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The Illegal War in Libya
"The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation" -- candidate Barack Obama, December, 2007
"No more ignoring the law when it's inconvenient. That is not who we are. . . . We will again set an example for the world that the law is not subject to the whims of stubborn rulers" -- candidate Barack Obama, August 1, 2007
When President Obama ordered the U.S. military to wage war in Libya without Congressional approval (even though, to use his words, it did "not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation"), the administration and its defenders claimed he had legal authority to do so for two reasons: (1) the War Powers Resolution of 1973 (WPR) authorizes the President to wage war for 60 days without Congress, and (2) the "time-limited, well defined and discrete" nature of the mission meant that it was not really a "war" under the Constitution (Deputy NSA Adviser Ben Rhodes and the Obama OLC). Those claims were specious from the start, but are unquestionably inapplicable now.
President Obama addresses an audience in Boston, Wednesday, May 18, 2011. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
From the start, the WPR provided no such authority. Section 1541(c) explicitly states that the war-making rights conferred by the statute apply only to "a national emergency created by attack upon the United States, its territories or possessions, or its armed forces." That's why Yale Law Professor Bruce Ackerman -- in an article in Foreign Policy entitled "Obama's Unconstitutional War" -- wrote when the war started that the "The War Powers Resolution doesn't authorize a single day of Libyan bombing" and that "in taking the country into a war with Libya, Barack Obama's administration is breaking new ground in its construction of an imperial presidency."
Ackerman detailed why Obama's sweeping claims of war powers exceeded that even of past controversial precedents, such as Clinton's 1999 bombing of Kosovo, which at least had the excuse that Congress authorized funding for it: "but Obama can't even take advantage of this same desperate expedient, since Congress has appropriated no funds for the Libyan war." The Nation's John Nichols explained that Obama's unilateral decision "was a violation of the provision in the founding document that requires the executive to attain authorization from Congress before launching military adventures abroad." Put simply, as Daniel Larison concluded in an excellent analysis last week, "the war was illegal from the start."
But even for those who chose to cling to the fiction that the presidential war in Libya was authorized by the WPR, that fiction is now coming to a crashing end. Friday will mark the 60th day of the war without Congress, and there are no plans for authorization to be provided. By all appearances, the White House isn't even bothering to pretend to seek one. A handful of GOP Senators -- ones who of course showed no interest whatsoever during the Bush years in demanding presidential adherence to the law -- are now demanding a vote on Libya, but it's highly likely that the Democrats who control the Senate won't allow one. Instead, the law will simply be ignored by the President who declared, when bashing George Bush on the campaign trail to throngs of cheering progressives: "No more ignoring the law when it's inconvenient. That is not who we are."
One of the questions often asked during the Bush years was why Bush/Cheney were so brazen in violating Congressional statutes given that the post-9/11 Congress would have given them whatever authority they wanted to do whatever they wanted; the answer was clear: because they wanted to establish the "principle" that they had the power to do anything without getting anyone's permission, including the American people's through their Congress or the courts ("These decisions, under our Constitution, are for the President alone to make," decreed John Yoo in his iconic September 25, 2001 memo). 
The same is true of Obama here. There is little doubt that Congress would subserviently comply -- as it always does -- with presidential demands for war authorization. The Obama White House is simply choosing not to seek it because Obama officials want to bolster the unrestrained power of the imperial presidency entrenched by Dick Cheney, David Addington and John Yoo, and because that route avoids a messy debate about purpose, cost and exit strategy. Instead -- just as Bush/Cheney invented theories to justify even direct violation of Congressional law (e.g., the AUMF implicitly allowed us to eavesdrop on Americans without warrants in violation of FISA) -- the Obama administration is now, as The New York Times put it, "trying to come up with a plausible theory for why continued participation by the United States does not violate the law." Those potential "theories" -- that the U.S. can stop bombing for a moment, claim the war ended, and then resume bombing on the basis that the momentary pause reset the WPR clock, or that NATO's command means the U.S. is not really at war -- are ludicrous on their face, but highlight how eager the White House is to avoid seeking a vote that might dilute the President's seized unilateral war-making power (Ackerman and Yale Professor Oona Hathaway have a Washington Post Op-Ed today deriding those absurd theories).
It was equally clear from the start that this Orwellian-named "kinetic humanitarian action" was, in fact, a "war" in every sense, including the Constitutional sense, but that's especially undeniable now. While the President, in his after-the-fact speech justifying the war, pledged that "broadening our military mission to include regime change would be a mistake," it is now clear that is exactly what is happening. "Regime change" quickly became the explicit goal. NATO has repeatedly sought to kill Gadaffi with bombs; one attack killed his youngest son and three grandchildren and almost killed his whole family including his wife, forcing them to flee to Tunisia. If sending your armed forces and its AC-130s and drones to another country to attack that country's military and kill its leader isn't a "war," then nothing is.
