OP-ED | Some In CT Delegation Made Wrong Choice On Defense Bill
by Sarah Darer Littman | Dec 16, 2011 12:29pm
(8) Comments | Commenting has expired
Posted to: Opinion
This week, Congress passed a defense-spending bill that illustrates the case I’ve been making since 2003 when I first became a regular columnist and learned to deal with hate mail for expressing it: that if we give up our core American principles in order to ‘win’ what the Bush Administration christened “The War on Terror” then we’ve already lost it. Osama bin Laden might be dead, but wherever he is – hopefully hell – I bet he’s smiling, because the insidious way Al-Qaeda managed to damage our psyches and corrupt our national values extends far beyond that tragic day a decade ago when hijacked planes struck the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
By voting for a National Defense Authorization Act with the controversial provisions for indefinite detention of any suspected terrorist including US Citizens ( at the complete discretion of the Executive Branch) without due process and extending the battleground within the United States Congress has now enshrined into law the despicable power grab of the last two Presidents.
Out of our entire CT Congressional delegation, only two and a half members had the courage to vote against the bill, namely Rep. Rosa DeLauro and Rep Chris Murphy. The half refers to Senator Blumenthal, who voted for the Udall/Webb amendment, which would have stripped the controversial provisions out of the Senate version of the bill, but when that failed to pass, voted for the final bill.
Rep. Joe Courtney, justified his vote on the basis that the requirement for military detention only pertains to non-citizens: “allowing for the option of addressing these individuals through civilian law enforcement agencies and courts.” The key word there is “option.” That option is at the discretion of the President. Doesn’t that make you feel sooooo much better?
Courtney goes on:
“To be clear, I did not seek inclusion of these provisions in the defense bill, nor would I have written these sections in this way had I been given the chance to. Ultimately, however, in being asked to evaluate these provisions and cast my vote, I found that the bill does not circumvent the rights of US Citizens, as claimed by some, and does little to change the current state of detention authorities claimed by two presidents and backed by the nation’s highest court. In fact, in dropping its veto threat on the final conference report on the bill, the White House stated that “the changes ensure that we are merely restating our existing legal authorities.”
What he neglects to point out is how the Government has dropped cases rather than fight them, in order to avoid testing their legitimacy in the court. Take the case of Doe vs. Gonzalez, where the government dropped the appeal after they’d successful muted the debate during the 2006 renewal of the Patriot And then read about how the Patriot Act gag order provision is being used in the case of a 16 year old American teenager and see if you feel quite as sanguine about all this as Rep. Courtney. I, personally, do not.
From the moment Congress passed the Patriot Act a mere forty-five days after September 11th – (the next person who opposes Healthcare Reform because it was “rushed through” but supported the Patriot Act gets a knuckle sandwich) our government began leading us down a dangerous path in the name of pursuing the- cleverly named “War on Terror”. While the terrorist threat we face is real, calling it a “war” deceived many Americans into believing it a finite term, and therefore they were willing to accept some “temporary” curtailments of civil liberties in order to feel safe.
But terrorism, as anyone who has lived abroad for any length of time knows, is like the Hydra of mythology. You cut off one head and another grows. It can only be contained by superior intelligence and constant vigilance. The idea that we were “fighting them over there so we didn’t have to fight them over here” was a $4 trillion myth created by Messrs Bush and Cheney. You know that budget deficit the GOP is so anxious to cut social programs to lower without any tax increases? According to that well-known socialist muckraker, The Wall Street Journal, the Iraq War accounts for 50 percent it.
Back in 2007 candidate Obama accused the Bush Administration of offering a “false choice between the liberties we cherish and the security we provide.” Under an Obama Administration, he promised: “No more ignoring the law when it is inconvenient…That is not who we are, that is not what is necessary to defeat the terrorists. We will again set the example to the world that the law isn’t subject to the whim of stubborn rulers and that justice isn’t arbitrary. This administration acts like the way to ensure our security is to violate civil liberties. It is not. There are no shortcuts to protecting America.”
Yes! Exactly! Can we have that guy back? Now President Obama, after threatening to veto the bill if it required military detention of American citizens, now appears willing to sign an amended bill. Alas, his objection wasn’t based on important Constitutional and legal issues like habeas corpus and posse comitatus. Rather, it was that he wanted to ensure that the power for making decisions about indefinite military detention lay within the Executive Branch, rather than being prescribed by Congress.
What is so disturbing is that with each step we take it towards enshrining and codifying these previously anathema ideas into law, we are changing the very concept of who we are as a nation. Senator Blumenthal promises to “continue to seek modifications to address civil liberties concerns raised by several detainee provisions.” The problem is, as we’ve seen with the Patriot Act, once a draconian act is signed into law it is difficult to remove or even change it. It takes years to test each provision through the courts and in the meantime, we drift further from our American ideals.
