Posted on 05/21/2009 2:18:36 PM PDT by STARWISE
President Obama wants you to know that nothing is ever his fault.
He gave a speech on national-security matters Thursday the gist of which was: George W. Bush left me a mess, and Im doing the best I can to clean it up.
A more forthright theme would have been:
Radical Islam has thrust the United States into a defensive war, and its now my duty to protect the nation despite legal complications created by left-wing lawyers, many of whom are now working in my administration.
President Obama described Bushs counterterrorism program as an ad hoc legal approach for fighting terrorism that was neither effective nor sustainable a framework that failed to trust in our institutions, and that failed to use our values as a compass.
But here Obama must contend with himself as much as with Bush:
His own Justice Department has argued, as the Bush Justice Department argued, that the nation is at war, that the laws of war therefore apply, and consequently that enemy combatants may be captured and detained without trial until the conclusion of hostilities.
In point of fact, the Bush administrations counterterrorism campaign was anything but ad hoc.
It was extraordinarily effective, and it is entirely sustainable which President Obama has shown by sustaining its major elements.
Detention of enemy combatants has been a staple of every war the United States has fought, which is why the Supreme Court reaffirmed the practice in the 2004 Hamdi case, even though the combatant at issue was an American citizen.
The practice of trying combatants before military commissions traces back to General Washingtons precedent in the Revolutionary War; and though todays tribunals were originally authorized by the commander-in-chief, as they traditionally have been, their use was reauthorized by Congress in 2006, without material change, in response to a lawless Supreme Court decision that twisted both statutes and the Geneva Conventions beyond recognition.
Bushs counterterrorism work can be regarded as ineffective only from the standpoint of the ACLU, whose metric is the quantum of due process accorded to terrorists who recognize no law or treaty.
From a sensible point of view, the measure of success is the incidence of terrorist attacks and we have not had one in eight years.
By adopting a war-fighting paradigm (the paradigm on which President Obama must rely, lest his assassinations in Pakistan be deemed a violation of international law), President Bush expanded geometrically our intelligence on the enemy, decimated and dislocated the top tiers of al-Qaedas hierarchy, and killed and captured thousands of jihadists.
At the same time, enforcing laws enacted in 1996 to enable the government to disrupt terrorist cells before their plots could come to fruition, the Bush Justice Department assembled an impressive string of convictions for terrorist conspiracy and financing.
True to his September 10 philosophy, President Obama declared on Thursday that the civilian courts were tough enough to convict terrorists. That has never been the question.
The problems are that the criminal-justice system cannot apprehend many terrorists (only 29 terrorists, mostly low-level, were prosecuted during the eight years of attacks leading up to 9/11), and that the few trials it manages become intelligence troves for the many thousands of terrorists remaining at large.
Bushs counterterrorism policies, particularly as supplemented by Congress in the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005 and the above-mentioned Military Commissions Act of 2006, afforded captured alien combatants an unprecedented degree of due process far beyond that accorded at the Nuremberg Tribunals that President Obama is fond of citing as a testament to the rule of law.
This due process includes a right of appeal to the civilian federal courts (which was expanded in 2008 by the Supreme Courts wrongheaded Boumediene decision).
So it was strange to hear President Obama on Thursday, castigating the military-commission system that he has chosen to revive with only cosmetic changes.
It is true, as the president points out, that the commission system has convicted only three terrorists of war crimes, but this is in no small part because the trials have been endlessly delayed by legal maneuvering from some of the very lawyers who now hold important positions in Obamas administration.
Deputy Solicitor General Neal Katyal, for example, represented Osama bin Ladens confidant Salim Hamdan in the Supreme Court case that derailed the commissions until Congress reversed the Court.
Harold Koh, the attorney Obama has nominated to be State Department legal adviser, filed an amicus brief in behalf of the detainees in the same case.
Attorney General Eric Holders old firm has represented at least 18 enemy combatants.
Because of the thick web of relationships between terrorism suspects, Holder, and other like-minded lawyers he has recruited, the Justice Department has been forced to set up elaborate protocols for recusing prosecutors, including the attorney general himself, from various national-security cases.
