This article originally provided by TruthOut
November 13, 2004
The Quaint Mr. Gonzales
By Marjorie Cohn
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
Saturday 13 November 2004
Most Republicans and many
Democrats have hailed Bush's nomination of White House
counsel Alberto Gonzales for attorney general as a brilliant
choice. Whereas John Ashcroft ruffled feathers with his
coarse warnings that opponents of Bush's post-9/11 agenda
"only aid terrorists," the soft-spoken Gonzales is
much more palatable. And he's Hispanic to boot, so the Bush
cabinet diversity quotient won't change when Colin Powell
steps aside in the second term. Some Democrats will ask
tough questions during Gonzales's confirmation hearing. But
it would be unseemly for Democrats to seriously challenge
the nomination of the first Latino Attorney General of the
United States.
The right-wing Republicans who
propelled Bush to a second term are relieved Gonzales was
tapped to head the Department of Justice, and not to be a
justice of the Supreme Court. Gonzales's views on abortion
are too liberal for them, but they don't see him doing
damage to their "pro-life" position as the
nation's top cop. Tom Minnery, vice president for public
policy at the Colorado-based Focus on the Family, confirmed
that Gonzales would be objectionable as a judicial nominee
because he does not have "strong pro-life
beliefs." However, Minnery's group would support
Gonzales's appointment as attorney general.
But the New York Times reports
that Republicans close to the White House claim the
nomination of Gonzales for attorney general is "part of
a political strategy to bolster Mr. Gonzales's credentials
with conservatives and position him for a possible Supreme
Court appointment." One Republican said the nomination
hearings on Gonzales would also "get out of the
way" the debate over the legal memos Gonzales prepared
and supervised as White House counsel.
Notwithstanding his mild-mannered
appearance, Gonzales is the iron fist in the velvet glove.
Gonzales, whom Bush affectionately calls "mi abogado"
("my lawyer"), wrote one of the most outrageous
torture memos. On January 25, 2002, Gonzales advised Bush
that "the war on terrorism is a new kind of war, a new
paradigm [that] renders obsolete Geneva's strict limitation
on questioning of enemy prisoners and renders some of its
provisions quaint."
Oh really? The "quaint"
Geneva Conventions are treaties ratified by the United
States, and therefore part of the supreme law of the land
under our Constitution.
Gonzales also provided Bush with
novel defenses against potential war crimes prosecutions
that might result from torturing prisoners captured in
Afghanistan. The 1996 War Crimes Act says that grave
breaches of the Geneva Conventions are war crimes. Thus, the
definition of war crimes includes torture, inhuman
treatment, and willful killing, as well as outrages against
personal dignity. Gonzales advised Bush that he could avoid
allegations of war crimes by simply declaring that Geneva
doesn't apply to the war against the Taliban and Al Qaeda in
Afghanistan.
When Colin Powell saw Gonzales's
memo, he reportedly "hit the roof." Powell wrote a
counter-memo to Gonzales and Condoleezza Rice, warning of
the immense damage this could do to the United States -
legally, politically, militarily, diplomatically, and
morally. To declare that the Geneva Conventions did not
apply, Powell wrote, "will reverse over a century of
U.S. policy and practice in supporting the Geneva
conventions, and undermine the protection of the law of war
for our troops, both in this specific conflict and in
general."
Powell was right. The Geneva
Conventions contain no loopholes that would allow the
torture and inhuman treatment of prisoners. Even if a
captive did not qualify for prisoner-of-war status under the
Third Geneva Convention, he would be protected by the Fourth
Geneva Convention on the treatment of civilians during
wartime. And article 3 of both conventions prohibits
torture, and humiliating and degrading treatment against
anyone who is no longer fighting. It is well-established
that article 3 applies to international, as well as
internal, conflicts.
Bush didn't listen to Powell. On
February 7, 2002, Bush declared that Geneva would not apply
to Al Qaeda. He added that he had "the authority to
suspend Geneva as between the United States and
Afghanistan," but declined to exercise it at that time.
Geneva "will apply to our present conflict with the
Taliban," Bush said. But then, in a striking example of
double-speak, he determined they were "unlawful
combatants," ineligible for hearings to decide whether
they were prisoners-of-war under the Third Geneva
Convention. (Under the terms of Geneva, only a
"competent tribunal" can make that determination).
