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Dead Constitution See other Dead Constitution Articles Title: The Torture Litmus Test Several days before his first meeting with the Senate Judiciary Committee, Michael Mukaseys Justice Department handlers arranged a private meeting for him with a number of movement conservatives. Two different administration sources have described the meeting to me. During the meeting, Mukaseys counterparts, largely figures associated with the Federalist Society, pushed him on two points in particular. First, they wanted him to undertake that he would not appoint a special prosecutor to look into the U.S. attorneys scandal and related charges concerning political prosecutions. At this point it is clear that if an independent investigation were to be launched, it would quickly run head-on into some of the same figures who sat in the room with Mukasey. The email traffic which has surfaced alreadyand it is only a tiny fraction of the totalshows how Rove and Miers repeatedly relied upon the Federalist Society and its members to help them out in addressing recalcitrant U.S. Attorneys who would not debase their office by converting it into a political tool. Lets be cynical and say that the first request they put to Mukasey was designed simply to protect themselves and keep their behind-the-scenes involvement with the Justice Departments highest profile scandal so far out of the spotlight. And second, they pushed aggressively on the torture question. They wanted Mukasey to pledge that he would toe the Administrations line on the Program, that he would continue to protect those who authored the program with the cloak of an Attorney General opinion keeping them safe from prosecution. Mukasey, I am told, gave vague reassurances on both points, without completely giving away the shop. That meeting and the Judiciary Committee hearing that followed provide a basis for us to conclude that the Bush Administration has developed a new litmus test for its attorney general: he must be prepared to wink at torture publicly, and behind the scenes to issue opinions giving the authors of the program comfort. There has been no shortage of litmus tests in the past: abortion, gay marriage, the flag amendmentwhatever hot-button issue the G.O.P. cooks up for its next election campaign. But the torture litmus test is new, and it seems to be key for lawyers. It really is an exercise in Kool Aid drinking. If youre prepared to hedge on whether waterboarding is torture, then you might be counted upon to do anything. Indeed, there is no question about it. Waterboarding is torture and has been understood to be torture in a formal sense for over a hundred years. Soldiers who used it were court-martialed, and the attempted defense of military necessity was smacked down by the Armys Judge Advocate General in 1903. There is no shortage of other precedent. This is why Mukaseys dodge on the issuefirst a very primitive dodge, and then a more sophisticated oneis so troubling. So why has torture emerged as a Bush Administration litmus test? My friend Jack Balkin nails this: And Jack summarizes the dilemma very accurately: I have very strong conflicting views about the vote which is coming in the Judiciary Committee. I believe that Mukasey, as an individual, is exceptionally well qualified to serve as attorney general. I would approve the Mukasey who says he personally finds waterboarding abhorrent. But I am troubled by the official Mukasey who is being trotted out as something different. And I believe that the nation cannot, at this stage, accept the appointment of an attorney general who refuses to come clean on the torture issue. In the end this is essential to national identity, and to the promise of the Justice Department to serve as a law enforcement agency. Too much of what the Justice Department has done of late has little resemblance to law enforcement. Rather it looks to be just the opposite. If the Bush Administration wants to turn torture into a litmus test, so must Congress. The question therefore ultimately becomes one of principle and not personality. The Judiciary Committee should not accept any nominee who fails to provide meaningful assurance on this issue. And, though it saddens me to say this, Michael Mukasey has not.
Poster Comment: Bush/Cheney are our Sauron of Mordor - the neocons their orcs. When and where will the sword be re-forged to win back our freedom?
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#1. To: Peetie Wheatstraw (#0)
First, they wanted him to undertake that he would not appoint a special prosecutor to look into the U.S. attorneys scandal and related charges concerning political prosecutions. At this point it is clear that if an independent investigation were to be launched, it would quickly run head-on into some of the same figures who sat in the room with Mukasey. And second, they pushed aggressively on the torture question. They wanted Mukasey to pledge that he would toe the Administrations line on the Program, that he would continue to protect those who authored the program with the cloak of an Attorney General opinion keeping them safe from prosecution. sickening
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