It's extraordinary how rapidly and brazenly the initial claims about the war were discarded. The notion that we were simply going to establish a no-fly zone to protect civilians in Benghazi behind the leadership of the Arab League -- remember all that? -- is a faded, laughable memory. Former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan, originally supportive of the mission in Libya, explained the obvious about NATO in an interview this week: "they've crossed a line and are now part of the civil war and fighting on one side of the civil war." One can now say many things about this war; that it is "time-limited, well defined and discrete" is most assuredly not among them.
The excuses offered to justify or excuse all of this are unpersuasive in the extreme. Some point out that Congress is content with having the President seize its war-making powers; that's true, but the same was true of Congress under both parties in the face of Bush/Cheney radicalism (Dan Froomkin wrote in 2007 that "historians looking back on the Bush presidency may well wonder if Congress actually existed"). Nobody back then suggested this inaction excused Bush's lawbreaking. That Congress acquiesces simply means -- like Obama's protection of Bush crimes -- that the President will get away with this lawbreaking, not that it's justified.
Nor do the instances of past illegal wars provide any excuse. Past lawlessness does not justify current lawlessness. Beyond that, Professors Ackerman and Hathaway argue today that Libya will create an all new and dangerous precedent for the imperial presidency:
Once Obama crosses the Rubicon, future presidents will simply cite Libya when they unilaterally commit America to far more ambitious NATO campaigns.
Make no mistake: Obama is breaking new ground, moving decisively beyond his predecessors. George W. Bush gained congressional approval for his wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Bill Clinton acted unilaterally when he committed American forces to NATO's bombing campaign in Kosovo, but he persuaded Congress to approve special funding for his initiative within 60 days. And the entire operation ended on its 78th day.
In contrast, Congress has not granted special funds for Libya since the bombing began, and the campaign is likely to continue beyond the 30-day limit set for termination of all operations. . . .
If nothing happens, history will say that the War Powers Act was condemned to a quiet death by a president who had solemnly pledged, on the campaign trail, to put an end to indiscriminate warmaking.
That the American people must approve of wars through their Congress is no legalistic technicality (and as my very British NYU Criminal Law Professor, Graham Hughes, dryly said of his arrival in the U.S. and initial exposure to TV debates about criminal defendants "getting off on technicalities": "I had never before been in a country where people refer to their Constitution as a 'technicality'"). The whole point of the Article I, Section 8 requirement is that democratic debate and consent is necessary to prevent Presidents from starting self-aggrandizing wars without real limits on duration, cost and purpose; the WPR was enacted after the Vietnam debacle to prevent its repeat.
This war, without Congressional authorization, is illegal in every relevant sense: Constitutionally and statutorily. That was true from its start but is especially true now. If one wants to take the position that it's not particularly important or damaging for a President to illegally start and sustain protracted wars on his own, then it's hard to see what would be important. That is the ultimate expression of a lawless empire.
Read more at Salon.com
- Posted in


65 Comments so far
Show AllIf this war is illegal, every killing is murder, and Obama and Gates should hang.
not to be too cynical here but when does a sane person mention the words legal and the united states in the same breath
throw a dart at the map and its better than even odds (sic) that we are doing something illegal there
its what we do - subversion, murder, and theft of resources
we are through the looking glass folks - we live in a fascist tyranny right now and have been for some time - the lyin' turd obummer with his fake birth certificate and his ever humming teleprompter is the puppet who presents the face of death to the world
the us is the most feared country in the world and that's not because of our determination to remain legal
then we have the second most feared country - our mini-me zion state of israel, murderous nwo scum pond - the other day they killed 20 palestinians and wounded hundreds for crossing a field and that doesn't even get covered
legal - glen don't make me laugh....
According to UN Resolution 1422, at the insistence of the United States, which threatened to veto the renewal of all United Nations peacekeeping missions, the UN Security Council granted >immunity from prosecution< by the International Criminal Court (ICC) to United Nations peacekeeping personnel from countries that were not party to the ICC.
BTW, the United States is >not< a member of the International Criminal Court (ICC). Convenient, no?
So the US, it's Government, Military and President can kill whoever they damn well please, wherever they want, and however many they want, with no penalty or prosecution.
Neat trick, huh?
Canada, it's Prime Minister, Government and military have no such protection, as Canada IS a signatory to the ICC. PM Stephen Harper is TOTALLY prosecutable for any and all actions committed by the Canadian Armed Forces in Libya.
