Alberto
Gonzales and Coup Against Democracy
By Ramzy Baroud
08/03/07 "ICH
" --- - The name of Alberto Gonzales is
rapidly becoming synonymous with all that has gone wrong
under the Bush administration. Repeated media discussions of
the US Secretary of State in the most contentious tones have
served to lay the blame for all the ailments that infected
American democracy under Bush squarely on one man's
shoulders.
President Bush himself, Gonzales' loyal boss, friend and the
hand behind all the stunts and tricks that Gonzales so
indefatigably performed to defend and justify the
unjustifiable, remains immune to any meaningful criticism.
Bush is well known for his habit of awarding sensitive posts
to old friends, as if the prime objective of the president
of the United States is to protect the administration's
secrets and rubber stamp whatever compulsive policies he and
his self-serving neoconservative associates concoct.
Although appointed to the post in February 2005, Gonzales
has been a member of Bush's team for years; he served as
Bush's General Counsel from 1994 to
1997, when the president was governor of Texas. Then, he
served as Secretary of State for Texas for two years, before
going on to join the state's Supreme Court. Finally he
worked with Bush again for five consecutive years as White
House Counsel. Considering the president's reputation of
favouritism and staunch loyalty to those faithful to him,
Gonzales' ascension to the 80th Attorney General of the
United States, replacing John Ashcroft, only seemed a
natural progression.
True, Bush's loyalty cannot be contested; however, it is
really the only attitude that can be expected of him towards
individuals with too much knowledge of sensitive matters
that he wouldn't desire to become public. Gonzales'
successful, albeit illegal, efforts to help Governor Bush be
excused from jury duty in 1996 (made possible by the
convenient overlooking of the 1976 misdemeanour drunk
driving case) is merely the tip of the iceberg. While the
latter was exposed during the 2000 presidential campaign,
there are many facts which can easily be deduced to fall in
the realm of 'known unknowns', to borrow a favourite term of
former Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.
While the Bush administration had innumerable spin doctors,
Gonzales was the man who knew the law well and thus knew how
to manipulate it well. He played a major role in abusing the
same laws that he once vowed to safeguard; the total
politicization of the Justice Department and the dismissal
of the eight attorneys who had the courage to question the
constitutionality of the administration's conduct in
December 2006.
Perhaps Gonzales' unwarranted acts have generated a lot more
attention in the last a few months as both Democrats and
Republicans are in need of a punching bag, where Bush and
Cheney have proved untouchable. Another reason could be that
Gonzales' past legal concoctions were justified as part of
the administration's 'war on terror': so what if Gonzales
had to circumvent national and international law -
repeatedly and unabashedly - to 'save American lives'?
And circumvent the law Gonzales most certainly did. Starting
with the drafting of Executive Order 13233 in November 1,
2001, which restricted the Freedom of Information Act, and
thus access to records of former presidents - to his
arguments that effectively cancelled Article III of the
Geneva Convention, denying suspected al-Qaeda and Taliban
militants held in Camp X-Ray the right to be treated as
combatants - to his re-interpretation of the principles of
the Geneva Convention that made possible the case for the
torture and humiliation of Iraqis and others. Gonzales' role
in the Bush administration's war on democracy at home, and
his imperial war abroad, is unquestionable.
Gonzales is still around precisely because of this role, not
inspite of it.
Gonzales' July 24 appearance before the Senate's Judiciary
Committee was a disgrace by any standards. Even Republican
members of the committee rightly doubted the man's
integrity, and the testimony made by a Gonzales subordinate,
FBI Director Robert Mueller, contradicted his boss' own
accounts. Members of both parties are now up in arms;
Republicans fear that Gonzales' sinking reputation will harm
their political positions further, and Democrats, not daring
to take on the President himself, are instead confronting a
man who was merely responsible for providing the legal
wrapping for the administration's illegal acts.
Tom Raum, an analyst with the Associated Press, reasoned
that Bush continues to stand by discredited Gonzales because
his advisors "are mindful of the fact that it could be next
to impossible to win Senate confirmation this late in his
term for any possible replacement." Indeed, the department's
No.
2, Deputy Attorney General Paul J. McNulty has just
resigned; his decision is attributed to his role in the
dismissal of the dissenting attorneys; another, William
Mercer, withdrew his nomination for the department's
third-highest job in June, knowing fully that his nomination
would be rejected by the Senate, according to the New York
Times' Philip Shenon and Jim Rutenberg. They quote Rich
Galen, a GOP consultant: "There is a body of thought among
Republicans that gives Gonzales great credit for drawing
fire and putting up with it so the others in the Bush
Cabinet can do their jobs. Because, if Gonzales is gone,
they (Democrats) will just look for a new guy to go after."
Whether or not Democrats find their "new guy", the horrific
violations of international human rights and of the US
constitution will continue unabated, further ravaging the
standing of the oldest Republic, and turning into shreds a
democratic system that was once a torch of hope to aspiring
democracies everywhere.
-Ramzy Baroud is a Palestinian-American author and editor
of
www.PalestineChronicle.com . His work has been
published in numerous newspapers and journals worldwide,
including the Washington Post, Al Ahram Weekly, Le Monde
Diplomatique and Japan Times. His latest book is The Second
Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People's Struggle
(Pluto Press, London). Read more about him on his website:
www.ramzybaroud.net
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