Posted on 02/16/2006 5:14:57 PM PST by neverdem
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February 16, 2006, 3:44 p.m. Checked and Unbalanced George Will’s diatribe against the NSA program is meritless.
As a reverent admirer of George Will, it pains me to say that his diatribe today against the National Security Agency's terrorist-surveillance program is an embarrassing magpie of hyperbole and error.
Will's premise is that the administration, in authorizing the program, has promulgated the "monarchical doctrine" that "whenever the nation is at war, the other two branches of government have a radically diminished pertinence to governance, and the president determines what that pertinence shall be." This is so outlandish as to defy measure. Neither the administration's position nor the NSA program have much of anything to do with governance in the domestic sphere which, it should be observed, is the only sphere in which one of the branches Will refers to, the judiciary, ever has a role in governance.
A Foreign AffairWill can suggest otherwise only by misrepresenting the program as "warrantless surveillance...targeting American citizens on American soil." In fact, the program targets al Qaeda, a foreign terrorist organization with which we are at war, and which is energetically working (it tells us unabashedly) toward a strike against our homeland which would dwarf the carnage of 9/11. The program targets, moreover, only international communications by this foreign enemy, some of which cross U.S. borders. Of course, it is settled law that warrantless searches at the border are an entirely legitimate exercise of executive power, even in peacetime. Anomalously, Will finds warrantless searches in wartime of possible enemy commands to launch a strike that could kill countless thousands of Americans to be an exercise in despotism. |
The administration's position, and the program, is pertinent to governance in the field of foreign relations. In that field, whether Will likes it or not, the president has primacy primacy of the same sort the Supreme Court enjoys in interpreting the Constitution and Congress in funding governmental operations. The president does not enjoy such primacy because of some Bush administration ipse dixit. It has been the law ever since we began living under the Constitution.
Will is offended by what he calls "the administration's argument that because the president is commander in chief, he is the 'sole organ for the nation in foreign affairs[,]'" a contention Will preposterously calls a "non sequitur [that] is refuted by the Constitution's plain language." Perhaps Will who evidently has no problem relying on Supreme Court precedent when he thinks it advances his position should take a look at what that tribunal has said in this regard.
The Court has not rested this view solely on the president's status as commander-in-chief but on all the powers vested in him under Article II. This includes all of the executive power itself which, as the Framers well understood, needed a far wider berth in the international arena if the Nation was to be secure. Will, however, curiously contends that this concept cannot be squared with the Constitution the framers bequeathed us which, according to Will, "empowers Congress to ratify treaties, declare war, fund and regulate military forces, and make laws 'necessary and proper' for the execution of all presidential powers." (Emphasis in original.)
Furthermore, the "necessary and proper" clause sheds exactly no light on the current controversy. It is freely conceded that Congress has the authority to make laws necessary and proper to vindicate the powers enumerated in the Constitution. That hardly means, however, that the president is impotent to take measures consistent with his own inherent authority under Article II and the president, it bears noting, is the only governmental officer bound by our fundamental law "to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States" (Article II, Section 1). Nor does it mean the president is bound to honor congressional enactments (such as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA)) to the extent their operation would constrain his inherent authority a position supported historically by administrations of both parties because of the elementary proposition that a statute cannot trump the Constitution.
It is simply a fact that there is a chasm between presidential authority in the domestic and foreign realms. In domestic affairs, we live in a single political community, the government has a monopoly on the use of force, and courts are imposed as a bulwark to protect Americans from executive and legislative overreaching. There, Congress has broad powers to regulate executive action. Not so in the international arena. There, we confront unpredictable contingencies including enemies claiming the power to use massive lethal force. The circumstances are not hospitable to the same kind of antecedent law-making that is practical in domestic affairs. That is why the framers provided for an energetic executive, not national security by committee.
It is also, no doubt, why, in United States v. Brown (1973), the Fifth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, in upholding the president's inherent Article II authority to conduct warrantless wiretaps for foreign intelligence gathering, asserted that "[r]estrictions upon the President's power which are appropriate in cases of domestic security become artificial in the context of the international sphere." It is why, when FISA became law in 1978, President Carter's attorney general, Griffin Bell, stressed that FISA did not (and, indeed, could not) vitiate the president's inherent authority under Article II. It is why, in 1994, President Clinton's deputy attorney general, Jamie Gorelick, testified that the president maintained his inherent Article II authority to order warrantless searches even when FISA was expanded to regulate such searches. And it is why, even after a quarter-century of FISA, the highest and most specialized court ever to review that statute, the Foreign Intelligence Court of Review, observed in 2002: "[A]ll the other courts to have decided the issue [have] held that the President did have inherent authority to conduct warrantless searches to obtain foreign intelligence information... We take for granted that the President does have that authority." (Emphasis added.)
