|
Worse than Watergate? High crimes and misdemeanors justifying the
impeachment of George W. Bush, as increasing numbers of Democrats in
Washington hope, and, sotto voce, increasing numbers of
Republicans—including some of the president's top lieutenants—now fear?
Leaders of both parties are acutely aware of the vehemence of anti-Bush
sentiment in the country, expressed especially in the increasing number of
Americans—nearing fifty percent in some polls—who say they would favor
impeachment if the president were proved to have deliberately lied to
justify going to war in Iraq.
John Dean, the Watergate conspirator who ultimately shattered the
Watergate conspiracy, rendered his precipitous (or perhaps prescient)
impeachment verdict on Bush two years ago in the affirmative, without so
much as a question mark in choosing the title of his book Worse than
Watergate. On March 31, some three decades after he testified at the
seminal hearings of the Senate Watergate Committee, Dean reiterated his
dark view of Bush's presidency in a congressional hearing that shed more
noise than light, and more partisan rancor than genuine inquiry. The
ostensible subject: whether Bush should be censured for unconstitutional
conduct in ordering electronic surveillance of Americans without a
warrant.
Raising the worse-than-Watergate question and demanding unequivocally that
Congress seek to answer it is, in fact, overdue and more than justified by
ample evidence stacked up from Baghdad back to New Orleans and, of
increasing relevance, inside a special prosecutor's office in downtown
Washington.
In terms of imminent, meaningful action by the Congress, however, the
question of whether the president should be impeached (or, less severely,
censured) remains premature. More important, it is essential that the
Senate vote—hopefully before the November elections, and with overwhelming
support from both parties—to undertake a full investigation of the conduct
of the presidency of George W. Bush, along the lines of the Senate
Watergate Committee's investigation during the presidency of Richard M.
Nixon.
How much evidence is there to justify such action?
Certainly enough to form a consensus around a national imperative: to
learn what this president and his vice president knew and when they knew
it; to determine what the Bush administration has done under the guise of
national security; and to find out who did what, whether legal or illegal,
unconstitutional or merely under the wire, in ignorance or incompetence or
with good reason, while the administration barricaded itself behind the
most Draconian secrecy and disingenuous information policies of the modern
presidential era.
"We ought to get to the bottom of it so it can be evaluated, again, by the
American people," said Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, the
Republican chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, on April 9. "[T]he
President of the United States owes a specific explanation to the American
people … about exactly what he did." Specter was speaking specifically
about a special prosecutor's assertion that Bush selectively declassified
information (of dubious accuracy) and instructed the vice president to
leak it to reporters to undermine criticism of the decision to go to war
in Iraq. But the senator's comments would be even more appropriately
directed at far more pervasive and darker questions that must be answered
if the American political system is to acquit itself in the Bush era, as
it did in Nixon's.
Perhaps there are facts or mitigating circumstances, given the
extraordinary nature of conceiving and fighting a war on terror, that
justify some of the more questionable policies and conduct of this
presidency, even those that turned a natural disaster in New Orleans into
a catastrophe of incompetence and neglect. But the truth is we have no
trustworthy official record of what has occurred in almost any aspect of
this administration, how decisions were reached, and even what the actual
policies promulgated and approved by the president are. Nor will we, until
the subpoena powers of the Congress are used (as in Watergate) to find out
the facts—not just about the war in Iraq, almost every aspect of it,
beginning with the road to war, but other essential elements of Bush's
presidency, particularly the routine disregard for truthfulness in the
dissemination of information to the American people and Congress.
The first fundamental question that needs to be answered by and about the
president, the vice president, and their political and national-security
aides, from Donald Rumsfeld to Condoleezza Rice, to Karl Rove, to Michael
Chertoff, to Colin Powell, to George Tenet, to Paul Wolfowitz, to Andrew
Card (and a dozen others), is whether lying, disinformation,
misinformation, and manipulation of information have been a basic matter
of policy—used to overwhelm dissent; to hide troublesome truths and
inconvenient data from the press, public, and Congress; and to defend the
president and his actions when he and they have gone awry or utterly
failed.
