Too bad Kim Jong-il kicked the bucket last weekend. If the divine hand that laid low the North Korean leader had held off for a week or so, Kim would have been sustained by the news that President Obama had signed into law a bill that puts the United States not immeasurably far from the Democratic People's Republic of Korea in contempt of constitutional protections for its citizens or constitutional restraints upon criminal behavior sanctioned by the state.
At least the DPRK doesn't trumpet its status as the least-best sanctuary of liberty. American politicians, starting with the president, do little else.
A couple of months ago, came a mile-marker in America's steady slide downhill towards the status of a Banana Republic with Obama's assertion that he has the right as president to secretly order the assassination, without trial, of a U.S. citizen he deems to be working with terrorists. This followed his 2009 betrayal of his pledge to end the indefinite imprisonment without charges or trial of prisoners in Guantanamo.
After months of declaring that he would veto such legislation, Obama has now crumbled and will soon sign a monstrosity called the Levin/McCain detention bill, named for its two senatorial sponsors, Carl Levin and John McCain. It's snuggled into the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act.
The detention bill mandates — don't glide too easily past that word — that all accused terrorists be indefinitely imprisoned by the military rather than in the civilian court system; this includes U.S. citizens within the borders of the United States.
All onslaughts on potential sedition like to cast as wide a net as possible, so the detention act authorizes use of military force against anyone who "substantially supports" al-Qaida, the Taliban or "associated forces." Of course, "associated forces" can mean anything. The bill's language mentions, "associated forces that are engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners, including any person who has committed a belligerent act or who has directly supported such hostilities in aid of such enemy forces." That's language that can be bent, at will, by any prosecutor. Protest too vigorously the assassination of U.S. citizen Anwar al Awlaki by American forces in Yemen in October and one day it's not fanciful to expect the thump of the military jackboot on your front step, or on that of any anti-war organizer, or any journalist whom some zealous military intelligence officer deems to be giving objective support to the forces of evil and darkness. Since 1878, here in the U.S., the Posse Comitatus Act has limited the powers of local governments and law enforcement agencies from using federal military personnel to enforce the laws of the land. The detention bill renders the Posse Comitatus Act a dead letter.
Governments, particularly those engaged in a Great War on Terror, like to make long lists of troublesome people to be sent to internment camps or dungeons in case of national emergency. Back in Reagan's time, in the 1980s, Lt. Col. Oliver North, working out of the White House, was caught preparing just such a list. Reagan speedily distanced himself from North. Obama, the former lecturer on the U.S. Constitution, is brazenly signing this authorization for military internment camps.
There's been quite a commotion over the detention bill.
Civil liberties groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union have raised a stink. The New York Times denounced it editorially as "a complete political cave-in." Mindful that the votes of liberals can be useful, even vital in presidential elections, pro-Obama supporters of the bill claim that it doesn't codify "indefinite detention." But indeed it does. The bill explicitly authorizes "detention under the law of war until the end of hostilities."
Will the bill hurt Obama? Probably not too much, if at all. Contrary to widespread belief, liberals are never very energetic in protecting constitutional rights. That's more the province of libertarians and other wackos actually prepared to draw lines in the sand for matters of principle.
Simultaneous to the looming shadow of indefinite internment by the military for naysayers, we have what appears to be immunity from prosecution for private military contractors retained by the U.S. government, another extremely sinister development.
The U.S. military has been outsourcing war at a staggering rate. Even as the U.S. military quits Iraq, thousands of private military contractors remain. Suppose they are accused of torture and other abuses including murder?
The Centre for Constitutional Rights — a U.S. non-profit organization — is currently representing Iraqi civilians tortured in Abu Ghraib and other detention centers in Iraq. They seek to hold accountable two private contractors for their violations of international, federal and state law. In the words of Laura Raymond of the CCR, "By the military's own internal investigations, private military contractors from the U.S.-based corporations L-3 Services and CACI International were involved in the war crimes and acts of torture that took place, which included rape, being forced to watch family members and others be raped, severe beatings, being hung in stress positions, being pulled across the floor by genitals, mock executions and other incidents, many of which were documented by photographs. The cases — Al Shimari v. CACI and Al-Quraishi v. Nakhla and L-3 — aim to secure a day in court for the plaintiffs, none of whom were ever charged with any crimes."
But the corporations involved are now arguing in court that they should be exempt from any investigation into the allegations against them because, among other reasons, the U.S. government's interests in executing wars would be at stake if corporate contractors can be sued. And Raymond reports, "They are also invoking a new, sweeping defense. The new rule is termed 'battlefield preemption' and aims to eliminate any civil lawsuits against contractors that take place on any 'battlefield.'"
You've guessed it. As with "associated forces", an elastic concept discussed above, in the Great War on Terror the entire world is a "battlefield." So unless the CCRs suit prevails, and a ruling of a Fourth Circuit federal court panel stands, private military contractors could be immune from any type of civil liability, even for war crimes, as long as it takes place on a "battlefield."
