Libby's Pardon: The Failure of Mr. Bush
There was always something excessively distasteful about the Lewis Libby trial. It wasn't the five felony counts of lying to investigators and misleading a grand jury, or his conviction on four of them, or what it revealed of the incestuous corruptions between the nodes of power and the Washington press corps that did so much to cover up the larger crime the Libby trial danced around (the Iraq war). It wasn't even that Libby's conviction had nothing to do with the original offense (the leaking of Valerie Plame's name). The distaste about it all was that it was a farce from the start—an unwitting show trial headed for its inevitable dismantling at the hands of a president to whom even the Department of Justice is a basement annex in a machinery of expedience.
What Bush calls a compromise is, of course, a pardon. That Libby still has a $250,000 fine to pay, that he's on probation, that he can't practice law anymore is all beside the point. The money he owes will be raised in a day's radiothon. It doesn't take a law degree to practice lobbying, to rake in money on the talk circuit, to play adviser to scoundrels, to be in the shadows of Dick Cheney's shadows all over again. Fines and probation and ruined careers affect ordinary people. Libby is no ordinary man. He is a Bush administration Untouchable, taking one for the team and being rewarded for it. And still, the Wall Street Journal found room to excoriate Bush for not giving the full pardon, for playing into the half-guilt of a man who "deserved better from the President whose policies he tried to defend when others were running for cover."
"But by failing to issue a full pardon," the Journal wrote, "Mr. Bush is evading responsibility for the role his Administration played in letting the Plame affair build into fiasco and, ultimately, this personal tragedy." That about sums up the neocon re-writing of the last five years. Just as Oliver North managed to single-handedly turn the Reagan Administration's illegal war (and war crimes) in Central America into a cause for the "just," for "freedom fighters" and apple pie, just as Oliver North managed to turn the Iran-Contra scandal from what should have led to Reagan's impeachment into another springboard to ideological vindication and (for North) stardom, Lewis Libby, in the reactionaries' eyes, is single-handedly deflecting the tragedy and crimes of the Iraq war onto his own supposed personal valor and loyalty, his sacrifice, his, if the Journal is to be believed, honesty.
It wasn't about cooking up a false case for war, nor about manufacturing the demolition of a country on the basis of that lie (a lie even now the Journal denies when it writes about "Joe Wilson's original, false accusation about pre-war intelligence"). It was about a man standing up for just policies leading to a just war that a special prosecutor's zeal and a liberal press' hatred for America ruined for all of us.
The symbolic temptation is to think that by pardoning Libby, Bush is pardoning himself of whatever crimes he committed. But that would presume a sense of justice at the core of the president's thinking. What the pardon shows in as stark a light as any aborting of justice Bush has orchestrated is his utter contempt for the law, for the very system he defends but has never upheld. But if he and Cheney have been so easily amused at making buffalo chips of due process in their so-called global war on terror, in Guantanamo, in Afghanistan, in Iraq, what should, what could keep them from doing the same at home?
I'm reminded of an Onion story a year ago spoofing that book by San Francisco Chronicle reporters about Barry Bonds' steroid abuse: "With the publication of a book detailing steroid use by San Francisco Giants superstar Barry Bonds, two San Francisco Chronicle reporters have corroborated the claims of Bonds' steroid abuse made by every single person who has watched or even loosely followed the game of baseball over the past five years." The logo that accompanied the story said it all: "No Shit."
The other inevitable comparison that comes to mind is the Gerald Ford pardon of Nixon in 1974. It was a bit revolting, back in December when Ford died, to read once again the press' toadying over that pardon. Seen at the time as an insult to the Constitution, it's been revised since as a "healing" gesture that spared the country more anguish than it needed. As if the United States were an infant, an emotionally deranged democracy that needed cuddling above all. Cuddling Ford provided. But the Times was right at the time, headlining its editorial plainly enough: "The Failure of Mr. Ford." Not President Ford, mind you, but Mr. Ford: By pardoning Nixon, Ford had abjured his claim to the title. He had, in the Times' words, "affronted the Constitution and the American system of justice." Odd how the reasons Ford gave for his pardon dovetail those Bush gave for Libby's. Nixon/Libby suffered enough. Bush/Ford had to act on his own conscience. Far from a healing act, the Nixon pardon laid the groundwork for the erosion of justice at its core, making pardons like Libby's the required routine rather than the surprise.
