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On Bush, Cheney Crimes: Seek Truth and Accountability
Senate Judiciary Committee chair Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont, deserves credit for pressing ahead with his modest proposal to establish a truth and reconciliation commission to review the assaults on the Constitution and general lawlessness of the Bush-Cheney administration.
As Leahy said at the opening of Wednesday's Judiciary Committee hearing on "Getting To The Truth Through A Nonpartisan Commission Of Inquiry":
Nothing has done more to damage America's place in the world than the revelation that this Nation stretched the law and the bounds of executive power to authorize torture and cruel treatment. The Bush administration chose this course, but tried to keep its policies and actions secret, knowing that they could not withstand scrutiny in the light of day. How many times did President Bush go before the world and say that we did not torture and that we acted in accordance with law?There are some who resist any effort to look back at all, while others are fixated on prosecution, even if it takes all of the next eight years, or more, and further divides this country.
Over the last month, I have suggested a middle ground to get to the truth of what went on during the last several years, in a way that invites cooperation. I believe that that might best be accomplished though a nonpartisan commission of inquiry. I would like to see this done in a manner removed from partisan politics. Such a commission of inquiry would shed light on what mistakes were made so that we can learn from these errors and not repeat them.
That is a reasoned and responsible stance, of the sort we have come to expect from Leahy.
There is no question that the chairman is pushing further into the constitutional thicket than President Obama or Attorney General Eric Holder seem to be willing to go. And there is certainly some merit in borrowing from the wise experiments in accountability initiated by other countries -- especially South Africa, which used the truth-and-reconciliation-commission model to get those responsible for Apartheid-era crimes to acknowledge where the bodies were buried in return for the promise of immunity.
Unfortunately, Leahy's proposal to remove from the table the prospect of prosecution of officials who have committed crimes goes against the fundamental American precept that the rule of law must apply to all of us -- even presidents, vice presidents, attorneys general and White House aides.
Justice Anthony Kennedy was correct when he observed in the Supreme Court decision restoring the writ of habeas corpus that was undermined by the Bush administration and its congressional amen corner, that the Constitution is not something an administration is able "to switch... on and off at will."
Even Leahy admits that: "We must not be afraid to look at what we have done, to hold ourselves accountable as we do other nations who make mistakes. We must understand that national security means protecting our country by advancing our laws and values, not discarding them."
Unfortunately, the chairman's proposal for a commission switches off the rule of law by suggesting that the prospect of legal prosecution even in cases of extreme lawlessness -- and congressional action to address gross assaults on the Constitution -- in favor of "developing a process to reach a mutual understanding of what went wrong and learn from it."
The chairman of the Constitution subcommittee of the Judiciary Committee, Wisconsin Democrat Russ Feingold, suggests that it is unwise to simply give up on the prospect of prosecuting lawbreakers.
While Feingold compliments Leahy's initiative and says that "getting all the facts out about what happened over the last eight years is a crucial part of restoring the rule of law," the Senate's most outspoken defender of the Constitution warned today against going too far in surrendering the essential tools of the accountability process.
"On the question of immunity, I think we should tread carefully," told Wednesday's hearing. "There are cases that may require prosecution, and I wouldn't want a commission of inquiry to preclude that. Those who clearly violated the law and can be prosecuted should be prosecuted. On the other hand, the country will really benefit from having as complete a telling of this story as possible, so the ability of the commission to seek immunity for lower level participants certainly needs to be considered. How to do this is one of the complex questions that I hope can be explored in this hearing."
The American Civil Liberties Union agrees with Feingold's view that prosecutions should not be ruled out. The group is urging Holder and the Department of Justice to appoint a special prosecutor to conduct an investigation and, if warranted by the facts, to bring criminal charges against members of the Bush-Cheney administration who broke the law.
Additionally, the ACLU is calling for the creation of a congressional Select Committee that would work in conjunction with Leahy's truth and reconciliation commission. "(The)combination of both committees would be an effective format for congressional review of Bush administration policies," explains an ACLU statement on the issue, which recalls the important work of a committee headed by Idaho Senator Frank Church that investigated executive abuses in the 1970s. "The Select Committee would have the ability to allocate the necessary time and resources outside of the day-to-day demands of the standing committee structure. It would also bring together members from the relevant committees with jurisdiction over the relevant issues to share their expertise concerning the programs under review."
Says ACLU Washington Legislative Office director Caroline Fredrickson: "Americans' faith in government has been deeply. While a truth commission is a valid and admirable suggestion, Congress must go further. Congress' complacent approach to oversight has done our country irreparable harm and legitimized illegal and counter-productive intelligence programs. It's time for Congress to step up in a very real way and assert its role of oversight."