Galenwainwright, I looked up Resolution 1422 and found the same language as in your comment at the Wikipedia article. To quote a bit further in the article,
"The resolution came into effect on July 1, 2002 for a period of one year. It was renewed for twelve months by Resolution 1487, passed on June 12, 2003. However, the Security Council refused to renew the exemption again in 2004 after pictures emerged of U.S. troops abusing Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghraib, and the U.S. withdrew its demand."
My question, then: Does Resolution 1422 still apply re Libya? Greenwald didn't mention this . . .
Excellent article that highlights one of the most glaring examples yet (out of a very, very, very long list) of how Obama is not only worse than his predecessor in so many regards, but actually seems hell-bent on being one of the worst presidents in U.S. history altogether. The blatant disregard for the Constitution by Obama is absolutely shocking - doing away with habeas corpus, authorizing the indefinite detention of people for the rest of their lives, even those who have been found innocent in a court of law; declaring the power to order the execution of any human being anywhere on the planet (American citizen or otherwise) at any time on his word alone; and now claiming the president no longer even needs the rubberstamp approval of Congress to launch any war he wants, anytime he wants, anywhere he wants.
The criminal violations of this president are truly scary, and the way he so cockily shits on the Constitution daily, in full view of the nation and world. And of course our corporate whores in Congress couldn't care less, just like they didn't much care when Bush took similar plops on that document.
We are really speeding up the downhill slide towards complete fascism that this country is on. Faster and faster we go...
Oh - and to all you Dem-apologists and Lesser-Evilists out there: be sure to vote for Obama and all other politicians with a "D" after their names next year, becuase - as this story clearly shows - Democrats are somehow at least a little better than Republicans.
I concur with the summation that Obama is worse than W in every respect, and both ought to share the same poplar tree as Strange Fruit.
The most chilling statement in this article is: "There is little doubt that Congress would subserviently comply -- as it always does - with presidential demands for war appropriation."
And Demonstorm's statement to the Dem-apologists is very important. We must not think there is any real difference between one corporately funded political party and the other one. Both share the same evil greed for power and personal wealth. They get well paid to serve the corporations and only the realization amongst the voters of this, will give us any chance of a democracy in our nation.
How much more are you going to ignore? Our democracy is gone, we are bankrupt but continue to waste trillions of dollars on war and tax breaks for the extremely wealthy while the people suffer now and austerity plans assure us it will get worse.
When are the people going to stand up and say, " We've had enough of these lies and the total corruption of our government!! The Congress must LISTEN TO THE PEOPLE!! We want the wars to end, the rich to pay their fair share of the taxes and the taxes be used to provide for the people and protect the planet Earth."
"in full view of the nation and the WORLD". It is time to admit the shadow government or group that in charge of this world. How else to explain not one country standing up to all the illegal invasions the US has done? Or the 'coalition of the nations' involved in our wars? The French wanted to start the Libya thing because of the water. The IMF, World Banks, corporations are running things. We are the workers, tax payers who willingly sit back and watch. Amy Goodman had a segment stating the Elites have a bigger army then the US. The FEMA Camps are not CT. They will be ready.
The US is invoved in all the Nations that are raising hell. Most of them.
Sioux Rose, hoping your Karma thing is correct and these people get a shitload of it.
Now it's clear why Bush and Cheney were willing to give up office when their terms ended, even though their party lost the election.
The transition has been seamless.
likeitornot -
I agree with you that Congress hasn't authorized (yet) what the US is doing in Libya, and no resolution of the Arab League can legally authorize it. Because Gadaffi presented no immediate threat to the security of the United States or any NATO member, I don't see how legal authority to bomb and kill (with or without regime change as its goal) can come from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization multi-lateral defense treaty. The UN Charter and UN Security Council resolution 1973 presents a closer legal call.
The Korean War was a UN-authorized military mission, in response to hostilities that broke out across the 38th parallel - a nasty north/south civil war not entirely unlike the east/west hostilities inside Libya today. Harry Truman never asked Congress to declare war on North Korea, nor (later) on the People'e Republic of China, when China intervened on behalf of the north. Congress did, however, appropriate tax dollars and take other legislative action to support fighting the Korean War.
In my view, the UN Security Council resolution is the strongest argument the Obama administration has in making its dance around the War Powers Act. That UN resolution, however, authorizes member states to set up a no fly zone, enforce an arms embargo, and undertake humanitarian aid. It specifically exempts a ground invasion, and disavows a UN-approved goal of bringing regime change to Tripoli.