Most of what we have learned about the reality of this administration—and
the disconcerting mind-set and decision-making process of President Bush
himself—has come not from the White House or the Pentagon or the
Department of Homeland Security or the Treasury Department, but from
insider accounts by disaffected members of the administration after their
departure, and from distinguished journalists, and, in the case of a
skeletal but hugely significant body of information, from a special
prosecutor. And also, of late, from an aide-de-camp to the British prime
minister. Almost invariably, their accounts have revealed what the
president and those serving him have deliberately concealed—torture at Abu
Ghraib and Guantánamo, and its apparent authorization by presidential
fiat; wholesale N.S.A. domestic wiretapping in contravention of specific
prohibitive law; brutal interrogations of prisoners shipped secretly by
the C.I.A. and U.S. military to Third World gulags; the nonexistence of
W.M.D. in Iraq; the role of Karl Rove and Dick Cheney's chief of staff in
divulging the name of an undercover C.I.A. employee; the non-role of
Saddam Hussein and Iraq in the events of 9/11; the death by friendly fire
of Pat Tillman (whose mother, Mary Tillman, told journalist Robert Scheer,
"The administration tried to attach themselves to his virtue and then they
wiped their feet with him"); the lack of a coherent post-invasion strategy
for Iraq, with all its consequent tragedy and loss and destabilizing
global implications; the failure to coordinate economic policies for
America's long-term financial health (including the misguided tax cuts)
with funding a war that will drive the national debt above a trillion
dollars; the assurance of Wolfowitz (since rewarded by Bush with the
presidency of the World Bank) that Iraq's oil reserves would pay for the
war within two to three years after the invasion; and Bush's like-minded
confidence, expressed to Blair, that serious internecine strife in Iraq
would be unlikely after the invasion.
But most grievous and momentous is the willingness—even enthusiasm,
confirmed by the so-called Downing Street Memo and the contemporaneous
notes of the chief foreign-policy adviser to British prime minister Tony
Blair—to invent almost any justification for going to war in Iraq
(including sending up an American U-2 plane painted with U.N. markings to
be deliberately shot down by Saddam Hussein's air force, a plan hatched
while the president, the vice president, and Blair insisted to the world
that war would be initiated "only as a last resort"). Attending the
meeting between Bush and Blair where such duplicity was discussed
unabashedly ("intelligence and facts" would be jiggered as necessary and
"fixed around the policy," wrote the dutiful aide to the prime minister)
were Ms. Rice, then national-security adviser to the president, and Andrew
Card, the recently departed White House chief of staff.
As with Watergate, the investigation of George W. Bush and his presidency
needs to start from a shared premise and set of principles that can be
embraced by Democrats and Republicans, by liberals and centrists and
conservatives, and by opponents of the war and its advocates: that the
president of the United States and members of his administration must
defend the requirements of the Constitution, obey the law, demonstrate
common sense, and tell the truth. Obviously there will be disagreements,
even fierce ones, along the way. Here again the Nixon example is useful:
Republicans on the Senate Watergate Committee, including its vice
chairman, Howard Baker of Tennessee ("What did the president know and when
did he know it?"), began the investigation as defenders of Nixon. By its
end, only one was willing to make any defense of Nixon's actions.
The Senate Watergate Committee was created (by a 77–0 vote of the Senate)
with the formal task of investigating illegal political-campaign
activities. Its seven members were chosen by the leadership of each party,
three from the minority, four from the majority. (The Democratic majority
leader of the Senate, Mike Mansfield, insisted that none of the Democrats
be high-profile senators with presidential aspirations.) One of the
crucial tasks of any committee charged with investigating the Bush
presidency will be to delineate the scope of inquiry. It must not be a
fishing expedition—and not only because the pond is so loaded with fish.
The lines ought to be drawn so that the hearings themselves do not become
the occasion for the ultimate battle of the culture wars. This
investigation should be seen as an opportunity to at last rise above the
culture wars and, as in Watergate, learn whether the actions of the
president and his deputies have been consistent with constitutional
principles, the law, and the truth.
Karl Rove and other White House strategists are betting (with odds in
their favor) that Republicans on Capitol Hill are extremely unlikely to
take the high road before November and endorse any kind of serious
investigation into Bush's presidency—a gamble that may increase the risk
of losing Republican majorities in either or both houses of Congress, and
even further undermine the future of the Bush presidency. Already in the
White House, there is talk of a nightmare scenario in which the Democrats
successfully make the November congressional elections a referendum on
impeachment—and win back a majority in the House, and maybe the Senate
too.