And still in the end the Libby cesspool adds up to nothing more than the last act in a predictable made-for-television movie. If you're looking at all this through the eyes of an Iraqi, the war crimes carry on untouched, the demolition of Iraq is complete, the mocking of the American justice system continues apace, with Alberto Gonzales at Justice, Dick Cheney at the vice-presidency, and, at the center of it all, Mr. Bush, the criminal-in-chief, oblivious, in our face, unrepentant, and even, from time to time, sainted by the very press that continues the incestuous relationship with power that got us this far down the drain pipes: "Bush," the Post wrote in a half-fawning, half-horrified profile on Monday, "has virtually given up on winning converts while in office and instead is counting on vindication after he is dead. 'He almost has . . . a sense of fatalism,' said Rep. Peter T. King (R-N.Y.), who recently spent a day traveling with Bush. 'All he can do is do his best, and 100 years from now people will decide if he was right or wrong. It doesn't seem to be a false, macho pride or living in your own world. I find him to be amazingly calm.'"
Isn't that what was said of Saddam on the scaffold?
Pierre Tristam is a News-Journal editorial writer. Reach him at ptristam@att.net or through his personal Web site at www.pierretristam.com .
© 2007 Candide's Notebooks
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34 Comments so far
Show AllBTW, let's STOP using the title of "President" for Bush....he's never earned the title of Lieutenant or Mister, much less, President. He was a drunk piece of dung in Texas until they sobered him up to run for Governor, another title he never deserved...more like gov lite....too many texans had two nickels and a Bible to rub together and thought they were Reptilians....one even said over Sunday lunch, "Bush is a much better Christian than Kerry!"
Geff, Thanks for telling it like it is....you damn sure wont hear that from the MSM here in the USA....Keith Olbermann's occasional rant/comment, which I love, is about as close as you'll get. Some recent postings here on CD hint at FEAR in the Congress , Senate and presidential candidates (Kerry) as the reason they don't having any balls....I'd like to see further comments on this subject.....Anyone?
BMA
Olbermann is right, who needs impeachment? The cheneybushcriminals should be forced to RESIGN, then prosecuted to the max, nationally and internationally.
If they won't resign, send the Seargent of Arms to march them both up the Capital steps and TRY THEM for INHERENT CONTEMPT FOR CONGRESS. Then throw them into adjacent cells in Leavenworth.
The 911 families, the survivors of dead and maimed US military, the families of 650,000 dead Iraqis will all have to stand in line for justice. But it will come, its day is fast approaching.
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE!
Finally after 231 years of business -
AMERICA IS CLOSING IT'S DOORS!
That's right! We're selling to the bare walls!
Here's just a sample of what is being sold to the highest bidder.
JUSTICE
HEALTH
HUMAN RIGHTS
ALL OUR RIGHTS
Heck, for the right price you can write your own bill and have it passed into law!
Get in on it now folks, cause when it's gone
IT"S GONE!
Libbey WOULD SING LIKE A BIRD if allowed to go to jail!
i believe the writer of this article is either paid by the Republican party or one of its affliates. Or by the bush administration itself.you just can't tell any more who is a true journalist telling it like it is or a paid writer working for any number of government departments, especially the executive branch to tell their lies. So get used to it. you will have to read between the lines. And Bush stated when he was first selected as president that he was going to bring respect and integrity back into the oval office. I'm just wondering when this is supposed to happen. i guess before hell freezes over.
Different day. Same s#!t. Nixon, Reagen, Bush and Bush. All republicans. All crooks. Is Bush worse? Only in that he stands on the shoulders of... well I can't bring myself to say giants. Maybe monsters.
We hear the myth that Republicans weren't always this way. There was a time when they had honor and ideals. Not in the past century they haven't. Maybe Teddy Roosevelt but of course in the end he left that party.
GWB at least fully understands that lying is the only way a Republican can succede. After all if they tell the truth no one will vote for them. Their goal is and has always been the distruction of the US Constitution and democracy. The foundation for that distruction is now well laid. And what a cost it will be to root that foundation out.
