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Monday, September 17, 2007
Michael Barone :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Overlawyered War
by Michael Barone
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"Never in the history of the United States had lawyers had such extraordinary influence over war policy as they did after 9/11." Those are the words of Jack Goldsmith, the Harvard law professor who was one of those lawyers, as head of the Justice Departments Office of Legal Counsel in 2003 and 2004. They appear in his book "The Terror Presidency," hailed as a criticism of the Bush administrations legal policies, which in part it is.

Believing that some of his predecessors opinions, particularly two on interrogation techniques, were "deeply flawed," he reversed them. He argues that the administration would have ended up with more latitude in fighting terrorism if it had worked with Congress to get legislation, even if those laws would not have been as expansive as the administration wanted. Its a serious argument, and he also presents fairly, I think, the opposing view that such restrictions would make it harder to protect the American people.

But anyone who goes beyond the first newspaper stories and reads the book will find another message. For one thing, Goldsmith also supports many much-criticized policies -- the detention of unlawful combatants in Afghanistan and their confinement in Guantanamo, trials by military commissions, the terrorist surveillance program. And he rejects the charge that the administration has disregarded the rule of law. Quite the contrary. "The opposite is true: the administration has been strangled by law, and since September 11, 2001, this war has been lawyered to death." There has been a "daily clash inside the Bush administration between fear of another attack, which drives officials into doing whatever they can to prevent it, and the countervailing fear of violating the law, which checks their urge toward prevention."

It was not always so, he points out. In 1942, Franklin Roosevelt ordered military commissions to try the eight Nazi saboteurs who had landed on our shores; the Supreme Court unanimously approved, and six were executed six weeks after they were apprehended, to the applause of the media of the day. But FDR "acted in a permissive legal culture that is barely recognizable to us today."

In the wake of Vietnam and Watergate, Congress passed laws that criminalized military and civilian officers who broke the rules on electronic surveillance and detainee treatment: "the criminalization of warfare." Its ban on political assassination deterred the Clinton administration from gunning down Osama bin Laden. The CIA has become so wary of possible criminal charges that it urges agents to buy insurance. Developments in international law, especially the doctrine of universal decision, also threaten U.S. government officials with possible prosecution abroad. All of this creates a risk-averseness that leaves us more vulnerable to terrorists.

The CIA today employs more than 100 lawyers, the Pentagon 10,000. "Every weapon used by the U.S. military, and most of the targets they are used against, are vetted and cleared by lawyers in advance," Goldsmith notes. In this respect, the national security community resembles the larger society. As Philip Howard of Common Good points out, we are stripping jungle gyms from playgrounds and paying for unneeded medical tests for fear of lawsuits.

The audiotapes released last week of Khalid Shaikh Mohammeds interrogation remind us that we are faced with evil enemies and that getting information from them can save lives. Goldsmith, who withdrew his predecessors interrogation opinions, nevertheless understands this and makes a strong case that our national security apparatus is overlawyered.

Most Americans seem to agree; an Investors Business Daily poll shows that more than 60 percent of Americans -- and majorities of Democrats as well as Republicans -- favor wiretapping terrorist suspects without warrants, increased surveillance, retaining the Patriot Act and holding enemy combatants at Guantanamo. Unfortunately, the 30 percent or so who disagree are disproportionately represented in the legal profession and in the media.

The 1970s laws that have helped produce the overlawyering of this war were prompted by the misdeeds of one or two presidents. But they will hamper the efforts of our current president as well as his successors in responding to a threat that is likely to continue for many years to come.

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About The Author
Michael Barone is a senior writer with U.S. News & World Report and the principal co-author of The Almanac of American Politics, published by National Journal every two years. He is also author of Our Country: The Shaping of America from Roosevelt to Reagan, The New Americans: How the Melting Pot Can Work Again, the just-released Hard America, Soft America: Competition vs. Coddling and the Competition for the Nation's Future.
 
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Vic
"The real problem here is that Congress is populated with Lawyers."
Yeah, that's the problem. The people writing our laws have too much legal knowledge. Did you know that the main reason your car breaks down is that repair shops are hiring too many auto mechanics?
"We need a Constitutional amendment that forbids lawyers from being congressmen due to the obvious conflict of interest."
Dick Cheney gave tens of millions to Halliburton as SecDef, then they gave him millions in the 90's, then he gave them billions as VP. But the conflict of interest problem we have is with lawyers. Right.

"The non-citizen terrorists captured out of the country and brought to Gitmo have no rights under U.S. law and the Geneva Convention."
Lie much? There are no terrorists held at GITMO.
ALL persons captured on a battlefield are protected by the Geneva Conventions. If you doubt it, read them.
"The only right they have is what we chose to give them."
You seem to be unclear on the concept of rights; they are not given by others; they are posessed innately.
"Once they have been judged to have operated OUTSIDE of the laws of warfare they are then subject to whatever we wish to do."
No, once they have been judged to have operated OUTSIDE of the laws of warfare, they are subject to criminal prosecution. Until such judgement, they are entitled to POW status. Noone captured in the GWOT has yet been judged to have operated outside the laws of warfare.
"To all of you sniveling dogs who scream "brutality" we could take ALL of them out in the back and shoot them tomorrow without being in violation of anything."
Die and go to hell you evil fascist pig.

Bandu
"I had heard this kind of thing before but I thought it was mere "right wing" propaganda. Well, I saw it with my eyes."
No, you saw it on an outlet for right wing propaganda, hello?! Rules of engagement in Iraq encourage US troops to shoot anything that moves anytime they feel threatened. The bloody results have been broadcast over and over again, but not on the "History" channel.

"Do we really want to win this war?"
NO!!! This war is a stain on the flag, a disgrace, a heinous crime, an offense against the Human Race. We must lose for the Human Race to win.
"Do we want this country to be great again?"
NO!!! Greatness, historically, as the term pertains to leaders and nations, is essentially a measure of their skill and propensity for killing people and taking their stuff. Greatness is a barbaric virtue. A civilized nation should strive for something far better than "greatness". It is far better to be a good nation than a great one.
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