But voting now to create a Senate investigation—chaired by a
Republican—could work to the advantage both of the truth and of Republican
candidates eager to put distance between themselves and the White House.
The calculations of politicians about their electoral futures should pale
in comparison to the urgency of examining perhaps the most disastrous five
years of decision-making of any modern American presidency.
There are huge differences between the Nixon presidency and this one, of
course, but surprisingly few would appear to redound to this
administration's benefit, including even the fundamental question of the
competence of the president.
First and foremost among the differences may be the role of the vice
president. The excesses of Watergate—the crimes, the lies, the trampling
of the Constitution, the disregard for the institutional integrity of the
presidency, the dutiful and even enthusiastic lawbreaking of Nixon's
apparatchiks—stemmed from one aberrant president's psyche and the paranoid
assumptions that issued from it, and from the notion shared by some of his
White House acolytes that, because U. S. troops were fighting a
war—especially a failing one against a determined, guerrilla enemy in
Vietnam—the commander in chief could assume extraordinary powers nowhere
assigned in the Constitution and govern above the rule of law. "When the
president does it that means that it is not illegal," Nixon famously told
David Frost.
Bush and Cheney have been hardly less succinct about the president's duty
and right to assume unprecedented authority nowhere specified in the
Constitution. "[E]specially in the day and age we live in … the president
of the United States needs to have his Constitutional powers unimpaired,
if you will, in terms of the conduct of national-security policy," Cheney
said less than four months ago.
Bush's doctrine of "unimpairment"—at one with his tendency to trim the
truth—may be (with the question of his competence) the nub of the national
nightmare. "I have the authority, both from the Constitution and the
Congress, to undertake this vital program," Bush said after more than a
few Republican and conservative eminences said he did not and joined the
chorus of outrage about his N.S.A. domestic-surveillance program.
"Terrorism is not the only new danger of this era," noted George F. Will,
the conservative columnist. "Another is the administration's argument that
because the president is commander in chief, he is the 'sole organ for the
nation in foreign affairs' … [which] is refuted by the Constitution's
plain language, which empowers Congress to ratify treaties, declare war,
fund and regulate military forces, and make laws 'necessary and proper'
for the execution of all presidential powers."
A voluminous accumulation of documentary and journalistic evidence
suggests that the policies and philosophy of this administration that may
be illegal and unconstitutional stem not just from Bush but from Cheney as
well—hence there's even greater necessity for a careful, methodical
investigation under Senate auspices before any consideration of
impeachment in the House and its mischievous potential to create the
mother of all partisan, ideological, take-no-prisoners battles, which
would even further divide the Congress and the country.
Cheney's recognition of the danger to him and his patron by a re-assertion
of the Watergate precedent of proper congressional oversight is not hard
to fathom. Illegal wiretapping—among other related crimes—was the basis of
one of the articles of impeachment against Nixon passed by the House
Judiciary Committee. The other two were defiance of subpoenas and
obstruction of justice in the Watergate cover-up. "Watergate and a lot of
the things around Watergate and Vietnam, both during the 1970s, served, I
think, to erode the authority … [that] the president needs to be
effective, especially in the national-security area," Cheney has observed.
Nixon did not share his decision-making, much less philosophizing, with
his vice president, and never relegated his own judgment to a number two.
Former secretary of state Colin Powell's ex-chief of staff, retired army
colonel Larry Wilkerson, has attested, "What I saw was a cabal between the
vice president of the United States, Richard Cheney, and the secretary of
defense, Donald Rumsfeld, on critical issues that made decisions that the
bureaucracy did not know were being made."
Here it may be relevant that Powell has, in private, made statements
interpreted by many important figures in Washington as seemingly
questioning Cheney's emotional stability, and that Powell no longer
recognizes the steady, dependable "rock" with whom he served in the
administration of George W. Bush's father. Powell needs to be asked under
oath about his reported observations regarding Cheney, not to mention his
own appearance before the United Nations in which he spoke with assurance
about Saddam Hussein's possession of weapons of mass destruction and
insisted that the United States was seeking a way to avoid war, not start
it.
Because Powell was regarded by some as the administration "good guy," who
was prescient in his anxiety about Bush's determination to go to war in
Iraq ("You break it, you own it"), he should not be handed a pass
exempting him from tough questioning in a congressional investigation.
