Why Bush
Impeachment
Is Necessary
By Ed
Ciaccio
24/07/08 "ICH"
-- - On
Friday, July
25, 2008,
the House
Judiciary
committee
will finally
hold a
hearing
about George
W. Bush's
excessive
abuses and
unconstitutional
expansion of
his
executive
powers. But
Judiciary
Committee
Chairman
John
Conyers, a
Democrat
heeding the
proclamation
of Speaker
Nancy Pelosi
that
impeachment
is "off the
table", has
already
declared
that this
hearing will
not lead to
impeachment.
Conyers,
Pelosi, and
all members
of Congress
who oppose
the
impeachment
of George W.
Bush are
betraying
the oath
they all
swore when
they took
office and
should be
condemned
for this
betrayal.
Following
are the
reasons why
the
impeachment
of George W.
Bush is
necessary.
We now know
that, in
January,
2001, soon
after taking
office, but
eight months
before the
9/11
terrorist
attacks,
Dick
Cheney's
energy task
force,
consisting
of
representatives
of the oil
and natural
gas
industries,
but
excluding
environmentalists,
held
meetings
using maps
of Iraq's
oil fields.
As even Alan
Greenspan
finally
admitted
recently,
the war was
"about oil."
We also now
know that
representatives
of
Afghanistan's
Taliban
government
were in the
U.S.
attempting
to negotiate
a deal with
Unocal, with
Bush
administration
help, to
build oil
and natural
gas
pipelines
from the
Caspian Sea
through
Afghanistan
to Pakistan,
negotiations
which failed
in July,
2001. That,
two months
prior to the
9/11
attacks, is
when the
Bush
administration
decided to
attack
Afghanistan
to remove
the Taliban
government
by November,
2001. The
9/11 attacks
then moved
up the
Afghanistan
attack by
one month,
to October,
2001.
The
recently-released
Phase II of
the Senate
Intelligence
Committee
Report on
the lead-up
to the Iraq
invasion
makes clear
that Bush,
Cheney,
Rumsfeld,
Rice, and
Wolfowitz,
among many
others in
the Bush
administration,
in lying
about the
threat
allegedly
posed by
Iraq's
non-existent
weapons of
mass
destruction,
links to
al-Qaeda,
and
connections
to the
9/11/01
terrorist
attacks,
perpetrated
fraud on the
American
people,
which
resulted in
the
unnecessary,
avoidable
deaths of
over 4,100
U.S.
soldiers and
the maiming
of tens of
thousands
more. From
the National
Intelligence
Estimate (N.I.E.)
of early
October,
2002, the
Bush
administration
knew that
the case
against Iraq
was weak and
circumstantial,
at best. Yet
they
continued to
beat the
drums for
war with
exaggerated
threats ("a
mushroom
cloud") to
mislead the
U.S. into
war. Such
deliberate
fraud
resulting in
unnecessary,
avoidable
deaths and
suffering to
U.S.
citizens is
a felony
capital
crime
punishable
by life
imprisonment
or the death
penalty.
Deliberately
causing the
unnecessary
deaths of
U.S.
military
personnel
also
constitutes
treason
against the
United
States.
The
post-World
War II
Nuremberg
Trials
declared
waging a
preventive
war of
aggression
to be "the
supreme
international
crime."
Bush's
unnecessary
bombing and
invasion of
Iraq was
such a
preventive
war of
aggression.
In its wake,
U.S. forces
have
tortured;
kidnapped
for torture
(extraordinary
rendition);
used napalm
(Mark-77
firebombs),
depleted
uranium,
white
phosphorous,
cluster
bombs and
many other
indiscriminate
weapons of
mass
destruction
which killed
and maimed
hundreds of
thousands of
Iraqi
civilians;
and caused
over four
million
Iraqi
refugees
(ethnic
cleansing).
All of these
are war
crimes
punishable
by death.
Kofi Annan,
when
Secretary
General of
the United
Nations,
declared
that the
U.S. attack
on Iraq was
a violation
of the U.N.
Charter.
U.S. forces'
mistreatment
and torture
of prisoners
is a
violation of
the Geneva
Conventions.
These
violations
of
international
law are also
violations
of Article
VI, Clause 2
of the U.S.
Constitution,
the
Supremacy
Clause.
In addition,
in December,
2005, Bush
admitted he
violated
FISA many
times, which
is a felony
punishable
by five
years'
imprisonment,
and a
violation of
the Fourth
Amendment of
our
Constitution,
which all
members of
our
government
swore to
uphold,
protect, and
defend,
"against all
enemies,
foreign and
domestic."
All these
clear
violations
of
international
laws and the
U.S.
Constitution
are
egregious
offenses
which more
than
constitute
the "high
crimes and
misdemeanors"
called for
by our
Constitution
as being
necessary to
merit
impeachment.
Much more
serious than
Bill
Clinton's
lies under
oath about
his
extramarital
consensual
sexual
affair with
Monica
Lewinsky
which caused
his
impeachment,
these lethal
crimes must
be punished
by
impeachment
so that the
perpetrators
are held
legally
accountable
and so that
no future
president
ever dares
to commit
such crimes
again.
Members of
Congress who
oppose this
necessary
impeachment
of George W.
Bush,
required by
our
Constitution
for
committing
so many
serious
criminal
offenses,
are not only
betraying
their oath
of office,
but also
their
responsibility
to the
citizens of
the United
States.
Knowing that
many of them
would,
themselves,
be exposed
as complicit
in
contributing
to and/or
condoning
these
serious
crimes,
these
anti-impeachment,
anti-Constitution
Democratic
and
Republican
members of
Congress
have blocked
the one
prescribed
remedy for
the Bush
administration's
years of
criminal
behavior.
They have
clearly
chosen their
own
reputations
and
political
careers over
what is
necessary to
serve, and,
indeed,
save, our
democratic
republic
from even
further
deterioration
into an
authoritarian
state with
an
excessively-powerful
chief
executive
and weakened
legislative
and judicial
branches.
In doing so,
these
selfish
members of
Congress
have shamed
themselves,
earned
condemnation
from us, and
endangered
our future.
Voting to
re-elect any
of these
traitors to
our
Constitution,
our country,
and us, is
voting
against our
best
interests
and, as
such, a
colossal act
of folly. We
must all
keep this in
mind come
Election
Day. It is
the
strongest
argument for
the
dismantling
of the
corrupt
two-party
system which
has led us
so far from
our hard-won
civil
liberties,
our
principles,
and our
values.
