The 9/14 Presidency
Barack Obama, like George W. Bush, is operating with war powers granted three days after the 9/11 attacks.
If you believe the president's Republican critics, Barack Obama takes a law enforcement approach to terrorism. His FBI came under fire for reading Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian national who nearly blew up an airplane on Christmas, his constitutional rights. His attorney general was blasted for wanting to give 9/11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed a criminal trial in lower Manhattan. Republican Sen. Scott Brown rode to his historic upset victory in Massachusetts in part due to this slogan: "In dealing with terrorists, our tax dollars should pay for weapons to stop them, not lawyers to defend them." Every sign suggests the GOP will make terrorism a wedge issue in the 2010 midterm elections. "As I've watched the events of the last few days," former vice president Dick Cheney said shortly after the Abdulmutallab attack, "it is clear once again that President Obama is trying to pretend we are not at war."
It's true that the president's speeches and some of his policy rollouts have emphasized a break from the Bush era. In the Quadrennial Defense Review, the guiding strategy for defense spending released every four years, the administration excised any reference to the "long war," previously the go-to pseudonym for the global war on terror. In a major speech last summer, the president's top adviser on terrorism and homeland security, John Brennan, stated explicitly that Obama rejected the phrase "global war" because "it plays into the misleading and dangerous notion that the U.S. is somehow in conflict with the rest of the world." In a USA Today op-ed piece last February, Brennan argued that Republican critics were playing into Al Qaeda's hands by suggesting U.S. courts could not handle terrorism prosecutions.
But these differences in style mask a sameness in substance that should worry civil libertarians. When it comes to the legal framework for confronting terrorism, President Obama is acting in no meaningful sense any differently than President Bush. As the Obama administration itself is quick to point out, the Bush administration also tried terrorists apprehended on U.S. soil in criminal courts, most notably "20th hijacker" Zacarias Moussaoui and shoe bomber Richard Reid. More important, President Obama has embraced and at times defended the same wartime powers as President Bush, with all of their attendant constitutional dangers.
The U.S. still reserves the right to hold suspected terrorists indefinitely without charge, try them via military tribunal, keep them imprisoned even if they are acquitted, and kill them in foreign countries with which America is not formally at war (including Yemen, Somalia, and Pakistan). When the president closed the secret CIA prisons known as "black sites," he specifically allowed for temporary detention facilities where a suspect could be taken before being sent to a foreign or domestic prison, a practice known as "rendition." And even where the Obama White House has made a show of how it has broken with the Bush administration, such as outlawing enhanced interrogation techniques, it has done so through executive order, which can be reversed at any time by the sitting president.
The font of this extraordinary authority is a congressional resolution passed just three days after the 9/11 attacks. It says, "The president is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, or harbored such organizations or persons, in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or persons."
As long as this authorization of force remains the law of the land, any change in the legal conduct of our open-ended, undeclared war will be, at most, cosmetic. Although it's true that President Obama appears more reluctant to use these extraordinary powers than his predecessor, he is nonetheless asserting, enthusiastically at times, that he has such powers. And because so much of the American war on terror is conducted in secret, it is difficult to know what Obama is and is not doing to wage it.
The Mirage of Accountability
Unlike other wars in American history, a global war on a terrorist network has no geographic boundaries and no clear end point. FDR interned Japanese Americans until the end of World War II, an extraordinary assault on civil liberties. But at least there was no doubt what the end of that conflict would look like.
"The danger of a war that takes place everywhere and lasts forever is that it gives the president almost limitless authority to detain or even kill U.S. citizens and civilians anywhere in the world," says Ben Wizner, an attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union. On February 3, Dennis Blair, director of national intelligence, confirmed that power in congressional testimony, telling lawmakers that the administration had the right to kill American citizens who joined Al Qaeda without court involvement or consultation with Congress. The only legal authority required, Blair said, was "special permission," which amounts to presidential approval on a case-by-case basis.
This position troubles Philip Alston, the United Nations special rapporteur on extrajudicial executions, whose requests for information on CIA drone strikes has been stonewalled by the Obama administration. "The U.S. under President Obama has apparently maintained the Bush administration's view that, because it is involved in a global armed conflict against Al Qaeda, it is permitted to target and kill relevant individuals anywhere in the world," Alston says.
The White House has repeatedly defended using the same powers that were frequent targets of Democratic criticism when Bush and Cheney were exercising them. In a December speech at West Point announcing a surge of 30,000 troops in Afghanistan, Obama underscored that the action was authorized by the September 14 resolution, which, he noted, passed by a vote of 98 to 0 in the Senate.