Indeed, Powell is probably more capable than any other witness of
providing both fact and context to the whole story of the road to war and
the actions of Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and the others.
One of the similarities between Bush and Nixon is their contempt, lip
service aside, for the legitimate oversight of Congress. In seeking to
cover up his secret, illegal activities, Nixon made broad claims of
executive privilege, many on grounds of national security, the most
important of which were rejected by the courts.
Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, and their colleagues have successfully evaded
accountability for the dire consequences of their policies through a
tried-and-true strategy that has exploited a situation in which the press
(understandably) has no subpoena power and is held in ill repute
(understandably) by so many Americans, and the Republican-controlled
Congress can be counted on to ignore its responsibility to compel
relevant, forthright testimony and evidence—no matter how outrageous
(failure to provide sufficient body armor for American soldiers, for
example), mendacious, or inimical to the national interest the actions of
the president and his principal aides might be.
As in Watergate, the Bush White House has, at almost every opportunity
when endangered by the prospect of accountability, made the conduct of the
press the issue instead of the misconduct of the president and his aides,
and, with help from its Republican and conservative allies in and out of
Congress, questioned the patriotism of the other party. As during the
Nixon epoch, the strategy is finally wearing thin. "He's smoking Dutch
Cleanser," said Specter when Bush's attorney general claimed legality for
the president's secret order authorizing the wiretapping of Americans by
the N.S.A.—first revealed in The New York Times in December.
Before the Times story had broken, the president was ardent about his
civil-libertarian credentials in such matters: "Any time you hear the
United States government talking about wiretap, it requires—a wiretap
requires a court order. Nothing has changed, by the way. When we're
talking about chasing down terrorists, we're talking about getting a court
order before we do so," Bush said in a speech in Buffalo, New York, in
April 2004.
Obviously, Bush's statement was demonstrably untrue. Yet instead of
correcting himself, Bush attacked the Times for virtual treason, and his
aides initiated a full-court press to track down whoever had provided
information to the newspaper. "Our enemies have learned information they
should not have, and the unauthorized disclosure of this effort damages
our national security and puts our citizens at risk," he declared, as if
America's terrorist enemies hadn't assumed they were subject to all manner
of electronic eavesdropping by the world's most technologically
sophisticated nation.
As in the Nixon White House, the search for leakers and others in the
executive branch who might be truthful with reporters has become a
paranoid preoccupation in the Bush White House. "Revealing classified
information is illegal, alerts our enemies, and endangers our country,"
Bush added. (The special prosecutor's revelation that Bush himself—through
Cheney—was ultimately behind Scooter Libby's leaking to undermine Joseph
Wilson has ironically caused Bush more damage among Republican members of
Congress than far more grievous acts by the president.)
Literally dozens of investigations have been ordered at the C.I.A., the
Pentagon, the National Security Agency, and elsewhere in the executive
branch to find out who is talking to the press about secret activities
undertaken in this presidency. These include polygraph investigations and
a warning to the press that reporters may be prosecuted under espionage
laws.
Bush's self-claimed authority to wiretap without a court order—like his
self-claimed authority to hold prisoners of war indefinitely without
habeas corpus (on grounds those in custody are suspected
"terrorists")—stems from the same doctrine of "unimpairment" and all its
Nixonian overtones: "The American people expect me to protect their lives
and their civil liberties, and that's exactly what we're doing with this [N.S.A.
eavesdropping] program," asserted Bush in January.
Then Nixon's former attorney general John N. Mitchell was compelled to
testify before the Watergate Committee, he laid out the sordid "White
House horrors," as he called them—activities undertaken in the name of
national security by the low-level thugs and high-level presidential aides
acting in the president's name. Mitchell, loyal to the end, pictured the
whole crowd, from Haldeman and Ehrlichman and Colson down to Liddy and the
Watergate burglars, as self-starters, acting without authority from Nixon.
The tapes, of course, told the real story—wiretapping, break-ins, attempts
to illegally manipulate the outcome of the electoral process, routine
smearing of the president's opponents and intricate machinations to render
it untraceable, orders to firebomb a liberal think tank, the Watergate
cover-up, and their origin in the Oval Office.