And it was President Obama himself who delayed commissions for 21 terrorists back in January some of whose trials were imminent.
But instead of reinstating those proceedings, the president is delaying them still further, while his administration makes trivial procedural tweaks that will allow him to pretend his policies constitute a real departure from those of his predecessor.
The president insisted in his speech that the Guantanamo Bay detention camp and enhanced interrogation techniques (which he characteristically referred to as torture, a term both legally inaccurate and morally obtuse) increased terrorist recruitment.
In fact the leading driver of terrorist recruitment is successful terrorist attacks. That is what convinces the fence-sitters that radical Islam can win, and that Osama bin Laden is correct when he argues that the United States is a weak horse that will retreat when things get tough enough.
The counterterrorism policies of the Bush administration prevented new terrorist attacks and assured the worlds bin Ladens that the United States was committed to their defeat. We hope that assurance still holds; if it does, it is only because President Obama, for all his unseemly disparagement of his predecessor, has picked up the tools George W. Bush left him and made them his own.
The undeniable truth is Pres. George W. Bush and his intrepid and unending priortizing of our security kept us safe, for nearly 8 years, against all odd. God bless and protect him.
It was because of constant surveillance, feet on the ground, canny outsmarting of the beasts, incredible skill and the relentless courage of so many, especially our awesome military and intel agencies, AND Pres. George W. Bush and Vice President Richard Cheney... truly righteous leaders and statesmen who never took their eye off the ball.
The lack of peace and safety we feel (at least I do)is for good reason. The current resident is an arrogant boy playing in the growups' yard.
~~PING!
Truman: the buck stops here.
Obama: the buck stops elsewhere.
Great line. You don’t even need to read the story to understand the point he is making. This line is a keeper we should use often.
“President Obama wants you to know that nothing is ever his fault.”
Classic text book sociopath.
We should start a pool as to a date when O will no longer use Bush as an excuse for his own failures.
You’re closer than most people would like to acknowledge. We’re going to pull quotes for decades from this guy, and historians will shudder.
Everything is about him, except when it’s negative. And when it’s negative, he’s trying so hard to spread his goodness over the problem.
BUMP
He is not a “grown man” in the sense that I understand that term.
There was one such who spoke at the American Enterprise Institute today.
It just hit me: Obama=St. Elsewhere
“We should start a pool as to a date when O will no longer use Bush as an excuse for his own failures.”
Great idea, but if everyone puts their money on “NEVER” how and when do you divide the proceeds? And who’s going to hold the risk if you place the funds in either Treasury bills or bank CDs waiting for the end of his term?
“Great idea, but if everyone puts their money on NEVER how and when do you divide the proceeds? And whos going to hold the risk if you place the funds in either Treasury bills or bank CDs waiting for the end of his term?”
You’re right. Just buy more gold and ammo instead. :-)
Under Pelosi's approach, this should be grounds for prosecution and disbarment. After all, he's submitting his opinions to the court. And Pelosi et al want to prosecute and disbar Bush admininstration attorneys who did the same thing, just on the opposite side.
I predict 2050.
Excellent post! Thanks.
;)
~~Righteous leader ...... PING !
I heard only minutes of this loser’s speech, just enough to hear him blaming everyone else.
Judging by the crowd thermals over at Yahoo!Answers, Obama has lost his supporters. The polls will come to reflect that soon enough.
Starwise, thanks for pinging me to all these great threads. I really appreciate it even though I don’t always post.
I heard a good portion of BO’s totus today and was appalled at all of the I, I, I, I, me, me, me, me. In fact, I think he gave a book review on his first book - the title of which I can’t remember and don’t really care to.
Imagine the screeeching from the wacko lefties, if Bush admin lawyers or affiliates represented dozens of terrorists.
######
We must learn to reflexively state that Obama’s justice dept lawyers have represented terrorists at Gitmo, as quickly and easily as leftists say “halliburton” when someone says “cheney.”
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