
After several years of missteps and dunderheaded RINOist policy proscriptions, Senators John McCain and Lindsey Graham got one right for a change. The unctuous pair published an Op Ed in the Wall Street Journal on May 6 that is spot on in its analysis of the dangerous road down which Barack Obama and the Democrats are taking us as far as the war on terror is concerned.
Because this issue is so important and so as not to waste time, we will take as a given here the poor standing that both Senators rightfully have with conservatives, set aside their RINOism, and move past their inability to “get it” on every other issue but this one. What McCain and Graham had to say in their WSJ piece is of supreme importance and it is an area where we can all agree upon in all the most important ways. So, let’s focus on the Guantanamo facility and the greater debate on the war on terror, shall we?
In the first paragraph of the piece McCain and Graham pinpoint one of the most injurious things that Obama’s possible upcoming “truth commissions” will have on future American administrations. Obama’s prosecutions of Bush officials for having given their honest council to the president will simply destroy the trust that future advisers will have to give their best council. If future advisers imagine that they can be hauled off to jail with ever new administration’s ascension to office, no adviser will ever feel safe. All will unduly hedge their advice for simple self preservation. This cannot help but hurt this country from this point forward.
McCain and Graham write, “We believe that any subsequent attempts to subject those who provided such legal advice to prosecutions are a mistake. They will have a chilling effect on the candor with which future government officials provide their best counsel.”
In fact, we have already seen the deleterious effects that Obama’s coming crusade against members of Bush’s administration has caused. Already the CIA is so wary of Obama as to seriously damage its already low level of trust in the presidency and its already low level of effectiveness in the field. The reticence of the CIA to give its full, thoughtful council will spread to every other agency soon enough if Obama allows these show trials to begin.
This will surely make us less safe.
The next point is also spot on.
In January, the president announced via executive order that the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay will close within a year. The announcement was easy — but it left unanswered the hardest questions about detainee policy for the future.
As we have seen with Obama so often, he is prone to windy pronouncements and showy efforts that contain little substance. In the case of his signing of an executive order to shut down the Guantanamo Bay facility we have all the worst of that propensity. Not only did Obama not really sign any order to shut the facility down — all he signed was a pledge to take the matter up in a year — but he also did not bother to make provisions to pay for the effort, nor make any plans on what to do with those imprisoned there once it is shut down.
It was an act free of any substance whatever made solely to get his extreme left-wing patrons off his back. But it was a reckless action, nonetheless.
From there McCain and Graham go on to detail some salient points on how to treat these terrorist combatants, what to do with them and what not to do with them. Each point is an excellent read of the situation. Obama would be right to listen to them.
The two Senators say that terrorists are not “criminals” and they should not be brought into our civil courts. The designation of “enemy combatant” is a good and proper convention and so military commissions are well and proper, they say. Also we absolutely must decide what to do with those we’ve already gobbled up and placed in detention before we make airy pronouncements of shutting down the facilities in which they are housed.
Lastly the pair bring up the single biggest failing of the Bush Administration, though they don’t necessarily identify it as such.
Finally, Congress must be involved in crafting detainee policy. It is critical for all branches of government to work together to develop solutions to the complex legal problems presented by this war.
George W. Bush’s single biggest failing was not spending, it was not the No Child Left Behind program, it was not the war itself either. It was his failure to fully engage Congress in the definition of terms and the creation of the legal process by which we as a nation dealt with the war on terror.
Bush took the role of war president one step too far when deciding that handling enemy combatants and creating the processes by which we would prosecute terrorists was a thing only a president should do within his duties as a war leader. By essentially ignoring Congress he opened himself up to the sort of left-wing, partisan attack that the Democrat Party glommed onto as a way to oppose his presidency.
Instead of taking the findings of his legal council and simply moving forward from there as if Congress had little or no part in the debate, he not only handed enemies to American safety and power a club with which to beat him over the head, he also denied the public the vigorous debate over national security that the country and the issue deserved. Yes, it would have been messy. But it should have occurred, anyway.
The piece ends with a paragraph that I truly wish the Bush administration had considered:
We believe that the time has come to focus on these urgent issues, rather than spend the nation’s energy on the debates of the past. We stand ready to work with President Obama to develop an enemy-combatant detention process that is transparent, provides robust due process consistent with the law of war, involves an independent judiciary, and protects us against a dangerous enemy. The American people and the international community will see such a system not as an arbitrary exercise of power, but as an intelligent balance of due process and national security.
The only problem I see here is that the Democratic Party has now vested itself in losing the war on terror, scaling back actions against our enemies, and making the USA safe. I hope it isn’t too late to have this debate.
So, kudos to McCain and Graham for a fine editorial. Let’s hope it finds some open minds inside the Obama administration… though I, for one, won’t be holding my breath.
