The Trust
Gap
Editorial
2.13.06 New
York Times
We can't think of a president who has gone to the American people
more often than George W. Bush has to ask them to forget about things
like democracy, judicial process and the balance of powers - and just
trust him. We also can't think of a president who has deserved that
trust less.
This has been a central flaw of Mr. Bush's presidency for a long time.
But last week produced a flood of evidence that vividly drove home the
point.
Domestic Spying
After 9/11, Mr. Bush authorized the National Security Agency to eavesdrop
on the conversations and e-mail of Americans and others in the United
States without obtaining a warrant or allowing Congress or the courts
to review the operation. Lawmakers from both parties have raised considerable
doubt about the legality of this program, but Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales made it clear last Monday at a Senate hearing that Mr. Bush
hasn't the slightest intention of changing it.
According to Mr. Gonzales, the administration can be relied upon to
police itself and hold the line between national security and civil
liberties on its own. Set aside the rather huge problem that our democracy
doesn't work that way. It's not clear that this administration knows
where the line is, much less that it is capable of defending it. Mr.
Gonzales's own dedication to the truth is in considerable doubt. In
sworn testimony at his confirmation hearing last year, he dismissed
as "hypothetical" a question about whether he believed the
president had the authority to conduct warrantless surveillance. In
fact, Mr. Gonzales knew Mr. Bush was doing just that, and had signed
off on it as White House counsel.
The Prison Camps
It has been nearly two years since the Abu Ghraib scandal illuminated
the violence, illegal detentions and other abuses at United States military
prison camps. There have been Congressional hearings, court rulings
imposing normal judicial procedures on the camps, and a law requiring
prisoners to be treated humanely. Yet nothing has changed. Mr. Bush
also made it clear that he intends to follow the new law on the treatment
of prisoners when his internal moral compass tells him it is the right
thing to do.
On Thursday, Tim Golden of The Times reported that United States military
authorities had taken to tying up and force-feeding the prisoners who
had gone on hunger strikes by the dozens at Guantánamo Bay to
protest being held without any semblance of justice. The article said
administration officials were concerned that if a prisoner died, it
could renew international criticism of Gitmo. They should be concerned.
This is not some minor embarrassment. It is a lingering outrage that
has undermined American credibility around the world.
According to numerous news reports, the majority of the Gitmo detainees
are neither members of Al Qaeda nor fighters captured on the battlefield
in Afghanistan. The National Journal reported last week that many were
handed over to the American forces for bounties by Pakistani and Afghan
warlords. Others were just swept up. The military has charged only 10
prisoners with terrorism. Hearings for the rest were not held for three
years and then were mostly sham proceedings.
And yet the administration continues to claim that it can be trusted
to run these prisons fairly, to decide in secret and on the president's
whim who is to be jailed without charges, and to insist that Gitmo is
filled with dangerous terrorists.
The War-in Iraq
One of Mr. Bush's biggest "trust me" moments was when he
told Americans that the United States had to invade Iraq because it
possessed dangerous weapons and posed an immediate threat to America.
The White House has blocked a Congressional investigation into whether
it exaggerated the intelligence on Iraq, and continues to insist that
the decision to invade was based on the consensus of American intelligence
agencies.
But the next edition of the journal Foreign Affairs includes an article
by the man in charge of intelligence on Iraq until last year, Paul Pillar,
who said the administration cherry-picked intelligence to support a
decision to invade that had already been made. He said Mr. Bush and
Vice President Dick Cheney made it clear what results they wanted and
heeded only the analysts who produced them. Incredibly, Mr. Pillar said,
the president never asked for an assessment on the consequences of invading
Iraq until a year after the invasion. He said the intelligence community
did that analysis on its own and forecast a deeply divided society ripe
for civil war.
When the administration did finally ask for an intelligence assessment,
Mr. Pillar led the effort, which concluded in August 2004 that Iraq
was on the brink of disaster. Officials then leaked his authorship to
the columnist Robert Novak and to The Washington Times. The idea was
that Mr. Pillar was not to be trusted because he dissented from the
party line. Somehow, this sounds like a story we have heard before.
Like many other administrations before it, this one sometimes dissembles
clumsily to avoid embarrassment. (We now know, for example, that the
White House did not tell the truth about when it learned the levees
in New Orleans had failed.) Spin-as-usual is one thing. Striking at
the civil liberties, due process and balance of powers that are the
heart of American democracy is another.
Links:
The
Power of Nightmares
Peace
Blog: Trust Gap? Indictment Gap!
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