Ladies and gentlemen, you are now watching Act 1 of democracy in action in America:
What a wonderful democracy and Constitution America has. The president decides to have a crime committed. Tells one his underling to commit the crime, and then pardons him. Which one is the principle criminal and which one the accessory to the crime? This, of course, is a rhetorical question, but the sad thing is both of them are now walking free—and one is even still in power!
I know by experience that the American government under the guise of exporting democracy, exports military bases, wars, and destruction. But hey, listen, even if you wanted to export your real democracy to us, save it. People over here are a bit smarter in general than those over there.
Granted that when the Constitution was drafted it was the best of its kind, but it's no longer. Times have changed. The crooks are crook-ier, if you allow me to make a superlative adjective from a noun. Looking at the Constitution in action, this is what I see:
Initially a bunch of rich guys got together and decided to divide into two groups, sort of like they wanted to play football, but the game was politics. (The original players may not have been rich, but the present players are). Still among the rich, they elected 9 people as Supreme referees. They also made sure that no other team or third parties were involved to spoil their game. In this game people were only spectators.
(Sorry, I have to stop here, hit the sack, and go to work tomorrow. I'll continue the story later, Bye now.)
#
"frank1569 July 3rd, 2007 5:59 pm
"I wouldn't mind a dictatorship… as long as I was the dictator." And we thought he was just pullin our leg…"
In my observation Bush's little remarks like that are the ones that let you know what he is really thinking.
Lobo Gris
"The only place for a just man in an unjust society is the prison house." -Henry David Thoreau. I guess Libby's pardon proves this maxim in reverse.
God damn America
God damn the world
God bless the Republicans
This is now our legacy
Anybody that loyally works for this administration and keeps damaging evidence away from the public should feel the weight of their guilt on their chest like a large rock slowly suffocating them for the rest of their life.
They should never have a moment of peace because of their conscience. They should never sleep comfortably again.
The pain of their guilt should never ever ever leave them.
All who meet them should shun them like a rotting corpse.
AND THAT IS STILL NOT ENOUGH!
Dont know about you, but I feel as if I were sucker punched. As a former Marine, I am truly ashamed to be an American............. Happy 4th :{
Here's the irony in all this fiasco.
Today's NYT has an op-ed by Maureen Dowd. Hillary's talking to Bill. Here's a quote from it:
Her smile fades. "Of course," she frowns, "there was that awkward moment when I said Bush should not have commuted Scooter Libby's sentence because he was elevating cronyism over the rule of law, and there you were, Mr. Elevate-Cronyism-Over-The-Rule-of-Law, sitting on a stool right behind me in that look-at-me Crayola yellow shirt, reminding everyone of that passel of pardons you sneaked in under the wire, including one for that fugitive tax-evader Marc Rich, whose ex-wife was your fund-raiser and whose lawyer was--can it get any worse?--SCOOTER LIBBY!
Check out this clip of Keith Olbermann from Monday night:
http://movies.crooksandliars.com/Countdown-SpecialComment-Libby.mov
I normally eschew pledges, anthems, and all symbols of reactionary patriotism--brainwashed pride. Yet, this 4th of July, I suggest everyone fly his or her flag upside down as a sign of distress. Then continue to fly it upside down--even torn and tattered, like our nation. The organized crime syndicate that runs this country has jeopardized our human rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. The flying of our flags upside-down represents that we see clearly that this country IS in constitutional crisis and distress.
I vote for Chief Tecumseh. Thanks for posting that beautiful paean MaxheMust.
And the good news is...
Rupert Murdoch still on track to buy the Wall Street Journal. One score and something years ago he bought the [London] Times. Then it was the voice of Great Britain. Now it's just another rag. So, sit back and watch the WSJ go the exact same way.
Libby said to Cheney something like this:
"If you don't get my GD sentence commuted, I'm going to start squeeling on your GD asses like a stuck pig, and then you'll really bleed."
--
Any fairly intelligent - intelligence agents will see this whole deal as a betrayal to all NSA/CIA agents. If they're really smart they'll won't let the republicans fix the next presidential election, and they'll do whatever they can to fight corruption in high places.
===========
---------------
Good advice from Chief Tecumseh
"Live your life that the fear of death can never enter your heart. Trouble no one about his religion. Respect others in their views and demand that they respect yours. Love your life, perfect your life, beautify all things in your life. Seek to make your life long and of service to your people. Prepare a noble death song for the day when you go over the great divide.