Thus, how the White House and Pentagon get from the UN Charter treaty provisions to targeted assassination efforts aimed at Gaddafi, fighter jet air strikes against Gaddafi's armored infantry forces, CIA and Special Ops boots on ground, and Hellfire drone attacks on residential areas of Tripoli is mission leap, not mission creep.
Bill from Saginaw
The UN authorized the US government -- that is Congress-- to act, but it does not, and can not, require any country to go to war. This is like being authorized by a school to go on a trip to represent the school in a spelling bee, but you still have to get permission from your parents. Other member states did not take part in the no-fly zone or hostilities.
“4. Authorizes Member States that have notified the Secretary-General, acting nationally or through regional organizations or arrangements, and acting in cooperation with the Secretary-General, to take all necessary measures, notwithstanding paragraph 9 of resolution 1970 (2011), to protect civilians and civilian populated areas under threat of attack in the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, including Benghazi, while excluding a foreign occupation force of any form on any part of Libyan territory, and requests the Member States concerned to inform the Secretary-General immediately of the measures they take pursuant to the authorization conferred by this paragraph which shall be immediately reported to the Security Council;"
While the president doesn't 'technically' have the authority to start wars without Congressional approval, the approval would be a given in any case. Almost every single Congressman from the RepoDemo Party are funded by some wing of the military industrial complex and/or Big Oil. To act surprised that the President doesn't adhere to the 'rule of law', is to deny that the U.S. is nothing more than a plutocracy with a very private agenda to serve a handful of corporate interests.
Congress, like the President and the Supreme Court, does not represent the public interest. Would you feel better if the President enacted a new WPR Act, one approved by Congress and backed up by the Supreme Court, that gave him unlimited power to wage future wars? Just because a war is declared "legal", doesn't make it right.
"If this war is illegal, every killing is murder, and Obama and Gates should hang."
Although one may agree with every part of what you wrote, the parts don't add up to a coherent whole. Your comment is in the form of a sentence but it is a non sequitur at best.
Greenwald, on the other hand has made a cogent argument for the illegality of Obama's actions that go beyond those of GWB. It's a bit like escaping from Freddie Kruger only to end up in the arms of Hanibal Lecter.
Excellent analysis by Glenn, and the Op-Ed by professors Ackerman and Hathaway in WaPo is well worth a click to read in full.
The War Powers Act was passed in 1973 specifically in reaction to Richard Nixon's invasion of Cambodia without Congressional approval, or even knowledge on the part of the Congressional leadership that this massive "mission leap" from the quagmire of Vietnam into the Ho Chi Mihn trail sanctuaries west of the Mekong was being seriously contemplated. In response to this blatant, illegal escalation of a war Nixon repeatedly pledged to end, popular furor in the streets and calls for Nixon's impeachment inside the DC beltway immediately arose. The shooting of student protestors at Kent State and Jackson State universities soon followed. During the later Watergate hearings, an article of presidential impeachment based upon Nixon's unlawful invasion of Cambodia was introduced but never acted upon.
The War Powers Act was passed by means of a presidential veto override. It (and is 60 day/30 day time frames) is the law of the land. War campaigns in Lebanon, Grenada, Panama, Kosovo, and elsewhere were shoe horned into its statutory framework. Libya truly appears to be a special, ominous test case.
The real reason of course why the current Congress will continue to slumber is because hearings or a floor debate would split the Democratic Party base and create some awkward ideological issues for Republicans at an inconvenient moment in the electoral cycle. The conventional wisdoms says bet that sleeping dog will be left to lie.
Bill from Saginaw
Thank you, Mr. Greenwald. Your courage in exposing the illegalities underway is a credit to the nation and whatever posterity manages to survive this era.
For those in the forum who are busily comparing Obama with his predecessor, the issue is not so much the presidential figurehead, as much as it is a pattern being furthered by complicit parties in "both" political camps. Plans to enact a "unitary executive," or unimpeded make-war state began at least 40 years ago. Now, with no major body in place to counter such efforts, progress towards this objective continues as if greased on skids.
Also, for those who remind of Amerika' s past violations of law and related indecencies, it's imperative to note that a Rubicon HAS been crossed. In the past, at least the pretense of legal authority was used for egregious actions. Today, even that last defense of the public's trust has been done away with.
To observe how:
1. First illegal spying on citizens was done, then retroactively appropriated the fig leaf of legality
2. Torture practices were permitted by calling prisoners enemy combatants, or altering the meaning of torture to only relate to definitive organ failure
3. Money, against the public's wishes, was handed to the same banksters that knee-capped not just our economy, but thanks to their dissemination of weapons of mass financial destruction 'round the world, other nations have been similarly financially decimated.