Suppose now we take the new powers of the military in domestic law enforcement, as defined in the detention act, and anticipate the inevitable, that the military delegates these powers to private military contractors. A company owned by, say Goldman Sachs, could enjoy delegated powers to arrest any U.S. citizen here within the borders of the USA, "who has committed a belligerent act or who has directly supported such hostilities in aid of such enemy forces," torture them to death and then claim "battlefield preemption."
Don't laugh.
Alexander Cockburn is co-editor with Jeffrey St. Clair of the muckraking newsletter CounterPunch. He is also co-author of the new book "Dime's Worth of Difference: Beyond the Lesser of Two Evils," available through www.counterpunch.com. To find out more about Alexander Cockburn and read features by other columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM

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15 Comments | Post Comment
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A vote for Obama is a vote for a George W Bush clone
Sad really, there were such high hopes for change and 'sticking it to the man'
What actually happened was 'sticking it to the people'
RON PAUL
nuff said
Comment: #1
Posted by: Soothsayer
Fri Dec 23, 2011 6:45 AM
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This is a great article. I wish every American would read it. I wish we would have a national discussion about this issue. I wish we would make obama and mccain try to defend this bill because its totally indefensible.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Fri Dec 23, 2011 9:09 AM
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This is a great article. I'm glad to see that some liberals are seeing obama for what he really is. I wish everyone in the country would read this. I wish it would spark a national discussion. I wish we could make obama and mccain answer for this because its totally indefensible.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Fri Dec 23, 2011 9:11 AM
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I would love to see how Mr. Cockburn's writing would morph were he to find himself a victim of collateral damage caused by a suicide bomber. He really ought to travel to a place where that risk is a fact of life and test all of his outdated concerns against that risk.
We exist in a world very different from the one in which our simplistic notions of civil versus military protections were first defined. I am uncomfortable with the bulldozing of protections that exist to protect us against the excesses of the military, but I am equally uncomfortable with the utter inability of our current national defense paradigm to stay current with the tactics and psychology that threaten the basic fabric of our civilization.
Cockburn offers nothing but outdated rhetoric in this regard.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Masako
Fri Dec 23, 2011 7:35 PM
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Masako,
We are now all victims collateral damage of the terrorists and their accomplices in the US house, senate, and white house. While the terrorists have been amazingly ineffective at directly damaging our nation's democracy, they have caused us to destroy it ourselves. I would argue that we have been quite effective in dealing with domestic terrorism with what remains of our constitutional protections in place. The thing threatening the basic fabric of our civilization is the simplistic cowards in the government who are terrified of being accused of being "weak on terror".
.
Cockburn is arguing against the continued destruction of our freedoms. I believe that the burden of proof falls on those who would destroy those freedoms, not those who would seek to preserve them.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Mark
Sun Dec 25, 2011 10:50 AM
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Dear Mark. Picture a day when suicide bombers take out a bunch of shoppers at Walmart. We are not in the days of the 50's and 60's when Herbert Hoover was having wet dreams about commies taking over the country.
All of the political weaknesses you point to do exist in our response so far, which is no surprise. Yes, politicians will use every mediocre approach they can think of to advance themselves in the name of patriotism and protecting the public.
You have to sort that from the legitimate police work that needs to be done to keep us from living the kind of life of war at every street corner that is now common to the Middle East. Maybe this a losing battle, but the old approach to civil liberties simply does not cut it when you are dealing with suicide bombers.
Then there is the transparency the internet and electronic communications are inflicting on us all, like it or not. It's here, it's now, and older people with their heads stuck under the ground of the 60's cannot stop it with all of that PC rhetoric that once sounded so sweet and pure. A lot of them thought computers were the enemy, and wanted to stop computerization at any cost. Maybe they were right, but too late now.
If you think some politician can run on a platform that says, "Let them do it to us, we will die with dignity, but we won't lower our principles to protect ourselves, because we are above that," have at it. Lots of luck.
Comment: #6
Posted by: Masako
Mon Dec 26, 2011 5:59 PM
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Dear Masako,
Picture a day when the government comes to pick you up because they don't like what you posted in response to Oliver North's latest anemic attempt at ration discourse. Picture your feelings after being transferred to some gulag with an assurance that, even though you have no right to challenge your detention, you will be released as soon as the government licks this terrorism problem AND declares that hostilities are over.
.
As you know from our previous discussions, I hold our constitutional protections to be sacrosanct. (The first time I visited the national archives and saw the founding texts and the visiting copy of the magna carta, I had the powerful sensation that I was entering a place as holy as any religious site on earth.) I am not willing to give up my freedoms for some vague assurance of safety. The thing is, after you have given up freedoms for a for a vague assurance of security, you will never get those freedoms back and those who would seize those freedoms will never be satisfied that they have enough power. They will always tell you that you must give up a just a few more in order to be truly secure. Once the citizens-to-gulag law has been implemented, how will we know that it is effective? By the decrease in domestic terror from about zero to negative terrorism?
