George W. Bush as the New Richard M. Nixon:
Both Wiretapped Illegally, and Impeachable
Find Law.com
John Dean
December 30, 2005
On Friday, December 16, the New York Times published a major scoop by James
Risen and Eric Lichtblau: They reported that Bush authorized the National
Security Agency (NSA) to spy on Americans without warrants, ignoring the
procedures of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA).
It was a long story loaded with astonishing information of lawbreaking at
the White House. It reported that sometime in 2002, Bush issued an executive
order authorizing NSA to track and intercept international telephone and/or
email exchanges coming into, or out of, the U.S. - when one party was believed
to have direct or indirect ties with al Qaeda.
Initially, Bush and the White House stonewalled, neither confirming nor
denying the president had ignored the law. Bush refused to discuss it in his
interview with Jim Lehrer.
Then, on Saturday, December 17, in his radio broadcast, Bush admitted that
the New York Times was correct - and thus conceded he had committed an
impeachable offense.
There can be no serious question that warrantless wiretapping, in violation
of the law, is impeachable. After all, Nixon was charged in Article II of his
bill of impeachment with illegal wiretapping for what he, too, claimed were
national security reasons.
These parallel violations underscore the continuing, disturbing parallels
between this Administration and the Nixon Administration - parallels I also
discussed in a prior column.
Indeed, here, Bush may have outdone Nixon: Nixon's illegal surveillance was
limited; Bush's, it is developing, may be extraordinarily broad in scope. First
reports indicated that NSA was only monitoring foreign calls, originating
either in the USA or abroad, and that no more than 500 calls were being covered
at any given time. But later reports have suggested that NSA is "data mining"
literally millions of calls - and has been given access by the
telecommunications companies to "switching" stations through which foreign
communications traffic flows.
In sum, this is big-time, Big Brother electronic surveillance.
Given the national security implications of the story, the Times said they
had been sitting on it for a year. And now that it has broken, Bush has ordered
a criminal investigation into the source of the leak. He suggests that those
who might have felt confidence they would not be spied on, now can have no such
confidence, so they may find other methods of communicating. Other than
encryption and code, it is difficult to envision how.
Such a criminal investigation is rather ironic - for the leak's effect was
to reveal Bush's own offense. Having been ferreted out as a criminal, Bush now
will try to ferret out the leakers who revealed him.
Nixon's Wiretapping - and the Congressional Action that Followed
Through the FBI, Nixon had wiretapped five members of his national security
staff, two newsmen, and a staffer at the Department of Defense. These people
were targeted because Nixon's plans for dealing with Vietnam -- we were at war
at the time -- were ending up on the front page of the New York Times.
Nixon had a plausible national security justification for the wiretaps: To
stop the leaks, which had meant that not only the public, but America's
enemies, were privy to its plans. But the use of the information from the
wiretaps went far beyond that justification: A few juicy tidbits were used for
political purposes. Accordingly, Congress believed the wiretapping, combined
with the misuse of the information it had gathered, to be an impeachable
offense.
Following Nixon's resignation, Senator Frank Church chaired a committee that
investigated the uses and abuses of the intelligence derived from the wiretaps.
From his report on electronic surveillance, emerged the proposal to create the
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA). The Act both set limits on
electronic surveillance, and created a secret court within the Department of
Justice - the FISA Court -- that could, within these limits, grant law
enforcement's requests to engage in electronic surveillance.
The legislative history of FISA makes it very clear that Congress sought to
create laws to govern the uses of warrantless wiretaps. Thus, Bush's
authorization of wiretapping without any application to the FISA Court violated
the law.
Whether to Allow Such Wiretaps, Was Congress' Call to Make
No one questions the ends here. No one doubts another terror attack is
coming; it is only a question of when. No one questions the preeminent
importance of detecting and preventing such an attack.
What is at issue here, instead, is Bush's means of achieving his ends: his
decision not only to bypass Congress, but to violate the law it had already
established in this area.
Congress is Republican-controlled. Polling shows that a large majority of
Americans are willing to give up their civil liberties to prevent another
terror attack. The USA Patriot Act passed with overwhelming support. So why
didn't the President simply ask Congress for the authority he thought he
needed?
The answer seems to be, quite simply, that Vice President Dick Cheney has
never recovered from being President Ford's chief of staff when Congress placed
checks on the presidency. And Cheney wanted to make the point that he thought
it was within a president's power to ignore Congress' laws relating to the
exercise of executive power. Bush has gone along with all such Cheney
plans.
No president before Bush has taken as aggressive a posture -- the position
that his powers as commander-in-chief, under Article II of the Constitution,
license any action he may take in the name of national security - although
Richard Nixon, my former boss, took a similar position.
Presidential Powers Regarding National Security: A Nixonian View
Nixon famously claimed, after resigning from office, that when the president
undertook an action in the name of national security, even if he broke the law,
it was not illegal.