4. Oil drilling, against the public's wishes, continues in the Gulf
5. A health "care" give-away to big insurance continues, against the public's wishes
6. Financial austerity, reflective of the prescriptions favored by the notorious Chicago School, are being enacted to induce yet more misery and privation upon our nation's citizeny
7. A war based on FIXED (as in fake!) evidence, and equally fallacious pretexts was launched... while War of Aggression is cited as THE Supreme Crime by the Geneva Conventions... and no one was held to account. By Obama pretending that it was better for the nation to look ahead, rather than back, as important voices have aired, the false cover of legitimacy was placed over the worst types of criminal acts. And so they are made to continue...like Wall Street gambling with pension funds, without any regulation put back in place. It's a free for all for those without conscience, morality, or any iota of consideration for human rights (or well-being).
Add to this list the way this president has arrogated to himself the right to call for the direct assassination of any presumed-enemy, the FEMA camps built in our nation, the use of incarceration to brand more and more members of society (often on the basis of nonsensical charges), the diminishing job base, the unfair tax policies, the noxious Republican governors turning back the clock on labor rights, the despicable lack of concern for ecological dangers that continue to compromise homes and regions one after another. And on and on. The absence of genuine leadership is breathtaking...
This list hardly reflects the whole of what's going on, and I share it to remind readers that the present government is ILLEGITIMATE. It does not speak for me, or many of you... nor countless millions. Its unsavory passion for the slaughter of innocents is nothing short of a DISEASE.
The MIC, in cahoots with this corrupt government (fueled by high-powered enablers from both parties) is essentially putting a target on each of us. Sooner or later a force will emerge to counter this out-of-control beast. Every day brings new horrors to light... one's disgust threshold is overwhelmed. How do we citizens of conscience demonstrate to the world, and particularly those citizens within the Pentagon's sights, that we grieve with them, apologize to them, convey our condolensces, and are searching for ways to alter the lawless lay of our land.
Hello Siouxrose!
There are decent people in every land, and they will realize and know the truth of this statement, and realize and know that there are decent people in the United States of America.
Manysummits
======
Michael: Your closing logo makes me want to go mountain climbing... I hope you're right about the contention that people of good will recognize this in disempowered other populations.
Kiely: I would say the GROUND is the answer.. and by that I mean, the escalating geological rumblings of this nearly late great planet earth may well become the thing that DOES stop the beast.
Sadly, you may very well be right. That's why I'll keep hoping it is the economy crashing into the ground that stops it first. Not the best thing to wish for, but I'm not sure what else will make enough impact on us to finally wake us all up without killing us.
"Sooner or later a force will emerge to counter this out-of-control beast."
Amen to that Siouxrose!
Put your ear to the ground and you can hear it coming... But will it get here in time?
Sioux & Kiely -
And may the force be with you......
Bill from Saginaw
Hello, Bill... I must admit that the photo in the left CD column of the uniformed guards taking the prisoner, arrayed in orange, away for his last Inquisitor's round of questioning reminds me of guys at a fraternity who let their animal impulses run wildly... because they can. Because absolute power corrupts absolutely. Because this LIE that these people caught in a drift net, casualties of a war based on fixed evidence, constitute genuine enemies ignites the dangerous impulse to fight back. And when a pack of testosterone-fueled kids gang up to fight back, all decency fades to black.
In that image, the dragging of a poor fellow caught in the felonious drift net, knowing he never got to say goodbye to his loved ones, never did anything wrong, or of a nature to warrant so brutal a truncated ending (hidden by the "suicide" report)... is the image of Amerika, The Fallen. No longer a land of laws, only their verisimilitude, its logos as empty as that of the faux filler so many millions, grown obese on the crap, take for food, or the genuine article.
I feel so sickened by so much that I can't even wait till sundown to bike today... the trees call out in their peaceful sanctuary, as the last vestiges of sanity still to be found. How guilty of disorderly conduct is the land of my birth. A beast, its dark hunger to maim and destroy moves from predation (Iraq) to predation (Libya)... without pause.
My sorrow is so deep, a well so full, that I can scarcely access the tears through which to discharge it. And even if I could, it would well up again tomorrow at the knowledge of the latest evils...
We must petition the heavens for a speedier justice, though it will further reduce the quality of life in our domain... if only to spare yet more innocents from the fall-out of our bloated bomb buster inventories. And the dark lords who play with life and death as if they were its chosen custodians.
Siouxrose--
Your eloquence brings tears to my eyes. Those of us, who are not swallowed by the noise coming out of the media and their barrage of advertisers that would tell us we're ugly unless we look like their models, weep bitter tears for the evil that Amerika now represents.