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What I expect of my politicians is to say that our laws are generally sufficient to the job of protecting us and that destroying the constitution is not going to make us more secure. I expect that any new law proposed be examined carefully and very publicly for its potential to damage our constitutional rights with the strong priority going to the preservation of those rights. I expect that they will work to put in short time period sunset provisions on any such law that the majority is determined to pass so that the politicians must regularly re-vote on such issues. We need to be reminded who is grabbing power and who is protecting the constitution.
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As Steve Chapman pointed out in a recent column, the BIG news story of the last 10 years is that nothing has happened. American Muslims have almost zero interest in engaging in home grown terror. (Yes, there are always a few nut jobs in any group. Note, however, that Timothy McVeigh did not bow to Mecca.) This is not for lack of targets. The security theater performed at the airports has not protected sports arenas, shopping malls, etc. If (when?) there is a another successful terror attack on American soil, I will still stand with the constitution.
Comment: #7
Posted by: Mark
Tue Dec 27, 2011 7:51 PM
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Dear Mark. You are living in a nostalgic bubble. The gendarmes will come for us whenever they are ready. We only got into WW 2 because of the brilliant trickery of FDR. He didn't give a flying you-know-what about the U.S. Constitution, or the pious feelings folks who know nothing about reality have about it.
You need to get out of your comfy intellectual bubble and spend some time in the Middle East, where women are still chattel, except in Israel, the great enemy of all the pious clowns of the left, and the second Inquisition is in full display. Try living the high-stress life the Israelis do, and for that matter, every other citizen in the Middle East who simply wants to live a peaceful life. It is hell, and once it gets imported here, it will be nice if you get a chance to say, "Oh, I didn't realize..." but the cancer will be in full metastasis, and there will be no miracle cure.
Yep, the stuff that happens at airports is largely incompetent fluff, all for show, but that is what politics requires. The herd has to be managed. The real efforts are going on behind the scenes, just as they did when FDR tricked the Japanese into bombing Pearl Harbor. You don't have a clue. Grow up.
Comment: #8
Posted by: Masako
Wed Dec 28, 2011 7:58 PM
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"Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -Benjamin Franklin
Masako,
I know it must be a comfort to you to believe that the boogie man so common in the middle east can be kept out of your life if you just give up enough of your liberty. Time to wake up, (grow up, get a clue, leave bubble, blah, blah, blah - insert favorite trite condescension here) before it is too late. I do not trust any politician, even the "sainted" FDR. They are all weak, corruptible humans. I trust the constitution a lot more. To pass laws such as the one discussed above is to trust the likes of FDR and Bush not to abuse the new found powers. Imagine a leader like Dick Cheney declaring that the detained citizens do deserve legal recourse to challenge their detention because the administration believes them to be "the worst of the worst". No need for review - trust us. We know best.
Comment: #9
Posted by: Mark
Thu Dec 29, 2011 5:48 PM
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Mark: So you trust a bunch of sheltered idiots in robes who got there by getting A's in law school more. That's what you are doing by putting all of your stock in the Constitution. They are the ones who apply it.
FDR was definitely not a saint. He just lived in the real world. He had to make decisions, and take the blame or the credit for their failure or success. That is what managers do, which you will never properly understand until you have been one.
Judges don't do that. They write a bunch of wonderful sounding and terribly intelligent words, and then they get to watch what their usually data-free hip shots do to society, mostly sheltered from whatever havoc they wreak. Not saying they are all bad, but they sure aren't saints either, and they tend toward more than their share of arrogance disconnection from reality.
By the way, Marbury v. Madison, in case you have ever heard of that decision, was orchestrated and tolerated by all of those types of people you don't trust. The judges just did what they were told. The issue for you to consider is not a document you want to elevate to the status of a deity, but checks and balances. You probably consider all of the above trite too.
Comment: #10
Posted by: Masako
Thu Dec 29, 2011 8:38 PM
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I stopped understanding what you guys were talking about 5 comments ago. A law was just passed that gives the president and the military the power to gitmo any person, for any reason, for any amount of time, and try them as an enemy combatant or not even give them a trial. This is a blatant disregard for our civil liberties. These last 2 presidents have plunged us into an ever increasing police state.
Comment: #11
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Fri Dec 30, 2011 6:28 AM
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Re: Chris McCoy: Not sure that's what the law says, but I am sure that is just about exactly what has been going on for the last decade.
Comment: #12
Posted by: Masako
Fri Dec 30, 2011 6:41 PM
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And that dosen't upset or worry anyone? I think this is something that needs to be discussed in detail this next election.
Comment: #13
Posted by: Chris McCoy
Sun Jan 1, 2012 10:20 AM
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Chris,
Yes. Exactly.
Comment: #14
Posted by: Mark
Sun Jan 1, 2012 11:08 PM
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No argument there. How in the world did we all find something to agree on?
Comment: #15
Posted by: Masako
Tue Jan 3, 2012 6:21 PM
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