BY GLENN GREENWALD
In one of the least surprising developments
imaginable, President Obama – after spending months threatening to veto the
Levin/McCain detention bill – yesterday announced that he would instead
sign it into law (this is the
same individual, of course, who unequivocally
vowed when seeking the
Democratic nomination to support a filibuster of “any bill that includes
retroactive immunity for telecom[s],” only to turn around – once he had the nomination secure — and not
only vote against such a filibuster, but to vote in favor of the underlying
bill itself, so this is perfectly consistent with his past conduct). As a
result, the final
version of the
Levin/McCain bill will be enshrined as law this week as part of the the
2012 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA). I wrote about the primary provisions and implications of this
bill last week, and won’t repeat those points here.
The ACLU said
last night that the
bill contains “harmful provisions that some legislators have said could authorize the U.S. military to pick up and imprison without charge
or trial civilians, including American citizens, anywhere in the world” and
added: “if President Obama signs this bill, it will damage his legacy.” Human
Rights Watch said that Obama’s decision “does enormous damage to
the rule of law both in the US and abroad” and that “President
Obama will go down in history as the president who enshrined indefinite
detention without trial in US law.”
Both groups pointed out that this is the first time
indefinite detention has been enshrined in law since the McCarthy era of the
1950s, when — as the ACLU put it — “President Truman had the courage to veto”
the Internal
Security Act of 1950 on the
ground that it “would make a mockery of our Bill of Rights” and then
watched Congress override the veto. That Act authorized the imprisonment of
Communists and other “subversives” without the necessity of full trials or due
process (many of the most egregious provisions of that bill were repealed by
the 1971 Non-Detention Act, and are now being rejuvenated by these War on Terror
policies of indefinite detention). President Obama, needless to say, is not
Harry Truman. He’s not even the Candidate Obama of 2008 who repeatedly insisted
that due process and security were not mutually exclusive and who condemned indefinite detention as “black hole” injustice.
There have been several persistent myths circulating
about this bill and President Obama’s position on it that need to be clarified
once and for all:
First, while the powers
this bill enshrines are indeed radical and dangerous, most of them already
exist. That’s because first the Bush administration and now the Obama
administration have
aggressively argued that the original 2001 AUMF already empowers them to imprison people without charges, use force against even U.S. citizens without due process (Anwar Awlaki), and target not only members of Al Qaeda and the Taliban (as the law states) but also anyone who “substantially supports” those groups and/or “associated forces” (whatever those terms mean). That’s why this bill states that it does not intend to change the 2001 AUMF (even as it codifies far broader language defining the scope of the war) or the detention powers of the President, and it’s why they purposely made the bill vague on whether it expressly authorizes military detention of U.S. citizens on U.S. soil: it’s because the bill’s proponents and the White House both believe that the President already possesses these broadened powers with or without this bill. With a couple of exceptions, this bill just “clarifies” — and codifies — the powers President Obama has already claimed, seized and exercised.
aggressively argued that the original 2001 AUMF already empowers them to imprison people without charges, use force against even U.S. citizens without due process (Anwar Awlaki), and target not only members of Al Qaeda and the Taliban (as the law states) but also anyone who “substantially supports” those groups and/or “associated forces” (whatever those terms mean). That’s why this bill states that it does not intend to change the 2001 AUMF (even as it codifies far broader language defining the scope of the war) or the detention powers of the President, and it’s why they purposely made the bill vague on whether it expressly authorizes military detention of U.S. citizens on U.S. soil: it’s because the bill’s proponents and the White House both believe that the President already possesses these broadened powers with or without this bill. With a couple of exceptions, this bill just “clarifies” — and codifies — the powers President Obama has already claimed, seized and exercised.
I’m embedding the video below of the segment I did
last night on Cenk Uygur’s TV program where I elaborated on this point: this is
not to mitigate how heinous this bill is, as there are real dangers to
codifying these powers in law with bipartisan Congressional support as opposed
to having the President unilaterally seize them and have some lower courts
recognize them. Instead, it’s a reflection of how horrible the civil liberties
status quo has become under the Bush and Obama administrations.This is the reason why civil libertarians have been so harshly
critical of this President. It’s the reason civil liberties groups
have been
saying things like this even when
saying them was so unpopular: it’s because Obama has, for three years
now, been defending and entrenching exactly the detention powers this law
vests, but doing it through radical legal theories, warped
interpretations of the 2001 AUMF, continuities with the Bush/Cheney template, and devotion to Endless War
and the civil liberties assaults it entails. See the newspaper excerpts below
for more proof of this.
Second, as I documented at length last week, Obama’s veto threat was never about substantive objections to the
detention powers vested by this bill; put another way, he was never objecting
to the bill on civil liberties grounds. Obama, as I documented last week and
again below, is not an opponent of indefinite detention;
he’s a vigorous proponent of it, as evidenced by his
continuous, multi-faceted embrace of that policy.