"And the dark lords who play with life and death as if they were its chosen custodians." –(Siouxrose)
Yes.
Amerika. The blood quotient, death the dividend. A garden of atrocities.
"Your ideas are terrifying and your hearts are faint. Your acts of pity and cruelty are absurd, committed with no calm, as if they were irresistible. Finally, you fear blood, more and more. Blood all the time."
–(Paul Valéry)
"It is not to be thought that the life of darkness is sunk in misery and lost as if in sorrowing. There is no sorrowing. For sorrow is a thing that is swallowed up in death, and death and dying are the very life of the darkness."
–(Jacob Boehme)
I'd appreciate your telling me or reminding me whence is the quotation of Paul Valéry;in French if possible.I have read about evrything Valéry has written, but can't remember in what text he said what you quote.Not that I doubt the accuracy of your quotation,of course.Thank you.
Your point is well taken.
This quotation is 'archival' and the provenance to Paul Valéry cannot be absolutely, or exegetically, ascertained. I will ask my wife, who read Valéry in French. I cannot provide a referential citation, other than to say it is certainly possible that your recollection is correct, and the source may be another writer. My reading of Valéry is cursory at best, mainly his poetry.
I hope that helps some. If you succeed in finding the text please post it up.
Valery is a prolific writer. I applaud your dedication to reading through all of his amazing work. Perhaps some intertextual search can turn up the quotation.
Another reader succeeded in finding the text to a source we posted from Walter Benjamin:
"Only that historian will have the gift of fanning the spark of hope in the past who is firmly convinced that EVEN THE DEAD will not be safe from the enemy if he wins. And this enemy has not ceased to be victorious."
–Walter Benjamin, "Theses on the Philosophy of History."
–Vashkar
Postscript:
The citation is from Paul Valéry's "The Yalu." It is somewhere in the Valéry Bollingen volumes. I behoove you to read it, not only to complete your reading of Paul Valéry, but also I remember it as a wonderful, inimitable piece. Most famously, it serves as an epigraph, along with the citation from Boehme, for Cormac McCarthy's haunting novel, "Blood Meridian," (Vintage)
–Kim.
"Sooner or later a force will emerge to counter this out-of-control beast."
–(Siouxrose)
Yes. Or, what does zero tolerance for fascism really mean?
“The hour in which–and it’s a space rather than a time–every being becomes his own shadow, and thus something other than himself. The hour of metamorphoses, when people half hope, half fear that the dog will become a wolf.”
–(Jean Genet, “Prisoner of Love.”)
((pretending that it was better for the nation to look ahead, rather than back, as important voices have aired, the false cover of legitimacy was placed over the worst types of criminal acts. And so they are made to continue))
Sioux thanks, for your OWN COURAGE for your WORDS, they are the components of statements you will expect from authentic leaders
Perhaps integrity & courage are not meant to reach the top but rather competition and cannibalism are? When I look @ the faces of the Republicans reps it's staggering the concentration of it within.
It's painful just saying it, one wish one did not have to say it. Time for silence is behind.
The single greatest threat to the world in every sense militarily, politically, economically, environmentally & most importantly, humanity is the us empire, INCREASING it is forcing powers and middle powers to take the shadow path. Armament for survival and suppressing respectively their own populations this is the message the US is sending to ALL.
Israel is unique a dwarf star with the same devastating impact on its neighbor & elsewhere. Our challenge is to stop the empire from collecting more stamps, therefore stopping the creation of UNHEALTHY ALLIANCES elsewhere excluding the healthy ones. THE GOOD OF HUMANITY REQUIRES THAT WE CONNECT BUT NOT THE WAY empires DICTATES
Israel has played the empire game in such a way, that it has fed, fueled and exploited every catastrophic foyer of tension or black holes often engendered by both entities, the tumor of the four square meters that Israel is creating by annexing those territories is a giant black hole, its swallowing everything on its path is GENERATING THERE & ELSEWHERE the loose of our liberties , the time & the energy to act on stooping other foyer of tension, working on real conflicts, ON SOMEBODY WHO BROKE HERE LEG not ON SOMEBODY WHO'S LEG WE BROKE, in other WORDS NOT ENGENDERED MANUFACTURED FOR PROFIT. We must start working on demographic dilemma, current & future WATER & HUNGER problems world wide, energy alternatives, global warming, education, woman condition in Africa & other countries, health & hope, the list is huge, the time is limited, the suffering is unfathomable.
EMPIRES NEED BLACK HOLES TO PROCESS ENERGY.