Bush also proclaimed that article 3 of Geneva didn't apply
to either Al Qaeda or the Taliban prisoners.
After the pornographic torture
photos, and memos justifying torture, leaked out last April,
it was Gonzales who was charged with damage control. While
being run out of town, Gonzales made it look like a parade
by releasing more memos - though not all of them, then
admitting to reporters that Team Bush "felt that it was
harmful to this country, in terms of the notion that perhaps
we may be engaging in torture."
Another controversial memo, dated
August 1, 2002, from the Justice Department's Office of
Legal Counsel to Gonzales, was one of the leaked documents.
It opined that under the president's powers as commander in
chief, interrogators who torture Al Qaeda or Taliban
prisoners could be exempt from torture prosecutions.
Gonzales, still trying to stem
the rising tide of outrage, said the August memo and another
one from the Pentagon had only been meant to "explore
the limits of the legal landscape." To his knowledge,
said Gonzales, they "never made it to the hands of
soldiers in the field, nor to the president."
In his January 25, 2002 memo,
Gonzales also outlined plans to use military commissions to
try prisoners, in order to deny them due process protections
afforded by military and civilian courts. In a significant
defeat for the Bush administration, a federal district court
judge in Washington D.C. ruled earlier this week that the
military commissions violate the Geneva Conventions, and
were unlawfully constituted because Congress had not
authorized them. The military commissions have been
suspended indefinitely.
Gonzales's sordid record goes
beyond his apologies for torture of prisoners. When he was
counsel to Texas Governor George W. Bush from 1995 to 1997,
Gonzales provided his boss with "scant summaries"
on capital punishment cases that "repeatedly failed to
apprise the governor of crucial issues: ineffective counsel,
conflict of interest, mitigating evidence, even actual
evidence of innocence," according to the Atlantic
Monthly.
Gonzales prepared 57 such
summaries, including one regarding the case of Terry
Washington, a mentally retarded man executed for murdering a
restaurant manager. The jury was never told about his mental
condition. Gonzales's three-page summary of the case for
Bush mentioned only that Washington's defense counsel's
30-page plea for clemency (which covered the mental
competency issue) was rejected by the Texas parole board.
Bush refused to stay executions in 56 of the 57 cases in
which Gonzales wrote abbreviated memos.
Moreover, Gonzales helped write
the USA Patriot Act, and managed Bush's selection of
judicial nominees, most of whom had to pass a right-wing
ideological litmus test. (See my editorial, Bush's
Judges: Right-Wing Ideologues.)
When Gonzales was Chief Justice
of the Texas Supreme Court, Dick Cheney's Halliburton was
the second-largest corporate contributor to Texas Supreme
Court races. Over a seven-year period, five Halliburton
cases went before that court, and it consistently ruled in
favor of Halliburton. And although Gonzales lawfully
accepted $14,000 from Enron, he did not recuse himself from
the administration's investigation of the Enron scandal when
he was White House counsel.
From 2000 to the present,
Gonzales led the Bush administration's obstruction of
Government Accountability Office access to documents from
Cheney's secret energy policy meetings.
Alberto Gonzales has been a loyal
foot soldier, walking in lockstep with George W. Bush, for
years. As head of the Justice Department, we cannot expect
Gonzales to lead independent investigations of the widening
probe of Halliburton, or the illegal leak of the identity of
a CIA agent by an official of the Bush administration.
In spite of opposition to
Gonzales's nomination by public interest groups such as the
Center for Constitutional Rights and Human Rights Watch,
Democratic Senator Joseph Biden said "I think he's a
pretty solid guy."
Unless the Democrats in the
Senate show some backbone, and block the nomination of
Alberto Gonzales with the only arrow left in their quiver -
the filibuster, we will be saddled with another attorney
general who mounts vicious assaults on our civil rights.
Marjorie Cohn, a
contributing editor to t r u t h o u t, is a
professor at Thomas Jefferson School of Law, executive vice
president of the National Lawyers Guild, and the U.S.
representative to the executive committee of the American
Association of Jurists.
|