The steel seizure case, though it occurred against the backdrop of the Korean War, involved presidential interference in a domestic collective bargaining dispute. To the contrary, the NSA program involves foreign intelligence collection, a matter as to which we needn't speculate the extent of presidential authority as we have seen, that authority is plenary. Little wonder then, as pointed out in a recent letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee by attorney Bryan Cunningham (a former official in the Clinton and Bush administrations), that it was the very same Justice Jackson who wrote for the Court only two years earlier, in Johnson v. Eisentrager (1950), that the president was "exclusively responsible" for the "conduct of diplomatic and foreign affairs."
The administration is not, as Will avers, "incoherently" claiming that it thinks Congress tacitly blessed warrantless monitoring even though it really believes Congress would have declined such authority if asked specifically. As Attorney General Alberto Gonzales explained in answers to questions posed by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter, the administration believed it could not get FISA amended to approve the NSA program without compromising operational details of the program, which would inexorably have alerted the enemy to our capabilities. Thus it went ahead, not because it thought Congress unreceptive but because it believed quite plausibly that it already had valid legal grounds and pursuing additional, more specific authority would have undermined wartime effectiveness.
Will then grouses: "the argument that the AUMF contained a completely unexpressed congressional intent to empower the president to disregard the FISA regime is risible coming from this administration. It famously opposes those who discover unstated meanings in the Constitution's text and do not strictly construe the language of statutes." But it is Will's contention that is risible. Let's leave aside that the president's authority over foreign intelligence collection is so firmly entrenched as to require little discussion. In point of fact, what this administration "famously" did only two years ago is argue to the Supreme Court that the AUMF tacitly authorized the detention without trial of American-citizen enemy combatants. The Supreme Court accepted that argument in Hamdi v. Rumsfeld (2004), another case Will neglects to mention. The Court accepted the argument, it bears underscoring, based on the very rationale that applies perfectly here: the AUMF provides authority for all the fundamental aspects of war-waging. Those include the detention of enemy combatants, and they include just as basically the penetration of enemy communications.
Finally, as George Will knows as well as anyone, the president is no monarch. While his polemic is counterfactually entitled "No Checks, Many Imbalances," the Congress has the ultimate and complete check here. It can, right this minute, vote to cut off appropriations for the program. Naturally, it won't do that because it recognizes that the program is necessary and that the American people are not offended by the manner in which it has been implemented.
And for all Will's bombast about the Constitution's plain language and structure, it is difficult to imagine anything that would have been more startling to those who crafted our fundamental law than the suggestion that the president of the United States needs a federal judge's permission to intercept the international communications of a wartime enemy that seeks, above all else, to mount a massive attack against the homeland.
Andrew C. McCarthy, a former federal prosecutor, is a senior fellow at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.
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http://www.nationalreview.com/mccarthy/mccarthy200602161544.asp
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Undertaxed? What the hell?
George Will is completely irrelevent. His heyday was when the libs controlled the entire media, he was their token RINO.
Some good points here, and some bad points. I'll just add that the framers considered the President as commander-in-chief to possess inferor powers of state governors during peace.
Regarding the Executive Branch, the Constitution says "He shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two thirds of the Senators present concur"
FYI, the Senate is part of our Congress.
Will's article is the work of a legal illiterate. It is a card-castle of factual and legal misrepresentations. It is Will's argument that we can kill al Qaeda, we just can't listen to their phone calls, because that would be monarchical and dictatorial, and be a constitutional crisis, yada, yada.
Well, we got a two-fer with that guy we smoked in Yemen with the Predator. We were listening to his phone call when we sent a Hellfire up his butt. Which was worse, George?
I think that George Will, Peggy Noonan and Dick Morris all make the same mistake. The pressure seems to be on for them to register an opinion, but rather than immediately turning off the TV and hitting the reference books- they appear to listen instead to which way the wind seems to be blowing, ((or at least the howling would indicate), and then stake out a "me-too".
It is disappointing to witness, given that they are presented as our spokespersons.
What say some of those hellfires cut loose in Newark, Lackawana and Hamtramack? "It's war" donchaknow, and therefore within executive prerogative.
Agreed though, that Will is a legal illiterate.
I don't understand why anyone would think they have a absolute right to privacy on an international phone call. Particularly to a known terrorist country.
Good morning, counselor.
The guy we smoked in Yemen was a member of the Lackawana gang. He had previously been in the US.
I don't know enough about the law governing the use of the military against a foreign invader in the domestic context to really respond to that hypothetical. The argument can certainly be made that we can kill al Qaeda where ever we find them. Nevertheless, I think for prudential and political reasons the government would try to make an arrest if circumstances permitted.