In the February 1 issue of The New Republic, Jack Goldsmith, a Justice Department lawyer during the Bush administration, argued that Obama has assumed his predecessor's war powers in part because the early overreach of Bush prompted safeguards that make the executive branch more accountable. Goldsmith, who had been a sharp critic of Dick Cheney's views on executive power, pointed to "armies of lawyers" in the current administration whose sole job is to make sure highly classified programs adhere to congressional restrictions. "The enhanced powers of the presidency after September 11 have become part of the national fabric, in short, because they have received the consent of our national institutions, and thus of the people themselves," he concluded.
It's true that elements of Bush policy have been reined in by other branches of government. The Supreme Court rejected the military commissions that were first developed for detainees sent to Guantanamo. Obama has remade the commissions, with help from Republicans in Congress, to comply with the high court's ruling. Congress, which the Bush administration largely ignored when it developed its post-9/11 National Security Agency (NSA) surveillance program, has now reauthorized the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to allow for much of what was decried as warrantless surveillance of Americans' phone calls and email. And Congress has asserted at least limited oversight of the war: The top Republican and Democratic leaders of Congress, along with the chairmen and vice chairmen of the intelligence committees—the so-called Gang of Eight—are consulted on major intelligence programs and counterterrorism operations, as they were prior to 9/11.
But this kind of accountability is fundamentally handicapped by the fact that is has no public component. It is far too easy for the consulted members of Congress to conveniently forget their briefings when shadowy counterterrorism practices are disclosed in the media. Nancy Pelosi famously claimed that she was never told about the CIA's waterboarding and other "enhanced interrogations" after they came to light, even after the CIA produced an official record of a September 2002 briefing on interrogation techniques that said she attended.
These layers of accountability have not prevented abuses in the past. "The creation of the FISA Court in 1978 did not stop the Bush administration from circumventing it in 2001," says Steven Aftergood, the head of the project on government secrecy for the Federation of American Scientists. "And neither Congress nor the courts have found a way to provide a remedy to people like Maher Arar, who was 'rendered' to Syria for abusive interrogation by the U.S. government though he was innocent of any role in terrorism. And the government has now normalized torture by redefining it in a convenient if unpersuasive way. The armies of lawyers that Goldsmith sees working on accountability are not going to hold anyone accountable for any of these developments. Nor will they compensate the victims."
On the vital question of the public's right to know what its government is doing, the Obama administration has a mixed record at best. The Justice Department has disclosed the legal memos drafted in Bush's second term that reined in some of the president's extraordinary powers. Over objections from the CIA, the White House ordered the release of a Justice Department inspector general's report on the enhanced interrogation program.
Yet although the Obama White House has not said so explicitly, its policy to date has been to protect any secret that could theoretically implicate allied intelligence services, thereby keeping dark one of the murkiest corners of counterterrorism. The Justice Department, for example, has urged the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit to throw out a civil suit brought on behalf of Binyam Mohamed, an Ethiopian national. Mohamed was first arrested in Pakistan, and likely tortured there, then sent to Morocco, Afghanistan, and finally the prison at Guantanamo Bay. Last February, he was released from Guantanamo with no charges filed against him. To keep details of the case from coming out, the Obama administration went so far as to threaten the British Foreign Office, saying the U.S. might withhold future intelligence cooperation if a British court released to the public a U.S. document confirming some of Mohamed's poor treatment. In February the court ignored the pleadings of both Washington and London, releasing the seven-paragraph summary at the center of the controversy.
When it comes to overseeing the intelligence community's surveillance of Americans, the Obama administration has failed to appoint members to the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, a panel formed in 2004 and modified in 2007 to prevent the government from spying on U.S. citizens. As former New Jersey Gov. Thomas H. Kean, co-chairman of the 9/11 Commission, said in January, "We have now a massive capacity in this country to develop data on individuals, and the board should be the champion of seeing that collection capabilities do not intrude into privacy and civil liberties."
The Forever War
In an April 2009 speech at the National Archives announcing his policy on detainees and transparency, the president talked about the open-ended ambiguities of the current national security conflict. "Unlike the Civil War or World War II, we cannot count on a surrender ceremony to bring this journey to an end," he said. "Right now, in distant training camps and in crowded cities, there are people plotting to take American lives. That will be the case a year from now, five years from now, and—in all probability—10 years from now."
The man who wrote most of that speech, Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes, says Obama has deliberately narrowed the focus of the war on terror to Al Qaeda. He adds that the president is trying to leave a more sustainable legal framework for the war to his successor, pointing to the administration's bipartisan work to make military commissions comply with the Supreme Court's 2006 ruling rejecting Bush's approach.