Leahy is not a bad player here.
He understands that there must be a measure of accountability if we are going to renew this country's commitment to the rule of law and to constitutional governance.
The Vermonter is asking the right questions: "(How) did we get to a point where we were holding a legal U.S. resident for more than five years in a military brig without ever bringing charges against him? How did we get to a point where Abu Ghraib happened? How did we get to a point where the United States Government tried to make Guantanamo Bay a law-free zone, in order to try to deny accountability for our actions? How did we get to a point where our premier intelligence agency, the CIA, destroyed nearly 100 videotapes with evidence of how detainees were being interrogated? How do we make sure it never happens, again?"
But the answer to those questions must, necessarily, be bolder.
It will take a greater measure of accountability than just Leahy's truth commission to "make sure it never happens again."
The ACLU's Fredrickson is right when she says: "The truth commission is a beginning for Congress to reassert its power, but it must go further."
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23 Comments so far
Show AllWhat is the legal precedent that would put these criminals above prosecution? I doubt there is an answer. Are they not subject to the same laws (and possibly even more so, since they have taken an oath) as the average citizen? AND, if not, why not??
obushma's not giving back the keys
THe whole point of the truth Commission,- needling out the particulars of past crimes- is to distract us from the crimes that are taking place today.Have another Watergate- whoppee! Ferret out every little insignificant lie, distortion, con-game, misappropriation, two-bit buglar and espionage nutcase. Meanwhile the crimes go on being perpetrated- the OCCUPATION OF IRAQ, "NATION-BUILDING" IN AFGHANISTAN, DOMESTIC SURVEILLANCE, RENDITION & TORTURE!
OH My OH My The Republicans are turning a cold shoulder to the whole charade! Don't they know you can't butter both sides of the bread and keep your hands clean? Who cares, they never had any brains to begin with.
Arrest & execute. If it was good enough for the Germans and Japanese, it's good enough for Americans.
NUREMBERG II 2009
Leahy will make some noise and then let it die. I cannot help but think this too is a ploy, a ruse to buy time and allow the 'dust to settle' delivering us all - yet again - to nowhere in the land of injustice. Besides it affords the masses a place to put their angst buying more time for the economic crisis to pass. More theatre for the hapless viewers that we have become. Leahy was there when all this was going down. And he was silent then.
This is exactly what's going on. The "lodge brothers" don't rat each other out, or so goes is the thinking of the cowardly and corrupt Democrats. The fact that the Republicans would kill every Democrat in Congress if they could simply wish them all dead doesn't seem to bother the Dems. The Dems are "ladies and gentlemen"; they are civilized; the Dems can tell you who Cezanne was, or Joseph Conrad; the Republicans think they are the heads of European hedge funds. Most of all, the Dems are complicit.
he wasn't silent, but he wasn't effective either.
How can untruthful and criminal attorneys be expected to prosecute other criminals, who are their peers? If you look at American history, the unethical never do anything but put on a fascade and a canard called a commission, to mollify the ignorant, sheeple. The recent 911 commission was an example of the criminals investigating the other criminals! But millions of Americans are so politically, brainwashed that it takes very little subtle and specious, propaganda to mislead them and to rationalize the nefarious deeds and treason of their nihilistic leaders. When senator Stevens was ousted from congress on 7 felonies, the entire senate stood up and gave him a rousing ovation for many minutes on his last day. I rest my case.
Sioux Rose
PAUL R: Excellent "case" and extremely well-stated.
Congress and the president are not the only entities that can bring charges against the Bush administration, and maybe we ought to look farther afield for an active agent to do this.
There are several Constitutional law groups in the US who have kept close tabs on the Bush administration and its illegal actions. These groups include the ACLU. I'd give them every spare penny I had if they announced they were aiming for the prosecution of the Bush criminals.
So let Congress be wimpy as they have been all along. Let them grant CONGRESSIONAL immunity to get people to testify -- just not immunity for charges that might be initiated by other agencies supported by American citizens whose money, lives, and identity were stolen from us by these criminals.
Anyway, I do agree that we need to keep pushing Obama and Congress really HARD to prosecute them, but if they continue to refuse, let's not lose hope....
http://ccrjustice.org/prosecutebushofficials
SIGN THE PETITION
CCR has launched a new online campaign calling for accountability – and criminal prosecutions – of those Bush administration officials responsible for torture and war crimes. Help us make the point by signing on to our petition.