Thanks for posting.
Interesting, informative, educational. Great article.
Another great Andy Mc Carthy piece
Merryman and Quirin cases shed a bit of light, not on surveillance, but on habeas. There are a few others I think.
The argument can certainly be made that we can kill al Qaeda where ever we find them. Nevertheless, I think for prudential and political reasons the government would try to make an arrest if circumstances permitted.
That urge to arrest is what creates entry into the court system and all the supervision and second guessing that entails. Again, in the area of detention, we have a few cases working their way. Padilla comes right to mind.
It's really fascinating to see the friction and maneuvering between the foreign intelligence and criminal sides of our battle against those who would harm our citizens and subvert our form of government. I don't pretend to have any quick solutions either, particularly not since this whole area of academic investigation is very new to me, and I only do it as a hobby.
Thanks for the dialog - it's the first time I've interacted with a celebrity. ;-)
That line about the ratification jumped out at me too. The Congress has no role in negotiating treaties, but as representatives of the States, the Senate must approve the result...or not.
Part of the problem is that very few people have experience with this type of thing. Few lawyers study Constitutional law to begin with, and fewer still the Constitution itself. And even fewer have studied either the specific interfaces between the military and the civil authorities, and non-Congressional warmaking powers. To that extent, people often have difficulty understanding that POWs are not held for punishment sake, but to detain them from pursuing war - and thus are both not tried, and not prosecuted for being a foreign soldier. Further, is the general misunderstanding of the Geneva Conventions, and that the privileges enumerated are applied only to those who abide by its rules.
It is an entirely different vantagepoint from what is presented in government classes and in law school.
The last time this wasn't esoteric minutiae was WWII, and those who would remember it directly would be in their 80s.
Receieved this via e-mail this morning:
According to reports in todays Washington Post, Congress appears ready to abandon its oversight responsibility with regard to the Executive Branchs NSA spying program. Dont let them fold! We wrote you yesterday about our four-point plan to secure our nations checks and balances, and one pillar of that plan is oversight. While a special prosecutor (demanded by the petition we launched yesterday) would support two other pillars transparency and accountability oversight from Congress is an absolutely essential check on presidential power. We are asking you to call some unusual targets: Republican Leadership and Committee Chairs. The bottom line is that these men, listed below, will decide whether or not Congress fulfills its constitutional duties. If they choose to duck their responsibility, they must do so with the full knowledge that they are acting against the wishes of the American people. Thats why you must call. The final pillar of our campaign, after all, is public vigilance. Whether you call members of Congress regularly or even if youve never called a member of Congress before, pick up the phone and dial through this short list of four members tell them you expect the United States Congress to live up to its oversight responsibilities and conduct a thorough investigation, including in-depth hearings, about the possible illegal activity taking place in the Executive Branch. If you want other talking points, visit http://www.pfaw.org/go/NSATalkingPoints. Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Pat Roberts: 202-224-4774 House Intelligence Committee Chair Peter Hoekstra: 202-225-4401 Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist: 202-224-3344 Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert: 202-225-2976 Please tell us how your calls went by visiting http://pfaw.kintera.org/CallReport; we are curious to hear what these offices are telling the calling public. -- Your Allies at People For the American Way
And of course this fool says this right after he accuses Will of engaging in "hyperbole". Will's column never condemned the idea launching warrantless searches. Here's what he actually wrote:
Immediately after Sept. 11, the president rightly did what he thought the emergency required, and rightly thought that the 1978 law was inadequate to new threats posed by a new kind of enemy using new technologies of communication. Arguably he should have begun surveillance of domestic-to-domestic calls -- the kind the Sept. 11 terrorists made.Now either Andrew McCarthy is a liar or he just plain can't read.
The administration's position, and the program, is pertinent to governance in the field of foreign relations. In that field, whether Will likes it or not, the president has primacy primacy of the same sort the Supreme Court enjoys in interpreting the Constitution and Congress in funding governmental operations.
And the obvious implication from that statement is that the President gets to decide just how far the field of "foreign policy" extends. That of course was Will's central point, and predictably enough, McCarthy completely neglected to address it.
The only reason any of us ever gave Will any notice at all is because on these liberal-laced talking heads show he often seemed somewhat more coherent and reasonable than Cokie and the other liberal bozo's. I never considered Will much of a conservative.
Read Alan Nathan's piece in The Examiner, "No branch may usurp another's power." He's a centrist but hits this one home better than any of them. It should be compulsory reading for Mr. Will.
http://www.dcexaminer.com/articles/2006/02/17/opinion/op-ed/19oped15nathan.txt
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