Obama’s objections to this bill had nothing to do with
civil liberties, due process or the Constitution. It had everything to do with Executive power. The White House’s
complaint was that Congress had no business tying the hands of the President
when deciding who should go into military detention, who should be denied a
trial, which agencies should interrogate suspects (the FBI or the CIA). Such
decisions, insisted
the White House, are for the President, not Congress, to make. In
other words, his veto threat was not grounded in the premise that indefinite military detention is wrong; it was grounded
in the premise that it should be the President who
decides who goes into military detention and why, not Congress.
Even the one substantive objection the White House
expressed to the bill — mandatory military detention for accused American
Terrorists captured on U.S. soil — was about Executive power, not due process
or core liberties. The proof of that — the definitive, conclusive proof — is
that Sen. Carl Levin has several times disclosed that it was the White House
which demanded removal of a provision in his
original draft that would have exempted U.S.
citizens from military detention (see the clip of Levin explaining this in the
video below). In other words, this was an example of the White Housedemanding greater detention powers in the bill by
insisting on the removal of one of its few constraints (the
prohibition on military detention for Americans captured on U.S. soil). That’s
because the White House’s North Star on this bill — as they repeatedly
made clear — was Presidential discretion: they were
going to veto the bill if it contained any limits on
the President’s detention powers, regardless of whether those limits forced him
to put people in military prison or barred him from doing so.
Any doubt that this was the White House’s only concern
with the bill is now dispelled by virtue of the President’s willingness to sign
it after certain changes were made in Conference between the House and Senate.
Those changes were almost entirely about removing the parts of the bill that
constrained his power, and had nothing to do with improving the bill from a
civil liberties perspective. Once the sole concern of the White House was
addressed — eliminating limits on the President’s power — they were happy to
sign the bill even though (rather: because) none of the civil liberties
assaults were fixed. As Mother Jones‘ Adam
Serwer explained:
This
morning I wrote that by
making the mandatory military detention provisions mandatory in name only, the
Senate had offered the administration an opportunity to see how seriously it takes its own rhetoric on civil liberties.
The administration had said that the military detention provisions of an
earlier version of the NDAA were “inconsistent with the fundamental American
principle that our military does not patrol our streets.”
The revised NDAA is still inconsistent with that
fundamental American principle. But the administration has decided that fundamental American principles aren’t actually
worth vetoing the bill over.
That’s because, as Serwer explained in a separate
post, Congress — in
response to the veto threat — made changes “addressing the security concerns,
but not the ones related to civil liberties and the rule of law”
(by “security concerns,” the White House means: don’t
restrict what the President can do). That the White House cared
only about the former (presidential discretion), and not at all about the
letter (civil liberties), is proven by its willingness to sign the bill when
only objections to the former have been addressed. For more proof on this point
— and the perfect encapsulation of it — see this comment here.
Third, the most
persistent and propagandistic set of myths about President Obama on detention
issues is that he tried to end indefinite detention by closing Guantanamo, but
was blocked by Congress from doing so. It is true that Congress blocked the
closing of Guantanamo, and again in this bill, Congress is imposing virtually
insurmountable restrictions on the transfer of detainees out of that camp,
including for detainees who have long ago been cleared for release
(restrictions that Obama is now going to sign into law). But — and this is not
a hard point to understand — while Obama intended to close Guantanamo, he always planned — long before
Congress acted — to preserve Guantanamo’s core injustice: indefinite detention.
I need to say that again: long before, and fully independent of, anything Congress did,
President Obama made clear that he was going to preserve the indefinite
detention system at Guantanamo even once he closed the camp. That’s
what makes the apologias over Obama and GITMO
so misleading: the controversy over Guantanamo was not that about its locale —
that it was based in the Caribbean Sea — so that simply closing it and then
re-locating it to a different venue would address the problem. The
controversy over Guantanamo was that it was a prison camp where people were put in cages indefinitely, for decades or life, without being
charged with any crime. And that policy is one that President Obama
whole-heartedly embraced from the start.
Totally prior to and independent of anything Congress
did, President Obama fully embraced indefinite detention as his own policy. He
is a proponent — not an opponent — of indefinite detention. Just review the
facts — the indisputable facts — if you have any doubt about that or if you
know anyone who does:
This is why even
some progressive Senators such as Russ Feingold and Bernie Sanders ultimately
voted to deny funding to the closing of Guantanamo: not because they favored
GITMO, but because they wanted first to see Obama’s plan for what would replace
it, because they did not want to allocate funds to a plan that would simply
re-locate GITMO and its defining injustice — indefinite detention — onto U.S.
soil.
Can any rational person review these events and try to
claim that Obama is some sort of opponent of indefinite detention? He is one of
American history’s most aggressive defenders of that power. As Human Rights
Watch put it: “President Obama will go down in history as the
president who enshrined indefinite detention without trial in US law.”
There is no partisan loyalty or leader-reverent propaganda strong enough to
obscure that fact.
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