going to be Solicitor
General Paul Clement, a hard-right attorney who since 2005 has been the
administration's chief attorney, who will take over as interim AG when
Gonzo goes home to Texas on September 17. Clement, a former Federalist
Society member who clerked for Antonin Scalia as a young man, can be
expected to take his view of an all powerful chief executive with him
into the AG's office, which will probably mean a continued hard line on
both Congressional subpoenas, and on Congressional requests for special
prosecutors to investigate White House wrongdoing. Going with Clement,
who was next in line to Gonzales, with both the assistant and deputy
assistant AG already resigned, also conveniently spares Bush the task
of having to get somebody through a Senate confirmation.
The
one good thing that can be said about the Gonzales resignation is that
it eliminates the Democratic leadership’s latest gambit for attempting
to derail the impeachment movement. As support for the impeachment of
Vice President Dick Cheney has grown, both among the public at large
and in Congress, where there are now at least 20 co-sponsors for Rep.
Dennis Kucinich’s Cheney impeachment bill, the Democratic leadership in
the House scrambled to get behind a purely inside-the-beltway
“campaign†to impeach Gonzales — a move that did succeed in dividing
the real, authentic impeachment movement.
The interesting
thing is that in backing the impeachment of Gonzales, those leaders and
senior House Democrats who have been brushing off the broader
impeachment movement gave the lie to two of their main arguments
against impeachment — that it would be “too divisive†and that there
“isn’t time†for impeachment. Clearly if it wasn’t too late to impeach
Gonzales, and if impeaching Gonzales would not be too divisive, neither
is it too late to impeach Cheney and neither would impeaching Cheney be
“too divisive.â€
So let’s hail the departure of Gonzo, let’s
demand a continuation of the House and Senate investigations into his
various misdeeds and his lies to Congressional committees, and most
importantly, let’s move forward with the campaign to impeach Cheney,
starting with a full-court campaign to get all those who so readily
signed on to Washington Rep. Jay Inslee’s Gonzales impeachment bill to
now sign on to Rep. Kucinich’s H.Res. 333, a resolution to impeach the
vice president.