In the case of the Bush administration's two attorneys general, John
Ashcroft and Alberto Gonzales, there are indications that—as in the Nixon
White House—they approved and/or promulgated policies (horrors?) that
would appear intended to enable the president to circumvent the
Constitution and the law.
Ashcroft expressed reservations as early as 2004 about the legality of the
wiretapping authority claimed by Bush, according to recent disclosures in
the press, but Ashcroft's doubts—and the unwillingness of his principal
deputy attorney general to approve central aspects of the N.S.A. domestic
eavesdropping plan—were not made known to the Congress. Gonzales, as White
House counsel, drew up the guidelines authorizing torture at American-run
prisons and U.S. exemption from the Geneva war-crimes conventions
regarding the treatment of prisoners. (His memo to the president described
provisions of the conventions as "quaint.")
"Let me make very clear the position of my government and our country,"
said Bush when confronted with the undeniable, photographic evidence of
torture. "We do not condone torture. I have never ordered torture. I will
never order torture. The values of this country are such that torture is
not a part of our soul and our being." The available facts would indicate
this was an unusually evident example of presidential prevarication, but
we will never know exactly how untruthful, or perhaps just slippery, until
the president and the White House are compelled to cooperate with a real
congressional investigation.
That statement by Bush, in June 2004, in response to worldwide outrage at
the infamous Abu Ghraib photographs, illustrates two related, core
methodologies employed by this president and his cadre to escape
responsibility for their actions: First, an Orwellian reliance on the
meaninglessness of words. (When is "torture" torture? When is "ordered"
"authorized"? When is "if someone committed a crime they will no longer
work in my administration" a scheme to keep trusted aides on the payroll
through a legal process that could take years before adjudication and hide
the president's own role in helping start—perhaps inadvertently—the Plame
ball rolling?)
"Listen, I know of nobody—I don't know of anybody in my administration who
leaked classified information," the president was quoted saying in Time
magazine's issue of October 13, 2003. Time's report then noted with
acuity, "Bush seemed to emphasize those last two words ['classified
information'] as if hanging onto a legal life preserver in choppy seas."
The second method of escape is the absence of formal orders issued down
the chain of command, leaving non-coms, enlisted men and women, and a few
unfortunate non-star officers to twist in the wind for policies emanating
from the president, vice president, secretary of defense, attorney
general, national-security adviser to the president, and current secretary
of state (formerly the national-security adviser). With a determined
effort, a committee of distinguished senators should be able to establish
if the grotesque abuse of Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo was really the work of
a "few bad apples" like Army Reserve Spc. Lynndie England wielding the
leash, or a natural consequence of actions flowing from the Oval Office
and Office of the Secretary of Defense.
In a baker's dozen of hearings before pliant committees of Congress, a
parade of the top brass from Rice to Rumsfeld, to the Joint Chiefs, to
Paul Bremer has managed for almost three years to evade responsibility
for—or even acknowledgment of—the disintegrating situation on the ground
in Iraq, its costs in lives and treasure, and its disastrous
reverberations through the world, and for an assault on constitutional
principles at home. Similarly, until the Senate Watergate hearings, Nixon
and his men at the top had evaded responsibility for Watergate and their
cover-up of all the "White House horrors."
With the benefit of hindsight, it is now almost impossible to look at the
president's handling of the war in Iraq in isolation from his handling of
Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath. Certainly any investigation of the
president and his administration should include both disasters. Before
9/11, Bush and Condoleezza Rice had been warned in the starkest of
terms—by their own aides, by the outgoing Clinton administration, and by
experts on terrorism—of the urgent danger of a spectacular al-Qaeda attack
in the United States. Yet the first top-level National Security Council
meeting to discuss the subject was not held until September 4, 2001—just
as the F.B.I. hierarchy had been warned by field agents that there were
suspected Islamic radicals learning to fly 747s with no legitimate reasons
for doing so, but the bureau ultimately ignored the urgency of problem,
just as Bush had ample opportunity (despite what he said later) to review
and competently execute a disaster plan for the hurricane heading toward
New Orleans.
There will forever be four indelible photographic images of the George W.
