By Steven Jonas, MD, MPH – May 23, 2007
Almost two years ago, on July 1,
2004, I published a column in this space on Alberto Gonzales. It was
entitled “Counsel to the President.” Well, since that time the young man
has risen even higher in the Georgite hierarchy. He is getting lots of
publicity these days. The publishing industry’s view of publicity is that
there is no such thing as “bad publicity,” only “publicity.” If
that is true, well this particular good ol’ boy (who is one even if his
grandparents on one side may have been illegal immigrants, they were assuredly
poor) must be reveling in it right now. Since he is just so much in the
news, I thought that the Gonzales subject would be one worth revisiting at this
time.
Please note that this column is
being written on May 17, 2007, for scheduled publication on May 23. I am
convinced that Gonzales will still be in office on that day and indeed for a
considerable time thereafter, a subject that we shall visit in Part 2 of this
series, next week. If I am wrong about that, then all I can say is that
everyone makes mistakes. This column is about some actions that Gonzales
took when he was simply White House Counsel. I present them here to
remind all of us that what he was doing back then was rather worse even than
firing US Attorneys for party political reasons and trying to get a fellow
reactionary (although apparently not a fascist) to sign off on a secret program
that everyone knew was illegal, when the man was possibly at death’s
door. Gonzales is a major cog in the Georgite wheel pushing forward the
steamroller that is attempting to flatten US Constitutional Democracy into the
tarmac. Consider.
On Jan. 25, 2002, then Counsel to
the President, Alberto Gonzales, sent President George Bush a memo in which he
warned the President about a United States law, the War Crimes Act of 1996 (18
U.S.C. 2441). That law prohibits the commission of “war crimes” by any
U.S. officials or other personnel. Included in the definition are any
violations of the Geneva Conventions concerning the treatment of prisoners of
war. Gonzales told the President that the Justice Department had
concluded that the Geneva Conventions did not apply to any apprehended members
of al Qaeda. He also advised the President that the State Dept. did not
agree with Justice. He proposed to the President that he make a
determination that the Conventions did not apply to the Taliban or members of
al Qaeda.
In Gonzales’ view, the “war on
terror” had rendered certain sections of the Conventions obsolete; “quaint” was
a descriptor he used. One John Yoo, a University of California law
professor on leave with the Justice Department, had in the fall of 2001, as the
invasion of Afghanistan was getting under way, begun working on ways and means
for the US to avoid being charged with war crimes in reference to how certain
prisoners taken in Afghanistan were treated. Why might he need to have
done this? Because, according to The New Yorker’s Seymour Hersh’s
sources at least, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld had authorized an
approach to prisoner treatment that included physical coercion and sexual
humiliation. The Pentagon denied these charges, of course. But, one
might pause to ask, if such a plan did not exist, why on earth would they have
had a legal defense for its implementation prepared? And they did.
We now know that the plan was
implemented in Afghanistan. That implementation was then sent on to Iraq,
via Guantanamo. That sequence of events lead inexorably to the Abu Ghraib
outrage (something mostly forgotten here, but very much alive in the Muslim
world). We thus also know that what we saw in those first horrifying
photos was not the work of a “few bad apples” among enlisted personnel,
carrying out these atrocities on their own initiative, but rather the product
of more than a few bad apples fairly high up in the Bush Administration.
A primary question from the beginning has been; how high up the chain of
command do knowledge and responsibility go?
The Pentagon, and the CIA, asked
for legal rulings justifying the use of what most observers, as well as the
usual interpretations of the Geneva Conventions, would term torture. Rumsfeld
himself was involved. (A recent review of just how intimately involved
Rumsfeld was in this whole horror show is to be found in Andrew Cockburn’s “
‘Make Sure This Happens!’ How Rumsfeld Micromanaged Torture,” CounterPunch,
May 1, 2007.) That put the chain of command knowledge level pretty
high. Indeed, if it did not go so very high, why was the Counsel to the
President briefing Bush on the legal issues involved? These are matters
that have been and are being dealt with in great detail elsewhere (I wrote back
in 2004. Sadly not much has happened since concerning those
issues.) In this column, I take a brief look at certain Constitutional issues
raised by the whole sordid mess.