As an evolving organism we must break that pattern our new acquired & evolving consciousness has allowed us to stop eating each other literally, exploiting & sacrificing our own children to the gods & instead created structures for highly developed communication skills, arts, philosophy, science, spirituality & healing mechanisms & equally important perhaps more important, gazing at the mountains & asking WHATS BEHIND THEM?, monkeys on top of a tree still do that.
Perhaps the TRUE question we ought to ask is WHOSE CHILDREN DID NIXON, CHENEY, MADELAINE ALBRIGHT BUSH, RISE & CURRENT LEADERS SACRIFICE, WHAT
FOR & WHICH gods DID THEY AND ARE STILL SERVING? Clearly it is not the people.
No terror no torture just truth.
I'm don't think wars of aggression are legal according to international law, whether they have U.N. mandates or not.
But an excellent piece by Greenwald.
"a lawless empire" (Glenn Greenwald - constitutional litigator)
==============
I am reading this here in Canada. I wish I could find some fault with Glenn's assessment, but I can't.
======
Another excellent article. We need a thousand more Glenn Greenwalds!
What can you say about this president??? A wolf in sheep's clothing, a slimy spewer of pabulum, a grinning harbinger of death and destruction, a pathetic, lying, sack-of-shit. Makes me want to believe in Hell.
http://kiely-flashpoint.blogspot.com/2011/05/in-search-of-hope-and-change.html
Juan Cole has proved to be one of the worst of those "liberal voices," and is only worthy of contempt and disgust. Today Public Enemy #1 said Assad needs to get out of the way of democracy; my rejoiner is that Obama himself must get out of the way first and foremost. I hope the NAACP holds to the much higher standards of its founders and tells Obama to go to hell.
KARLOF My line in the sand was drawn against anyone who jumped on board to cheer the (alleged) death of Bin Laden. Such compliance does all of the following:
1. Insult the rule of law and any human being's right to a fair trial
2. Reinforce the official 911 story line
3. Massage the idea that the world is divided into good guys and bad guys and..
4. That whatever the US does is OK, because we're indisputably on the "good guy" TEAM
5. Insure yet more enmity in the Arab world, guaranteeing the cause for more weapons and likely "rebellious" (in defense of their own turf!) acts to quash
6. Champion the idea of U.S. president as macho warrior and unapologetic killer in chief
7. Provide an example of Might Makes Right (in lieu of genuine justice) to children
There are other subliminal messages this ugly act reinforces; yet these come to mind without much thought. Every one of them lessens the spiritual integrity and moral standing of our nation.
Liberals might go for it, but no true Green, Progressive, or principled person could...
The horrors are non-stop these days. They overwhelm as intensely as the rising Misssissippi waters...
One can easily observe from the photo that accompanies this piece that Barry is really a demon from Hell.
Yeah, he looks a lot like the gargoyle pictured for the Orwellian item.
If the President can order the killing of a person in Libya, he can order the killing of you or me.
I teach an ethics class at a local college. Every semester I give an assignment to write a paper on this topic: "What is the reason why actions that are ordinarily considered to be wrong and immoral become permissible and even good in time of war?" I have never gotten a good answer to my question.
What are you looking for when you ask that question? A justification, cause, explanation, excuse? The "reason" it happens is they need it to happen. To enable endless war they need to justify much of it.
A better question may be how it happens.
FWIW, I would've posted a comment I left to the "Death of the War Powers Act?" article here if I wasn't in the habit of reading daily CD articles from bottom to top.
I do give Glenn credit for continuing to provide eminently logical, well-crafted critiques and analyses that point out what is wrong with this picture.
But I think he still struggles to see the forest for the trees, and is reluctant to admit that legalistic critiques ultimately become irrelevant in the domain of an imperialist, authoritarian government that puts a clean-shaven face and an impeccable curriculum vitae to an amoral brutality operating in accordance with the dictum, "We don't need no stinkin' badges!"
O.S., stop, please. You're killing me. I'm still laughing about Osama's butt plug.
"But I think he still struggles to see the forest for the trees, and is reluctant to admit that legalistic critiques ultimately become irrelevant in the domain of an imperialist, authoritarian government that puts a clean-shaven face and an impeccable curriculum vitae to an amoral brutality..."
I think you have to cut guys like Glenn Greenwald some slack. He is gaining momentum and credibility. When you're a journalist, writer, intellectual, artist, or any sort of counter-status-quo-critical-thinker who begins to make ripples you need to be very careful with your words or risk being "swift-boated."
Just look at Cornel West. He just spoke his truth, probably born from frustration, and the media (even Salon) begins the tempest in the tea pot. He's had a "meltdown". You have to love how the media works. The label that couldn't be applied to the actual meltdown happening right in front of our eyes in Japan instantly gets applied to someone who simply says "Fuck it, I'm going to tell you what I think!"