Bush epoch: an airplane crashing into World Trade Tower number two; Bush
in a Florida classroom reading from a book about a goat while a group of
second-graders continued to captivate him for another seven minutes after
Andrew Card had whispered to the president, "America is under attack";
floodwaters inundating New Orleans, and its residents clinging to rooftops
for their lives; and, two days after the hurricane struck, Bush peeking
out the window of Air Force One to inspect the devastation from a safe
altitude. The aftermath of the hurricane's direct hit, both in terms of
the devastation and the astonishing neglect and incompetence from the top
down, would appear to be unique in American history. Except for the Civil
War and the War of 1812 (when the British burned Washington), no president
has ever lost an American city; and if New Orleans is not lost, it will
only be because of the heroics of its people and their almost superhuman
efforts to overcome the initial lethargy and apparent non-comprehension of
the president. Bush's almost blank reaction was foretold vividly in a
video of him and his aides meeting on August 28, 2005, the day before
Katrina made landfall. The tape—withheld by the administration from
Congress but obtained by the Associated Press along with seven days of
transcripts of administration briefings—shows Bush and his Homeland
Security chief being warned explicitly that the storm could cause levees
to overflow, put large number of lives at risk, and overwhelm rescuers.
In the wake of the death and devastation in New Orleans, President Bush
refused to provide the most important documents sought by Congress or
allow his immediate aides in the White House to testify before Congress
about decision-making in the West wing or at his Crawford ranch in the
hours immediately before and after the hurricane struck. His refusal was
wrapped in a package of high principle—the need for confidentiality of
executive branch communications—the same principle of preserving
presidential privacy that, presumably, prevented him from releasing
official White House photos of himself with disgraced lobbyist Jack
Abramoff or allowing White House aides to testify about the N.S.A.
electronic-eavesdropping program on grounds of executive privilege.
The unwillingness of this president—a former Texas governor familiar with
the destructive powers of weather—to deal truthfully ("I don't think
anybody anticipated the breach of the levees," he said in an interview
with Good Morning America three days after the hurricane hit) and
meaningfully with the people of the Gulf Coast or the country, or the
Congress, about his government's response ("Brownie, you're doing a heck
of a job") to Hurricane Katrina may be the Rosebud moment of his
presidency. The president's repeated attempts to keep secret his actions
and those of his principal aides by invoking often spurious claims of
executive privilege and national security in the run-up to the war in
Iraq—and its prosecution since—are rendered perfectly comprehensible when
seen in relation to the Katrina claim. It is an effective way to hide the
truth (as Nixon attempted so often), and—when uncomfortable truths have
nonetheless been revealed by others—to justify extraordinary actions that
would seem to be illegal or even unconstitutional.
Is incompetence an impeachable offense? The question is another reason to
defer the fraught matter of impeachment (if deserved) in the Bush era
until the ground is prepared by a proper fact-finding investigation and
public hearings conducted by a sober, distinguished committee of Congress.
We have never had a presidency in which the single unifying thread that
flows through its major decision-making was incompetence—stitched together
with hubris and mendacity on a Nixonian scale. There will be no shortage
of witnesses to question about the subject, among them the retired
three-star Marine Corps general who served as director of operations for
the Joint Chiefs of Staff during the war's planning, Gregory Newbold.
Last week he wrote, "I now regret that I did not more openly challenge
those who were determined to invade a country whose actions were
peripheral to the real threat—Al Qaeda. I retired from the military four
months before the invasion, in part because of my opposition to those who
had used 9/11's tragedy to hijack our security policy." The decision to
invade Iraq, he said, "was done with a casualness and swagger that are the
special province of those who have never had to execute these missions—or
bury the results." Despite the military's determination that, after
Vietnam, "[W]e must never again stand by quietly while those ignorant of
and casual about war lead us into another one and then mismanage the
conduct of it.… We have been fooled again."
The unprecedented generals' revolt against the Secretary of Defense,
Donald Rumsfeld, is—like the special prosecutor's Plame investigation—a
door that once cracked open, cannot be readily shut by the president or
even his most senior aides. What outsiders long suspected regarding the
conduct of the war has now been given credence by those on the inside,
near the top, just as in the unraveling of Watergate.
General Newbold and his fellow retired generals have (as observed
elsewhere in the press) declared Rumsfeld unfit to lead America's military
at almost exactly the moment when the United States must deal with the
most difficult legacy of the Bush presidency: how to pry itself out of
Iraq and deal with the real threat this administration ignored next door,
from Iran.