SEND A LETTER
We are also calling upon Sen. Patrick Leahy, who is holding a hearing on March 4 of the Senate Judiciary Committee to discuss a “truth commission” to investigate the crimes of the Bush administration, to support prosecutions for those government officials who violated the law. Sign a letter to Sen. Leahy and the Judiciary Committee calling for them to support prosecutions, and to oppose any immunity for the architects of these torture programs.
LEARN MORE
Holding the new administration of the United States accountable for preserving and restoring Constitutional rights is part of CCR's 100 Days to Restore the Constitution campaign, which focuses on the harm done by previous administrations and the hopes we have for making the country a better place for all.
If I were optimistic I would even hope that the investigation of the suspicious aeroplane crash that Paul Wellstone and his family and staff died in be reopened.
Leahy, despite apparent good intent and evident brains, reveals himself to be a powerless and befuddled courtier in a Through the Looking Glass house of cards. He either doesn't know or doesn't care with whom he is dealing, even after their Dark Lord told him in full public view to go F**k himself. These people are not interested in the truth or in reconciliation. They view the election of Obama as another step in the inexorable march towards permanent, irreversible imperial power abroad, authoritarian rule at home and an economic system of outright plunder wherever possible; maybe a side step, but a step nevertheless. They view Leahy and the rule of law as obstacles. The first, considerably less important than the second but neither of any value.
Put it this way - with nothing but a lie about a blow job, Leahy's opponents brought the government to a standstill and impeached a President. A lie told in an inadmissible deposition, in a case thrown out of court on the merits, trumped up by the President's enemies. A lie unearthed only after Ken Starr's 3-year, $60 million panty-sniffing adventure failed to find anything else. Did the braying asses who led the impeachment charge ever once consider, instead of impeachment, establishing a "truth commission" with "immunity" for all who testified?
Are they stupid, self-loathing, cowardly, deluded, bought-off, all of the above? History will be asking these questions about the Dems for a long time.
Once upon a time, what never happened
Became what surely was and forever will be.
And the long eared asses brayed "Yea-Ya".
(The last line is Nietzsche's -"Thus Spake ...")
http://www.IndictBushNow.org
Let's not forget Alan Greenspan when investigating crimes.
"There you have it. What is suggested here is that the push to reelect President George W. Bush, in the fall of 2004, may have played an important role in letting the housing bubble become bigger, thus paving the way for a housing bubble burst in 2005-2006. This is, by the way, on top of the confession that Mr. Greenspan made in his Memoirs (The Age of Turbulence) that he had personally lobbied the Bush-Cheney administration in favor of the unprovoked 2003 U.S. war against Iraq, and that consequently, he was personally tied to the overall political agenda of the Bush-Cheney administration."
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=12561
So what ever happened to the power of the subpoena? Why do we have to wait for Rove and Meiers, as reported today, to "agree to testify?" I’m profoundly unimpressed. What ever happened to the rule of law? I’m sick of this begging and pleading stance that the Dems are taking. "Please oh please, just tell us the truth so we can move on." That's the huge problem with this “Truth and Reconciliation” nonsense. There will be no peace, no reconciliation, until there is justice. We don’t get justice when we have criminals maybe telling the truth for once, not even apologizing for their crimes, fer chrissake, not ever expressing any remorse, but since they told the truth, we forgive them and they get immunity? Hello? This is why we have laws. Do I sound pissed off? Darn right. Subpoena them, try them, hold them accountable for their crimes, administer justice, and THEN move on.
Exactly, Alice. You don't have to fall down the rabbit hole to understand this. Why Nichols and Leahy can't seem to get it is anyone's guess. They're more interested in the interminable and holy freaking "process," which is Capitol Hillspeak for, "we're looking at it and we'll look until you stop caring, then we won't do anything even if we find crime, corruption, lies, murder, thievery and worse. We'll just Move Forward into the next series of crimes that we'll also pretend to care about."
Anther waste of time and money, tipical. These commisions do nothing but take up time and spend money the goverment does not have. The result will be long on wasted money and very short on truth.
"Leahy is not a bad player here." I would say Leahy is no player. He does not want to do his job. He does not want to investigate and bring the miscreants to justice.
Leahy is a big bag of wind. It is sickening.
snydly
Privatize Nuremberg.
5 million people sending $10/month for bounty on war criminals could employ a lot of unemployed ambulance chasers.
PRIVATIZE NUREMBERG.
2 steel high buildings in spain and china burned for 24 hours with no collapse during this past year..