Nixon's thinking (and he was learned in the law) relied on the precedent
established by Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War. Nixon, quoting Lincoln,
said in an interview, "Actions which otherwise would be unconstitutional, could
become lawful if undertaken for the purpose of preserving the Constitution and
the Nation."
David Frost, the interviewer, immediately countered by pointing out that the
anti-war demonstrators upon whom Nixon focused illegal surveillance, were
hardly the equivalent of the rebel South. Nixon responded, "This nation was
torn apart in an ideological way by the war in Vietnam, as much as the Civil
War tore apart the nation when Lincoln was president." It was a weak rejoinder,
but the best he had.
Nixon took the same stance when he responded to interrogatories proffered by
the Senate Select Committee on Government Operations To Study Intelligence
Operations (best know as the "Church Committee," after its chairman Senator
Frank Church). In particular, he told the committee, "In 1969, during my
Administration, warrantless wiretapping, even by the government, was unlawful,
but if undertaken because of a presidential determination that it was in the
interest of national security was lawful. Support for the legality of such
action is found, for example, in the concurring opinion of Justice White in
Katz v. United States." (Katz is the opinion that established that a wiretap
constitutes a "search and seizure" under the Fourth Amendment, just as surely
as a search of one's living room does - and thus that the Fourth Amendment's
warrant requirements apply to wiretapping.)
Nixon rather presciently anticipated - and provided a rationalization for -
Bush: He wrote, "there have been -- and will be in the future -- circumstances
in which presidents may lawfully authorize actions in the interest of security
of this country, which if undertaken by other persons, even by the president
under different circumstances, would be illegal."
Even if we accept Nixon's logic for purposes of argument, were the
circumstances that faced Bush the kind of "circumstances" that justify
warrantless wiretapping? I believe the answer is no.
Is Bush's Unauthorized Surveillance Action Justified? Not Persuasively.
Had Bush issued his Executive Order on September 12, 2001, as a temporary
measure - pending his seeking Congress approval - those circumstances might
have supported his call.
Or, had a particularly serious threat of attack compelled Bush to authorize
warrantless wiretapping in a particular investigation, before he had time to go
to Congress, that too might have been justifiable.
But several years have passed since the broad 2002 Executive Order, and in
all that time, Bush has refused to seek legal authority for his action. Yet he
can hardly miss the fact that Congress has clearly set rules for presidents in
the very situation in which he insists on defying the law.
Bush has given one legal explanation for his actions which borders on the
laughable: He claims that implicit in Congress' authorization of his use of
force against the Taliban in Afghanistan, following the 9/11 attack, was an
exemption from FISA.
No sane member of Congress believes that the Authorization of Military Force
provided such an authorization. No first year law student would mistakenly make
such a claim. It is not merely a stretch; it is ludicrous.
But the core of Bush's defense is to rely on the very argument made by
Nixon: that the president is merely exercising his "commander-in-chief" power
under Article II of the Constitution. This, too, is a dubious argument. Its
author, John Yoo, is a bright, but inexperienced and highly partisan young
professor at Boalt Law School, who has been in and out of government
service.
To see the holes and fallacies in Yoo's work - embodied in a recently
published book -- one need only consult the analysis of Georgetown University
School of Law professor David Cole in the New York Review of Books. Cole has
been plowing this field of the law for many years, and digs much deeper than
Yoo.
Since I find Professor Yoo's legal thinking bordering on fantasy, I was
delighted that Professor Cole closed his real-world analysis on a very
realistic note: "Michael Ignatieff has written that 'it is the very nature of a
democracy that it not only does, but should, fight with one hand tied behind
its back. It is also in the nature of democracy that it prevails against its
enemies precisely because it does.' Yoo persuaded the Bush administration to
untie its hand and abandon the constraints of the rule of law. Perhaps that is
why we are not prevailing."
To which I can only add, and recommend, the troubling report by Daniel
Benjamin and Steven Simon, who are experts in terrorism and former members of
President Clinton's National Security Council. They write in their new book The
Next Attack: The Failure of the War on Terror and a Strategy for Getting It
Right, that the Bush Administration has utterly failed to close the venerable
loopholes available to terrorist to wreak havoc. The war in Iraq is not
addressing terrorism; rather, it is creating terrorists, and diverting money
from the protection of American interests.
Bush's unauthorized surveillance, in particular, seems very likely to be
ineffective. According to experts with whom I have spoken, Bush's approach is
like hunting for the proverbial needle in the haystack. As sophisticated as
NSA's data mining equipment may be, it cannot, for example, crack codes it does
not recognize. So the terrorist communicating in code may escape detection,
even if data mining does reach him.
In short, Bush is hoping to get lucky. Such a gamble seems a slim pretext
for acting in such blatant violation of Congress' law. In acting here without
Congressional approval, Bush has underlined that his Presidency is unchecked -
in his and his attorneys' view, utterly beyond the law. Now that he has turned
the truly awesome powers of the NSA on Americans, what asserted powers will
Bush use next? And when - if ever - will we - and Congress -- discover that he
is using them?
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