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Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Terry Jeffrey :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Worse-Than-Meaningless Intelligence Bill
by Terry Jeffrey
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A casual onlooker might have understandably concluded that the intelligence bill recently vetoed by President Bush was crafted with the intention of prohibiting U.S. intelligence agencies from ever water-boarding terrorists or using other aggressive interrogation techniques not expressly approved by the United States Army Field Manual.

That conclusion would be wrong.

The real intention of the bill's architects was not to conclusively prohibit water-boarding or aggressive interrogation of terrorists, but to create new opportunities for Democrats to politically water-board their partisan adversaries.

We know the bill was not intended to decisively prohibit water-boarding, etc., because Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson of Florida told us so. He serves on the Intelligence Committee, and was chosen by Democrats to lead floor debate on the bill.

Nelson wanted it understood that if a terrorist who knew of a planned attack on the United States was not water-boarded -- or subjected to some other purportedly prohibited technique -- and innocent Americans died as a result, it would not be the fault of the Democrats' bill.

"There is something that is going to worry everybody, and it has worried this senator personally and as a member of the Intelligence Committee," Nelson said on the Senate floor on Feb. 13. "What if all this doesn't work, and the country is in imminent peril?"

"As commander in chief," Nelson continued, "the president can act when the country is in immediate peril. And if he so chooses, as commander in chief, to authorize activities other than what the Army Field Manual allows, then the president would be accountable directly to the American people under the circumstances with which he invoked Article II authority as commander in chief.

"What we are saying today does not relate to the president's Article II powers," said Nelson.

Alexander Hamilton, for one, would have been perplexed by Nelson's claim that the president -- as commander in chief -- can violate the express command of a law enacted by Congress. In Federalist 69, Hamilton, an author of the Constitution, wrote that the president's power as commander in chief was nothing like the unilateral power of a monarch. It amounted, he said, "to nothing more than the supreme command and direction of the military and naval forces, as first general and admiral of the confederacy; while that of the British king extends to the declaring of war and to the raising and regulating of fleets and armies -- all which, by the Constitution under consideration, would appertain to the legislature."

Just as a president may not invade Iraq if Congress has not authorized it, a president may not water-board Osama bin Laden if Congress has prohibited it. Continued...

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About The Author

Terence P. Jeffrey is the editor-in-chief of CNSNews

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©Creators Syndicate
John
"...Heck, back in WW2, we never would have been having these discussions. We would have done it for freedom's sake, and been glad. "

Actually you are a liar. Do maybe two seconds research? Tell me again how torture is patriotic and Jesus would torture.....

Time to rewrite
Sounds like it is high time we rewrite the Army Field manual before the democrats prevent the executive branch from having the option to do that.

Heck, back in WW2, we never would have been having these discussions. We would have done it for freedom's sake, and been glad.
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