"We would never claim we are doing everything different," Rhodes says. "There were good steps taken in the previous administration that we are building upon, but there are also other areas [where] we are providing a different focus." He also says, however, that there are no current plans for revising or supplementing the open-ended September 14 authorization of force.
Changing terminology and acknowledging the problems with open-ended powers are not the same as resolving the ambiguities and hard questions inherent in fighting against disparate groups intent on waging asymmetric warfare against civilians all over the globe. Doug Feith, undersecretary of defense for policy in the first Bush term, argues that both the "war" and "law enforcement" approaches to fighting terrorist organizations were imperfect concepts. Law enforcement is inadequate, he says, because it focuses on building evidence to try people for crimes that have already been committed, as opposed to preventing a deadly attack in the first place. But the war concept is problematic too.
"The nature of the enemy is that it is spread out all over the world," Feith says. "It is an ideological movement rooted in religion, and it is a network and decentralized. For all of those reasons the construct or concept of war did not fit perfectly either. The principle strategic challenge in this war is how do you fight an enemy located in numerous countries with whom you are not at war."
It would be easy to embrace the idea that all of Obama's and Bush's extraordinary powers are premised on a wildly exaggerated threat. Many more Americans died on our highways in 2001 than from terrorism, but the threat of driving has not mobilized the federal government to create a massive secret bureaucracy to protect us from car accidents.
But small networks of nonuniformed n'er-do-wells are indeed actively plotting to inflict maximum civilian deaths in the U.S. and elsewhere, with weapons as potent as they can get their hands on. Only a day before reasserting the president's power to kill American citizens, Dennis Blair had told the Senate Intelligence Committee he was certain Al Qaeda would attempt an attack on the continental United States by July. After Christmas bomber Abdulmutallab began cooperating with the FBI at the end of January, he told the bureau there were other English-speaking terrorists being trained at camps he had visited in Yemen. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee released a report in January detailing how American ex-felons who converted to Islam in prison had traveled to Yemen for possible terrorist training.
Even if there were no jihadist threat, the march of technology has reached a point where small networks of individuals can launch the same kind of mass-casualty attacks that a generation ago were the province only of nation-states. If one of those terrorists blows up a plane or poisons a reservoir, even if the operation isn't as deadly as 9/11, there will almost certainly be a public demand for more draconian measures to keep us safe.
Before that happens, we should demand, first, that the extraordinary powers granted on September 14, 2001, be made temporary. The resolution should be sunsetted at regular intervals. At the very least this would make sure that a long war does not become a permanent one. As Yale law professor Bruce Ackerman has pointed out, there is an important distinction between war powers, which he says are inappropriate in the context of counterterrorism, and a state of emergency, which implies limited abridgements of civil liberties aimed at assuring the public that the government can protect them and deal with an immediate threat.
Second, the administration must strengthen the oversight of the intelligence community by appointing the Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, an idea that has been recommended by both chairmen of the bipartisan 9/11 commission. Such independent watchdogs are an important part of curbing abuses, and they provide a place besides Congress where whistleblowers can register concerns.
Finally, Congress must demand more public accountability. News stories about the NSA surveillance program, extraordinary rendition, and secret prisons have produced a fair amount of congressional outrage. But Congress has not demanded a regular public accounting from the intelligence community. Indeed, the budget for all current intelligence operations remains a state secret, the details of which only a handful of congressional committees are permitted to know. There are some cases in which secrecy is necessary for successful statecraft, but Congress can enforce a strict sunset on these secrets as well. If the details of U.S.-Pakistan cooperation must be kept in the dark for now, they should not remain that way for a generation.
Above all, we must be honest with ourselves. Obama, like Bush, is committed to a long war against an amorphous network of terrorists. In at least the constitutional sense, he is no harder or softer than his predecessor. And like his predecessor, he has not come up with a plan for relinquishing these extraordinary powers once the long war ends, if it ever does. If change is going to come to U.S. policy on terrorism, it will have to come from a bipartisan recognition that Americans cannot trust their government to tell them when they are safe again.
Eli Lake (elilake@gmail.com) is a national security reporter for the Washington Times.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
If you sucker punch me, nobody will give me a hard time for beating the living crap out of you. If, 10 years later, I am still beating the crap out of people who look like you, that would be a problem.
but chimpy mcbushitler was the worst president ever, how can The Lightworker agree with and use procedures the tyrannical rethuglicans put into place?
