t is shocking that sixty percent of the
members of Congress, by voting in favor of the Military
Commissions Act of 2006, would hand to the president of the
United States the right to interpret, without Congressional
oversight, the Geneva Conventions, to waive the right of habeas
corpus, to authorize the use of information gathered through
torture, and to, in effect, establish a separate judicial system
that will be run out of the White House, willfully giving up
powers that until now were reserved for the legislative and
judicial branches of the government.
I wish that my father, Irving Wallace, was
still alive because, exactly thirty years ago, he wrote a novel,
The R Document, that predicted just such a
destruction of traditional civil liberties in the United States.
In the novel, the president takes advantage of a generalized
state of national fear to propose a Constitutional Amendment
that would allow the president to suspend the Bill of Rights in
case of a self-declared national emergency.
The text of the
Military Commissions Act of 2006 (formerly known as the
"Bringing Terrorists to Justice Act") is smooth and
fair-sounding, but it is filled with loopholes created by a
combination of vaguely-defined phrases and carefully parsed
definitions. For example, the section banning torture contains
an exception, namely "pain and suffering incidental to lawful
sanctions." This is a phrase that is used in the United Nations
Convention Against Torture to refer to practices that are
internationally accepted, such as imprisonment. However, there
is nothing to stop the Bush administration from redefining that
clause, as it has so many others.
One of the many disturbing aspects of the Act
is that the president now has the right to declare any foreign
citizen, including a legal resident of the United States, an
"unlawful enemy combatant" if that person is suspected of giving
money to an organization that supports terrorism, with the term
"terrorism" defined by the president. Supporters of President
Bush would do well to keep in mind that these new powers given
to Bush will also be available to the next president of the
United States...say, Hilary Clinton. The law's wording is vague
enough to allow President Clinton #2, or someone more maniacal,
to kidnap and detain forever a broad range of people that most
Americans would not consider terrorists.
Then there is the question of whether the Act
gives the Bush administration permission to detain American
citizens. Section 948a of the Military Commissions Act of 2006
defines "unlawful enemy combatant" as "an individual engaged in
hostilities againtst the United States who is not a lawful enemy
combatant." Does the phrase "an individual" include U.S.
citizens? Apparently we will have to wait for President Bush to
make that decision.
The international implications of the
Military Commissions Act are appalling. For one thing, the rest
of the world now knows that the United States has declared it
legal to kidnap anyone, including world leaders, if the
president of the United States declares that person a supporter
of a terrorist organization. It would not be surprising if the
governments of other countries exercise their presumed right to
copy the United States and do a bit of international kidnapping
themselves.
Bill of Rights |
The world is filled with dictators and
governments that repress their own citizens. Please excuse me
for promoting my own book, but I write about a lot of them in
Tyrants: The World's 20 Worst Living Dictators.
Many of these dictators would treat their citizens in an even
more brutal manner if the United States and the European Union
did not stand on the high ground of human rights and apply
pressure on them. With the Military Commissions Act, we can say
goodbye to the last remnants of American moral authority. In
fact, some repressive regimes, like those in Iran, Syria, China
and Uzbekistan, could taunt the U.S. by using our Military
Commissions Act as a model, and copying it word-for-word into
their own bodies of law.
So how did it come to pass that the
Republican members of Congress, with the help of 44 Democrats,
would choose to shove through a law that not only reverses
common assumptions about human rights in the United States, but
actually gives up some of their own powers to President Bush?
I think this story goes back to the U.S. War Crimes Act of 1996,
an admirable piece of legislation that was written and promoted
by Republicans, and which required Americans to abide by the
same standards that we demand of others. As I have pointed out
previously, declassified memos make it clear that the Bush
administration was fully aware of the fact that they planned to
engage in actions that violated the War Crimes Act. That's why
they created convoluted excuses that they hoped would absolve
them from prosecution, like creating a category of prisoners
known as "unlawful enemy combatants" that was not covered by the
Geneva Conventions, redefining the word "torture," and claiming
that because the prisoners were not held inside the boundaries
of the United States, they were not subject to U.S. law.