Always give a word or sign of salute when meeting or passing a friend, or even a stranger, if in a lonely place. Show respect to all people, but grovel to none. When you rise in the morning, give thanks for the light, for your life, for your strength. Give thanks for your food and for the joy of living. If you see no reason to give thanks, the fault lies in yourself.
Abuse no one and no thing, for abuse turns the wise ones to fools and robs the spirit of its vision. When your time comes to die, be not like those whose hearts are filled with fear of death, so that when their time comes they weep and pray for a little more time to live their lives over again - in a different way. Sing your death song and die like a hero going home."
- Chief Tecumseh -(the great - from the Shawnee tribe 1768-1813)
One must wonder if this administration isn't going to allow Libby to take the fall on this one, who are they planning on sacrificing for the cause? I'm sure they have somebody lined up, but who?
LOL
This is a point I found raised elsewhere.
"It is not a pardon.
If Libby had been given a pardon he could not then plead the fifth ammendment when asked about his involvement in the criminal behavior of Cheney's office by Congress.
Commuting the sentence while Libby continues to contest his conviction allows him to continue to lie to protect Cheney and Bush."
American Justice is a beacon to us all.
Be careful what you say about "W" because tomorrow you might wake with a severed stallion's head in your bed.
The Japaneses Minister of Defense just resigned over something that he had said to the press that offended many Japanese. An honorable man. What do we get in America? Politicians who use their power to protect their political buddies. America is a fraud.
Hoa binh
Only the naive could think that Bush might have not acted to spare Libby in some way.
The rule of law has been over for quite some time. But within government, law has been out of style much longer than in average everyday spheres of life. How can it be that when most of the people of a nation do respect the law, that the government is dramatically contemptible of law?
The average US taxpayer is on the IRS' hook for every penny.
Yet the government is seemingly accountable to no one—or it is accountable instead to a mysterious, non-physical entity which all its subjects create with their very breath.
Bush announces all laws, ILLEGAL for republicans-
That's what the release of Libby says to america. Hell - lets just make
everything legal, murder, rape, theft, robbery and release all of our 2 million Americans in prison.
We have two sets of laws in america. Rich republican laws and poor man laws.
Another nail in America's coffin. Another stage of the Bush coup d'etat. Americans, stop gorging on consumerism and superpower fantasy. Wake up!
It may not be a pardon. It IS a defacto pardon.
The fine is no punishment. $250,000 is neocon chump change and just another line item in the cost of doing business.
Loss of license to practice law is no punishment. The $50,000 per appearance that Libby commands on the neocon speaking circuit will earn him more in one month than he could earn in a year practicing law.
Everyone should recognize that this commutation (actually pardon) was not what the Founders had in mind when they gave the President this power. The intent was not to allow a President to order his underlings to break the law for his benefit, or that of his Vice President, and then to pardon them or commute their sentences. That would allow a President to become completely above the law.
Obviously the cure for this defect was supposed to be Impeachment. If Pelosi does not put Impeachment back on the table now, she must be removed from office by the San Francisco voters. And the same goes for every Democrat who refuses to take up Impeachment now that Bush has made it crystal clear that he is a criminal in charge of a criminal gang.
To all the "good Germans" out there, the time for delay and excuses is over.
Saddam ... Gaddam. What's the diff?
God Bless America.
God Bless the World.
God Damn the Republicans.
Bush didn't subvert the law to save Libby! He subverted the law to save himself and Dick Cheney! Libby knows where ALL the bodies are buried, and you can be sure that his last words to Cheney as he made the "perp walk" were: "just be sure I don't go to prison, or I'll sing loud and clear for Fitzgerald".
Bush was obviously more distressed by the fact that Scooter may have been sent to some cushy federal prison where he could still have had his fingernails polished than by the fact that on his orders untold numbers of nameless, faceless "enemy combatants" have been sent to secret prisons to have their fingernails pulled out.
"I wouldn't mind a dictatorship... as long as I was the dictator." And we thought he was just pullin our leg...
Darn. This is kinda sad and tears at my heart ... poor Libby will not be able to practice law. How is he gonna earn a living ? How is he gonna pay off this huge fine ? How is he gonna feed his family ?