Please go read the McCain/Graham piece in the Journal. See if you don’t agree with it in all the most important ways.
Dan Spencer
bs
Caleb Howe
Vladimir
Did you get demoted Warner...?
NeoKong Thursday, May 7th at 8:43AM EDT (link)Why are you way over here in the member diaries column?You’re a headliner here.
I have to disagree with you just a little bit today on this comment.
“Bush took the role of war president one step too far when deciding that handling enemy combatants and creating the processes by which we would prosecute terrorists was a thing only a president should do within his duties as a war leader. By essentially ignoring Congress he opened himself up to the sort of left-wing, partisan attack that the Democrat Party glommed onto as a way to oppose his presidency.”
Time and time again the Democrats in Congress had shown that they were not worthy of the trust to be included in high level decision regarding national security.
Bush was right to be secretive.His responsibility was to the American public first and not to Congress.
The Dem leaders in Congress have used their access to secrets time and time again to undermine the WOT for political gain.
I could fill this page with all sorts of examples.All the classified secrets in the NYT’s,releasing damaging photos,endlessly trying to prosecute Bush officials etc.etc.and etc.
Remember Pelosi’s fabulous trip to Syria?How about the recent revelations that she was in on all the briefings on waterboarding and the way she lied about ever being involved and then dishonestly railing against it.
How many times have Democrats in this country have shown they cannot be trusted to handle our national security?
The moment Obama got in office he began to dismantle the very programs that have kept us safe.
I pray that we can survive their incompetence for four years.
“We will not rest until we find all who were involved”
- President Barack Obama, on the failed terrorist attempt to blow up a Delta Airlines plane on Christmas Day as he vacationed in Hawaii.
I can certainly
Warner Todd Huston Thursday, May 7th at 8:54AM EDT (link)I can certainly understand your point, but Bush failed to even elicit the help of folks on OUR side in Congress! Congress does not like to be ignored, we must realize, and will take it out on any president that does so without having first made himself impenetrable by them. Bush was far from impenetrable.
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Be sure and Visit my Home blog Publius’ Forum. It’s what’s happening NOW!
War is usually not won by consensus and political games.
antisocial Friday, May 8th at 7:26PM EDT (link)And all these guys were on board. Every decision in a war can’t possibly be held hostage to congress decision. Moreover congress is notorious for leaking details and worse twisting facts. There are details that can cost lives. As details came out this week all prominent leaders were engaged routinely.
Just that Bush and Republicans lost the propaganda war. Probably GWB was more interested in winning the war than winning the perception with the voters. Time will tell.
What is to be done?
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No. You can’t - Moe Lane
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We shall fight in the air, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields, we shall fight in the hills — for 18 months. Then we start packing for home. - Charles Krauthammer
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The Emperor has no clothes!!!
Much damage has already been done.
Flagstaff Thursday, May 7th at 8:11PM EDT (link)The very fact that an elected President of the United States could even contemplate the imbecilic idea to criminalize or disbar lawyers for simply giving legal advice should give any potential Presidential or even just governmental adviser real reason for pause.
Talk about a “chilling effect.” Who will now take the jobs?
Obama is an enigma if you don’t assign nefarious motives to his actions.
Pluto, the Ninth Planet - Forever!
Vote John McCain!–Sometimes Better Than a Democrat.
“It’s quite satisfying to call someone an insulting colloquialism, even when it’s not accurate!”–Temperance Brennan, Bones
Isn't Obama going around Congress even more than Bush did?
bk Friday, May 8th at 7:40AM EDT (link)Not even counting all the stuff Geithner and company have done with the trillions given Obama in a blank check from Congress, Obama is stiffing Congress when it comes to who’s running what. Finding tax cheats to serve in his cabinet creates headaches, so he’s bypassing Congress completely by naming “czars” of this and that and everything in between. And this is with a completely friendly Congress that would rubber-stamp anyone he offered up for any post.
And Bush was the “unitary executive”. Riiiight.
except I don't care if they are right or not
kyle8 Friday, May 8th at 8:13AM EDT (link)I just want them to disappear.
(I won’t say die, that would not be nice)
I hope they just disappear in a puff of smoke, forever.
“Nothing works like freedom, Nothing succeeds like liberty”
Kyle
Related Onion-Style Parodies
melvinwinter Friday, May 8th at 10:48AM EDT (link)Check out these Onion-style parodies, all of which use some humor to reaffirm McCain’s and Graham’s points:
http://optoons.blogspot.com/2009/05/released-guantanamo-bay-detainees.html
http://optoons.blogspot.com/2009/04/obama-announces-recommendations-of-910_25.html
http://optoons.blogspot.com/2009/04/obama-creates-information-hotline-for.html