Rumsfeld appeared Friday on an Al Arabiya television broadcast and said,
"Out of thousands and thousands of admirals and generals, if every time
two or three people disagreed we changed the Secretary of Defense of the
United States, it would be like a merry-go-round." This kind of denial of
reality—and (again) Orwellian abuse of facts and language—to describe six
generals, each with more than 30 years military experience, each of whom
served at the top of their commands (three in Iraq) and worked closely
with Rumsfeld, is indicative of the problem any investigation by the
Senate must face when dealing with this presidency.
And if Rumsfeld is unfit, how is his commander-in-chief, who has
steadfastly refused to let him go (as Nixon did with Haldeman and
Ehrlichman, "two of the finest public servants I have ever known"), to be
judged?
The roadblock to a serious inquiry to date has been a Republican majority
that fears the results, and a Democratic minority more interested in
retribution and grandstanding than the national weal. There are
indications, however, that by November voters may be far more discerning
than they were in the last round of congressional elections, and that
Republicans especially are getting the message. Indeed many are talking
privately about their lack of confidence in Bush and what to do about him.
It took the Senate Watergate Committee less than six months to do its
essential work. When Sam Ervin's gavel fell to close the first phase of
public televised hearings on August 7, 1973, the basic facts of Nixon's
conspiracy—and the White House horrors—were engraved on the nation's
consciousness. The testimony of the president's men themselves—under oath
and motivated perhaps in part by a real threat of being charged with
perjury—left little doubt about what happened in a criminal and
unconstitutional presidency.
On February 6, 1974, the House voted 410 to 4 to empower its Judiciary
Committee to begin an impeachment investigation of the president. On July
27, 1974, the first of three articles of impeachment was approved, with
support from 6 of the 17 Republicans (and 21 Democrats) on the committee.
Two more articles were approved on July 29 and 30. On August 8, facing
certain conviction in a Senate trial, Nixon resigned and Gerald Ford
became president.
In Watergate, Republicans were the ones who finally told Richard Nixon,
"Enough." They were the ones who cast the most critical votes for articles
of impeachment, ensuring that Nixon would be judged with nonpartisan
fairness. After the vote, the Republican congressional leadership—led by
the great conservative senator Barry Goldwater—marched en masse to the
White House to tell the criminal president that he had to go. And if he
didn't, the leadership would recommend his conviction in the Senate and
urge all their Republican colleagues to do the same.
In the case of George W. Bush, important conservative and Republican
voices have, finally, begun speaking out in the past few weeks. William F.
Buckley Jr., founder of the modern conservative movement and, with
Goldwater, perhaps its most revered figure, said last month: "It's
important that we acknowledge in the inner counsels of state that [the war
in Iraq] has failed so that we should look for opportunities to cope with
that failure." And "Mr. Bush is in the hands of a fortune that will be
unremitting on the point of Iraq.… If he'd invented the Bill of Rights it
wouldn't get him out of this jam." And "The neoconservative hubris, which
sort of assigns to America some kind of geo-strategic responsibility for
maximizing democracy, overstretches the resources of a free country."
Even more scathing have been some officials who served in the White House
under Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush's father. Bruce Bartlett, a
domestic policy aide in the Reagan administration, a deputy assistant
treasury secretary for the first President Bush, and author of a new book,
Impostor: How George Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan
Legacy, noted: "A lot of conservatives have had reservations about him for
a long time, but have been afraid to speak out for fear it would help
liberals and the Democrats"—a situation that, until the Senate Watergate
Committee hearings, existed in regard to Nixon. "I think there are growing
misgivings about the conduct of the Iraq operation, and how that relates
to a general incompetence his administration seems to have about doing
basic things," said Bartlett.
After Nixon's resignation, it was often said that the system had worked.
Confronted by an aberrant president, the checks and balances on the
executive by the legislative and judicial branches of government, and by a
free press, had functioned as the founders had envisioned.
The system has thus far failed during the presidency of George W. Bush—at
incalculable cost in human lives, to the American political system, to
undertaking an intelligent and effective war against terror, and to the
standing of the United States in parts of the world where it previously
had been held in the highest regard.
There was understandable reluctance in the Congress to begin a serious
investigation of the Nixon presidency. Then there came a time when it was
unavoidable. That time in the Bush presidency has arrived.
|