Article VI of the Constitution
says, among other things, that: “This Constitution, and the laws of the United
States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or
which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the
supreme law of the land; and the judges in every State shall be bound thereby,
anything in the Constitution or laws of any State to the contrary
notwithstanding.” Sect. 2, Article II, empowers the President “. . . by and
with the advice and consent of the Senate, to make treaties, provided two
thirds of the Senators present concur. . . .” The clause from Article VI
quoted above has always been interpreted to mean that treaties are part of the
Constitution.
The oath of office for the
President is found in the Constitution, at the end of Article II, Sect 1.
It says: “I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the
office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my ability,
preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.” The
impeachment provision is found in Section 4 of the same article: “The
President, Vice-President and all civil officers of the United States, shall be
removed from office on impeachment for, and conviction of, treason, bribery, or
other high crimes and misdemeanors.” One would think that violation of
one’s oath, as found in the Constitution itself, would constitute a high crime,
or at least a misdemeanor.
Yoo was working on ways to have US
personnel avoid charges of committing war crimes. Jay Bybee, now a
Federal Appeals Court judge, of the Office of Legal Council of the Justice
Department, the federal government’s ultimate legal advisor, wrote the
principal memo that Gonzales used in advising the President. He decided
that certain provisions of the Conventions were “outdated” and “quaint.”
Further, he told the President that with a simple re-labeling of persons
captured in Afghanistan from “prisoners of war” to something else, and a redefinition
of “torture,” provisions of US law (passed by a Republican Congress and signed
by a Democratic President, by the way) concerning the commission of war crimes
could be by-passed.
In addition, a group of Pentagon
lawyers told Rumsfeld that “inherent” in the President’s power as
Commander-in-Chief, in war-time, was the authority to authorize essentially
anything he wanted to, regardless of US law or treaties. In this case
too, even if such power could be found anywhere in the Constitution (and I looked
hard in Article I, Sect. 2 that defines those powers --- and couldn’t find it)
it happens that the only US government entity empowered to declare war is the
Congress. Although the President and the Fox”News”Channel say over and
over again that “we’re at war,” we are not, at least in Constitutional terms.
In the eyes of most of the rest of
the world, what Gonzales, Yoo, Bybee, Ashcroft, and Rumsfeld’s lawyers did was
unilaterally to amend a series of treaties. And they did this without
bothering even to inform, much less negotiate with, our treaty partners (most
of the other countries in the world). Since treaties are part of the
Constitution, they were thus also unilaterally amending the Constitution
without bothering to go through the amendment process. To this was added
the interesting “inherent powers” doctrine that does the same thing. But
the Bush folks are not strangers to amending the Constitution at the stroke of
a pen. The USA Patriot Act does the same to Constitutional rights at
home. I have previously pointed out in this space that the Act voids
rights under the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Amendments, thus amending the
Constitution by de facto repealing of those amendments. It also
amends the last clause of Article III, Sect. 2, in the body, to wit “The trial
of all crimes, except in cases of impeachment, shall be by jury . . . . “
It is breathtaking that, with
reference to torture, all of these lawyers were looking for ways around treaty
obligations and US law that they recognized existed. (It should be noted
that other government lawyers, for example from the Army’s Judge Advocate
General’s Office and from the State Department, were horrified by all of
this. Yoo has hardly hidden his position and responsibility for what horrified
so many other government lawyers. His defense of his contribution to the
Georgite destruction of Constitutional Democracy can be found stated most
clearly and proudly in his book, The Powers of War and Peace: The
Constitution and Foreign Affairs after 9/11. Presumably Gonzales
would subscribe to Yoo’s rationale.) But the most disturbing aspect of
this is that, according to Gonzales’ advice to the President, as Counsel, all
of these actions, from the endorsement of the use of torture in the face of our
treaty obligations, to the suspension of Constitutional rights under the USA
Patriot Act, allegedly are and can be done on Presidential authority
alone. This is where Alberto Gonzales stood on the matters of the law and
the Constitution back in 2004. We will get somewhat up-to-date on certain
other issues next week.