In a recent, New York Times op-ed, two retired four-star Marine generals, Charles C. Krulak and Joseph P. Hoar, wrote, “some in Congress are all too willing to undermine our ideals in the name of fighting terrorism. They should remember that American ideals are assets, not liabilities.”
I salute Rosa DeLauro and Chris Murphy for being the only members of the CT delegation to recognize that.
Sarah Darer Littman is a columnist for Hearst Newspapers and an award-winning novelist of books for teens. Long before the financial meltdown, she worked as a securities analyst and earned her MBA in Finance from the Stern School at NYU.
Tags: defense bill, Sarah Darer Littman, Congressional delegation, vote, Iraq War, Obama
(8) Comments
posted by: GoatBoyPHD | December 17, 2011 4:26pm
Are you sure your ideals or principles are national ideals and principles?
I Was chasing my tail on this issue during the 80s when protesting the death penalty when Michael B Ross was the recently convicted killer with weepy family survivors supporting a quick and needed death for Ross. The torture and suspension of rights issue came up in the 1991 Iraq War and before that with the US policy in supporting proxies like the Contras to circumvent International Law.
Nothing’s changed.Let’s Watch “Wag the Dog” and laugh at its all too accurate biting satire.
There are polls out there saying CT Residents support the Death Penalty, extreme Homeland Security Detention options, and War Torture.
Which goes back to my original question. Are you sure those values you support are national values or American values? Or are they yours?
Politicians enlisting so-called American values in a speech to gain sympathy votes is SOP for Politician.
IS Bush worse than Obama because he spoke clearly about the issue of violating Human Rights?
Did the death of SustiNet feel better because it died under a Democrat? Or was it more bitter death?
posted by: NOW What? | December 18, 2011 3:27pm
Oh Sarah, have you truly been receiving genuine “hate” mail? I hope not, for I’ve never seen nor heard anything from you that would justify such a thing. Anyway, to the topic…
It is certainly true that terrorism must “...be contained by superior intelligence and constant vigilance” as you put it. But it can truly be contained - as you clearly imply - by also applying the appropriate rules of relevant domestic and, where applicable, international laws.
As far as I can tell, the problems that we in the U.S. find ourselves currently grappling with stem from the seemingly fact that our federal anti-terrorism laws were written in relative haste and consequently do not adequately distinguish between cross-border non-governmentally sponsored or sanctioned acts of terrorism, cross-border governmentally sponsored or sanctioned acts of war, domestic acts or planned acts of legally-defined treason, and domestic acts of violent or planned violent acts of non-treasonous criminal behavior.
If our government would see fit to make the time and effort to convene military and non-military legal and constitutional scholars and other such experts to help re-write such legislation and propose new relevant legislation, the ethical and moral quagmires that we now find ourselves in would hopefully dissipate if not disappear altogether.
posted by: HartfordPaul | December 19, 2011 9:02am
Not a badly written article except for the obvious political bias and name calling.
I am quite conservative and agree with much of your article as this subject knows no political side outside of the Washington Beltway.
I may have even enjoyed the entire article had you left the name calling out and used proper titles.
Also the reference to Obamacare was completely irrelevent to this topic and also a poor comparison since the Patriot Act was bipartisan and almost unanimous (98-1 Senate, 357-66 House); while Obamacare was purely partisan (220-215 House with 1 Republican vote and 60-39 Senate 0 Republican).
I understand it is an OP-ED but if you just want to spout; then name call away. But if you want to garner support for your point of view.. Why alienate those that would agree with you by printing petty jabs that don’t further your point?
posted by: NOW What? | December 19, 2011 12:52pm
HartfordPaul - I see no “name calling” or “petty jabs,” as you put them, anywhere in this op-ed piece.
posted by: Careful | December 19, 2011 4:38pm
We should change the name of our Department of Defense—to “Department of War.” Defense is used as a cover for our politically-backed, phony “Wartime Prosperity coverup” - which has drained this country to virtual ownership by the Republic of China.”
posted by: saramerica | December 20, 2011 2:17pm
The point, Hartford Paul, is that there was so much rhetoric about how the Healthcare Bill (and speaking of “name calling” I refuse to call it by the pejorative you call it) was “rushed through” when it was debated for almost a year, yet the Patriot Act, which has FAR more serious constitutional consequences was REALLY rushed through in 45 days. Whilst I understand it was done in a state of serious national trauma, none of the subsequent renewals were conducted under those circumstances, and our Congress people have been exceptionally disappointing in terms of their efforts to create more safeguards on the civil liberties front. I view this as a bipartisan issue for anyone who cares about the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and what I consider core American values - such as obeying the Geneva Conventions and International Law, rather than ignoring it when expedient.