Come on, you expect us to believe the preisdent is using super secret war time powers to further his evil agenda? I suppose it is only the illuminati controlled press conviently perpetuates the idea that Obama is much better than Bush?
I guess we can expect to find the Bilderberg group to be benefitting from the supposed "war powers"?
I take it by Hope and Change?, what they meant was "Hope things would change."
Looks like those guys have a wee bit too much spare time on their hands.
Lou
http://www.anon-posting.tk
Thanks, Eli, for the Joe Haldeman ref. Turned your already-depressing article into a Balko-grade gutpunch.
Oh yeah, covert military activity is completely out of the realm of possibility.... and Unit 731 was just a daycare where the kid's played the popular hands-on game, "operation", and somehow the world just got confused.
That's why when libertarians suggest reducing the military budget strictly to national defense, a lot of mouths close and eyebrows go up.
My biggest problem with war is that it fucks up the stock exchanges and hinders business relations, not to mention costs taxpayers a lot of money. This is why most of our imports are coming from Canada now.
I'll side with the hippies and say STOP THE WARS! totally agree... but we all should be trading, buying and selling.
Obama wants to starve the Iranians now. Thankfully, China and Russia told him to shove it up his ass.
Eli first off, you're obese. Secondly, you're disgusting to look at. You bring out the fascist in me. You have more chins than a chinese phonebook and I could go on. I didn't even bother reading your article because I fear I'll become type 2 diabetic. That would totally suck, much as your small dick. Instead of blogging so much, go and work on that physique.
Ohh Sarcasm! Take your intelligent satire somewhere else Cosmo.
You know what needs to happen? Punk rock needs to be more libertarian. What's with all the punk rockers that wear Obama pins? When I was a punk (chaos punk), I hated all the fuckers... and politics for that matter. Cheese steaks, pussy, and beer was all I wanted. If you're going to be a political punk, go libertarian.
The long Terror War is necessary. There isn't much that we can do about it. Islam's truest believers will be fighting us with whatever technology is available for centuries to come. The ability of the Executive to do surveilance and kill enemy groups anywhere in the world is necessary, and cannot be avoided. This closest historical analogy for this war is the Indian Wars, which in which the colonies and later the US fought a native insurgency for 250 years. The biggest difference is that the Indians didn't have foreign state supporters, and weapons technology was much less destructive back then. The most important thing for preventing abuse of those war powers is to stop passing new laws that can easily be domestically abused by the government. There are proposals in Congress to administratively revoke citizenship from terror suspects, ban gun ownership by anyone put on a no fly list for any reason, to prohibit civillian trials of US citizens caught in the US, etc... Such proposals are made by grandstanding Congressional weasels, and need to be soundly defeated.
Supra sneakers
Mens Supra shoes
There are some classic Supra sneakers, and I am sure that everyone knows, the unstoppable Supra Skytop. This is easily the most popular Supra footwear per minute, simply go to the MTV and shows the cult by wearing them. Supra Thunder shoes becomes the most popular style of the Mens Supra shoeson 2010. You should know that Supra Suprano shoes are loving by the most young people who also like the skateboarding. In particular, Supra Indy should continue with the Skate scene in recent years their cause. Supra Strapped NSabove was recently that II of the above are the same love, said above Supra Skytop NS world tour. It is the prefect design that wearing the Supra Society shoes while you are playing the skateboarding. Supra Cruizer on the hot sale for you.
Cheap Chanel Watch
Chanel J12 Wathces
Cheap Chanel Watch would be the good choice on 2010. A Chanel bestseller since its launch in 2000,Characterized by Chanel J12 Wathces - the brands first sports watch - Chanel Ceramic Chronograph Watches, now has a mirror image - Chanel J12 White Watches Series. The Chanel Ladies Watches undergoes a metamorphosis to opalescent white with amazing effect. Chanel Mens Watches are well-known in the world. Chanel Unisex Watches must be the good choice. Chanel Pursesare cool and fashionable, bring you a fresh and brandnew feeling. Chanel Handbags also is the hot item in the summer.
Cheap Chanel Watch
Chanel J12 Wathces
Cheap Chanel Watch would be the good choice on 2010. A Chanel bestseller since its launch in 2000,Characterized by Chanel J12 Wathces - the brands first sports watch - Chanel Ceramic Chronograph Watches, now has a mirror image - Chanel J12 White Watches Series. The Chanel Ladies Watches undergoes a metamorphosis to opalescent white with amazing effect. Chanel Mens Watches are well-known in the world. Chanel Unisex Watches must be the good choice. Chanel Pursesare cool and fashionable, bring you a fresh and brandnew feeling. Chanel Handbags also is the hot item in the summer.