The vast majority of Americans were unaware
of the U.S. War Crimes Act. The Bush administration, on the
other hand, was almost obsessed by it. In 2005, Senator John
McCain proposed an amendment to a defense appropriations bill
that banned the use of torture, as well as cruel, inhumane or
degrading treatment of prisoners in U.S. custody. President Bush
threatened to veto the bill, but then made a deal with
Congressional Republicans: he would sign the bill if they would
pass the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005, which would remove
habeas corpus rights for prisoners held at Guantánamo Bay. Bush
got his Detainee Treatment Act and, on December 30, 2005, he
signed the anti-torture amendment. But then, having gotten what
he wanted, he tricked his fellow Republicans by adding a
"signing statement" claiming that, as president, he was free to
ignore the anti-torture amendment.
For six months, the Bush administration was
free from worries about being prosecuted for war crimes. Then,
on June 29, 2006, the Supreme Court, in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld,
declared that all detainees did in fact deserve the rights due
prisoners of war, no matter where they were held and whether or
not they belonged to a national army. Members of the Bush
administration were back in danger of prosecution. So they
created what came to be known as the Military Commissions Act.
Tucked away in this 96-page bill, in section 6b, is a clause
that retroactively protects members of the administration and
any American who committed torture, whether military, CIA or
contractor, from prosecution for any act against a prisoner
since September 11, 2001.
What with Bush's low approval ratings, the
president and his administration could not count on
Congressional Republicans to pass this Act just because Bush
asked them to. So they ratcheted up the terrorism fear level
and, six weeks before an election, forced the Republicans to
rush through the Act in order to look tough on terrorism just
before Americans went to the polls.
And how did the Bush administration raise the
fear level? Take a look at the
Gallup Poll
results relating to President Bush's handling of terrorism.
In July of this year, more Americans disapproved of his handling
of terrorism than approved. Four weeks later, there was a
reversal and a majority approved of Bush's anti-terror
performance. What happened in between?...the arrest of more than
twenty suspects in a terrorist plot in England that was aimed at
destroying ten airplanes. This incident was a perfect launch for
the Bush administration's pre-election Be Afraid of Terrorists
campaign. Even Bush's overall approval rating went up, albeit by
a modest 3%. The Bush team sure got lucky on that one. Or was
there more to it? Maybe it's just my fertile imagination, but...
I recommend reading the
article about the plot by Don Van Natta, Elaine Sciolino and
Stephen Grey that appeared in the New York Times on August 28
and that is available online through the TimesSelect service or
on various unofficial sites. The article makes clear that the
plot was real. However, it was not imminent. British officials
apologized, two weeks after the fact, for the exaggerated,
panic-inducing statements they had made at the time of the
arrests. Naturally, the dire warnings made headlines, while the
retractions and apologies went largely unnoticed. The most
intriguing revelation in this article is that British officials
at Scotland Yard felt in complete control of the plotters, who
had not yet made flight reservations and two of whom had not yet
even obtained passports. The British spies wanted to continue
their surveillance of the plotters. Unfortunately, Scotland Yard
was forced to act quickly because, thousands of miles away in
Pakistan, the Pakistani government, without informing their
British anti-terror colleagues, arrested a man with dual
British/Pakistani citizenship who was, presumably, vital to the
plot and whose arrest was immediately known to the plotters.
From the Times: "Several senior British officials said
the Pakistanis arrested Rashid Rauf without informing them
first. The arrest surprised and frustrated investigators here
who had wanted to monitor the suspects longer, primarily to
gather more evidence and to determine whether they had
identified all the people involved in the suspected plot." So if
the hijackings were not imminent and the British wanted to wait
before making any arrests, why did the government of Pakistan's
dictator, General Pervez Musharraf, arrest Rashid Rauf when it
did? So far, there has been no official explanation.
As I said, maybe I just have too fertile of
an imagination, but one thing is certain: over a period of just
seven weeks, that arrest triggered the British arrests that set
off a fear-of-terrorism panic that gave President Bush extra
ammunition to pressure Congressional Republicans, who then
rushed through passage of an anti-terrorism bill that
transferred new powers to the executive branch while, at the
same time, immunizing President Bush and others from prosecution
for their violations of the U.S. War Crimes Act.
Some guys have all the luck.