So sure Glenn Greenwald resorts to legalistic critiques or beautifully explaining the trees to those looking at them. But I have a hunch he sees the forest pretty clearly.
All that need be said. Masterful and succinct.
There is something hauntingly sad about Glenn Greenwald's almost wistful insistence that normative legal strictures still come into play in a country which, in truth, acknowledges none, and in fact, cannot.
In another writer one would sense a nostalgia for a lost world. The 'ghost in the machine' for Greenwald is that his premises, clearly based on false hope, have been pulled out from under him and made glaringly irrelevant and moot. This despite the lucidity and clarity of his argument.
This persistence of memory for concepts like 'the law' in the shadow of imperial terror and fascism reminds one of the French anthropologist Claude-Levi Strauss' elegy to the vanishing primordial tribes he studied in the Amazon basin in the classic study "Tristes Tropiques."
What he sees is a dead or lost world.
Despite my comments below, I'd like to defend Mr. Greenwald. I may not be a writer, but I pretend like one in real life. And what I would write to a Salon audience, if they were paying me, would not be the same as what I would write to a local newspaper, and they've never paid me, would not be the same as what I would write to a message board under my own name, which would not be the same as what I write to say, Huffington Post, where I don't use my own name.
This is a really good article. The flaw is that's it's from a the perspective of an isolated America(n).
I appreciate how Greenwald shows Obama as a hypocrite just as he's giving a "really important" speech on the Middle East.
Thank-you, Mr. Greenwald.
Where is that scumbag Juan Cole now???!!!
He is complicit in these murders, and should be held accountable. No doubt that fool wanted "access" to power, and was probably tapped by some CIA handlers to do his liberal cheer leading for this slaughter.
Greenwald persuasively lays out one element of a progressive platform against both major parties. It's worth remembering.
As long as there'll be nothing and no one to compel the Executive and the Judiciary to be respectful of the Law, and as long as the Law will be conceptualised and construed in such a manner as not to promote the commmon good, that's what's gonna happen.
But we are faced with an exceptional situation, which has been persisting for so long that it has now ( almost ) been accepted as being the rule.And exceptional situations require exceptional solutions.
Hold Obama accountable: vote Green in 2012.
I sure wish there was some "Act" that would authorize our valiant president to go to war unilaterally, without any provocation or threat to our precious security. If only there were such an Act. Then I'd feel at peace and happy about about all the killing and suffering my sacred country was inflicitng on others. The War Powers Usurpation Act seems to have fulfilled my most ardent hopes. Hail King Obama!
From:
The Paradigm is the Enemy:The State of the Peak Oil Movement at the Cusp of Collapse
by Michael Ruppert - 4/28/06
..."The quote was simply, 'We’ve got them now.'
"The person who wrote those last 'recorded' words on a dispatch to his commanding officer was George Armstrong Custer.
"During the course of this conference I have heard precious little attention paid to events in the world around us indicating that Peak Oil is about to have its global 'coming out party' and what that might mean. In almost every nook, cranny and corner of the planet, stress points are beginning to fracture.
"For the past five years I have argued, emphasized, and repeated endlessly that perhaps the biggest mistake of all time was made on September 11th 2001, when the only real global operational plan to deal with Peak Oil was put into effect. On September 11th we began a war, now infamously known as 'the war which will not end in our lifetimes,' to decide who will control the last remaining oil and gas reserves on the planet."
*****
US Actions, Not Obama's Words Tell Story of US Middle East Policy
by Dennis Kucinich - 5/19/11
"The Interim Council of the rebels moved quickly to a $100 million oil marketing agreement with Qatar, unmasking a potential reason for intervention: control over Libya's vast oil fields which can yield over $300 million in oil daily. The military intervention in a civil war against the backdrop of a struggle for oil casts a shadow of doubt upon lofty rhetoric about positive change, peace and stability."
"...but when does a sane person mention the words legal and the united states in the same breath." –(medmedude)
Well said.
Glenn Greenwald's continuing legalistic circumspection has become piously quaint, almost circumlocutory in its hesitance to simply 'call a spade a spade' in the reality of imperial terror.
But then, all things considered in America, what else can he do? Risk being marginalized and considered a hysteric?
'Law' and 'America' are contradictions in terms, mutually exclusive categories of sound and fury, the former all but a ghostly relic, now drowned and subsumed in the murderous hegemony of empire.
"This war, without Congressional authorization, is illegal in every relevant sense: Constitutionally and statutorily."
This is just a technicality. Obama does not need your stinking Constitution.
Is it possible that citizens can instigate criminal prosecution against Obama?