I thought this was an excellent article. Much as I admired Obama I was doubtful that he could make significant change to American security or foreign policy any time soon. I think it has a life of its own and a President can only have significant impact in a national emergency, as Bush did after 9/11.
One thing that prevents looking realistically at how much human rights abuse is acceptable in the cause of security is the notion that foreigners are somehow less entitled to basic human rights in the criminal justice system than Americans.
As far as I know the US is the only democratic country that considers it acceptable to have a separate system of justice (the military commission system) reserved for foreign nationals only which provides less rights to the accused and makes convictions easier. Americans apparently have far less problem with torturing and denying basic human rights to nationals of other countries, even nationals of allies, than their own. The British government tried to set up something like that but it was very controversial and the Law Lords (their equivalent of the Supreme Court) shot it down as contrary to international and EU human rights laws.
But occasionally Americans become uncomfortable because abusing human rights may start with foreigners but it soon becomes a habit that starts affecting some American citizens. That may be the only real hope for a more balanced policy.
The only reason Maher Arar is denied any recourse for having been sent off to Syria for torture is surely because he's a Canadian and not an American. How crazy is that? Would it be ok for Canada to send Americans to some other country to be tortured? I doubt it.
Christian Louboutin Macarena 120 Wedges
christian louboutin gold glitter pumps
Christian Louboutin Macarena 120 Wedges
christian louboutin gold glitter pumps
I doubt it.
the best of nike
the best of watches
which limited the actions of Congress and by extension had to be incorporated, the Second Amendment stated that RKBA was not to be infringed, and lacked detail as to by whom, and therefore applied to all government. By its very language it was already applicable to the states!
Looking for great Wholesale Disney Toys Products for your business and want them at discounted wholesale prices? Look no further! Take a moment to browse Rhinomart's vast selection of Wholesale RC Toys
kfyj
In the block, people always set on the factors to bottle your feet warm. again that it should really actually quite empirical access Sheepskin Boots Sale boots. It is the ambition and all different girls anniversary to talk of his favorite Cheap women Uggs less
In the block, people always set on the factors to bottle your feet warm. again that it should really actually quite empirical access Sheepskin Boots Sale boots. It is the ambition and all different girls anniversary to talk of his favorite Cheap women Uggs less
apery my year aft small baby. Unfortunately, the Uggs Australia Outletboots of power has enabled several months alone. I'm offended by it. I know I can access the transaction Maken counterfeit. So to access the 18-carat admiration Ugg Boots On Sale used to my
Access we have to admire you. There are plenty of bargaining central Sheepskin Ugg Boots our web store said. All of them are able to style real and alarming. achieved agreement on Ugg Boots Online Store to feel the richness and warm. You surely do not condition of
The only reason Maher Arar is denied any recourse for having been sent off to Syria for torture is surely because he's a Canadian and not an American.
The only reason Maher Arar is denied any recourse for having been sent off to Syria for torture is surely because he's a Canadian and not an American. | RAN ran ran ??? ??? ??? |
Nothing is impossible for a willing heart.
thank you so much
Years may wrinkle the skin,but to give up enthusiasm wrinkles the soul. Worry, fear, self-distrust bows the heart and turns the spirit back to dust.
The only reason Maher Arar is denied any recourse for having been sent off to Syria for torture is surely because he's a Canadian and not an American.
Sweet blog! I found it while surfing around on Yahoo News. Do you have any tips on how to get listed in Yahoo News? I've been trying for a while but I never seem to get there! Thanks
Your article is very useful to us?Thanks for your sharing?I like the side of the article, and very like your blog, to write well and hope to continue your efforts, we can see more of your articles. dc shoes hats Recommend you to take a look at it, is now being discounted, Monster Energy Hats Collection in hot! Fashionable dc shoes hats Keeps with you at any time.
I like the side of the article, and very like your blog, to write well and hope to continue your efforts, we can see more of your articles.
is good
You comment?
I know the US is the only democratic country that considers it acceptable to have a separate system of justice. good work !!!
under fire for reading Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the Nigerian national who nearly blew u
speeches and some of his policy rollouts have emphasized a break from the Bush era. In the Quadrennial Defense
thanks for this article
http://emc-mee.com/transfer-fu.....awara.html
I stand alone in the darkness . The winter of my life came so fast . Memories go back to my childhood . To days I still recall Oh how happy I was then
dumb ways to die
fireboy and watergirl 4