The first step, or course, was the first Authorization for Use of
Military Force, passed in September 2001, which the president has
subsequently used to claimimproperly, but so what? that the whole
world, including the US, is a battlefield in a so-called War on
Terror, and that he has extra-Constitutional unitary executive powers
to ignore laws passed by Congress. As constitutional scholar and former
Reagan-era associate deputy attorney general Bruce Fein observes, that
one claim, that the US is itself a battlefield, is enough to allow this
or some future president to declare martial law, since you can always
declare martial law on a battlefield. All hed need would be a pretext,
like another terrorist attack inside the U.S.
The 2001
AUMF was followed by the PATRIOT Act, passed in October 2001, which
undermined much of the Bill of Rights. Around the same time, the
president began a campaign of massive spying on Americans by the
National Security Agency, conducted without any warrants or other
judicial review. It was and remains a program that is clearly aimed at
American dissidents and at the administrations political opponents,
since the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court would never have
raised no objections to spying on potential terrorists. (And it, and
other government spying programs, have resulted in the governments
having a list now of some 325,000 suspected terrorists!)
The
other thing we saw early on was the establishment of an underground
government-within-a-government, though the activation, following 9-11,
of the so-called Continuity of Government protocol, which saw heads
of federal agencies moved secretly to an underground bunker where,
working under the direction of Vice President Dick Cheney, the
government functioned out of sight of Congress and the public for
critical months.
It was also during the first year
following 9-11 that the Bush/Cheney regime began its programs of arrest
and detention without chargemostly of resident aliens, but also of
American citizensand of kidnapping and torture in a chain of gulag
prisons overseas and at the Navy base at Guantanamo Bay.
The
following year, Attorney General John Ashcroft began his program to
develop a mass network of tens of millions of citizen spiesOperation
TIPS. That program, which had considerable support from key Democrats
(notably Sen. Joe Lieberman), was curtailed by Congress when key
conservatives got wind of the scale of the thing, but the concept
survives without a name, and is reportedly being expanded today.
Meanwhile,
last October Bush and Cheney, with the help of a compliant Congress,
put in place some key elements needed for a military putsch. There was
the overturning of the venerable Posse Comitatus Act of 1878, which
barred the use of active duty military inside the United States for
police-type functions, and the revision of the Insurrection Act, so as
to empower the president to take control of National Guard units in the
50 states even over the objections of the governors of those states.
Put
this together with the wholly secret construction now under
way--courtesy of a $385-million grant by the US Army Corps of Engineers
to Halliburton subsidiary KBR Inc--of detention camps reportedly
capable of confining as many as 400,000 people, and a recent report
that the Pentagon has a document, dated June 1, 2007, classified Top
Secret, which declares there to be a developing insurgency within the
U.S, and which lays out a whole martial law counterinsurgency campaign
against legal dissent, and you have all the ingredients for a military
takeover of the United States.
As we go about our daily
lives--our shopping, our escapist movie watching, and even our
protesting and political organizingwe need to be aware that there is a
real risk that it could all blow up, and that we could find ourselves
facing armed, uniformed troops at our doors.
Bruce Fein
isnt an alarmist. He says he doesnt see martial law coming tomorrow.
But he is also realistic. He says, This is all sitting around like a
loaded gun waiting to go off. I think the risk of martial law is
trivial right now, but the minute there is a terrorist attack, then it
is real. And it stays with us after Bush and Cheney are gone, because
terrorism stays with us forever. (It may be significant that Hillary
Clinton, the leading Democratic candidate for president, has called for
the revocation of the 2002 Authorization for Use of Military Force
against Iraq, but not of the earlier 2001 AUMF which Bush claims makes
him commander in chief of a borderless, endless war on terror.)
Indeed,
the revised Insurrection Act (10. USC 331-335) approved by Congress and
signed into law by Bush last October, specifically says that the
president can federalize the National Guard to suppress public
disorder in the event of national disorder, epidemic, other serious
public health emergency, terrorist attack or incident. That
determination, the act states, is solely the presidents to make.
Congress is not involved.
Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT), chair
of the Senate Judiciary Committee, has added an amendment to the
upcoming Defense bill, restoring the Insurrection Act to its former
versiona move that has the endorsement of all 50 governors--but Fein
argues that would not solve the problem, since Bush still claims that
the U.S. is a battlefield. Besides, a Leahy aide concedes that Bush
could sign the next Defense Appropriations bill and then use a signing
statement to invalidate the Insurrection Act rider.
Fein
argues that the only real defense against the looming disaster of a
martial law declaration would be for Congress to vote for a resolution
determining that there is no War on terror. But they are such
cowards they will never do that, he says.
That leaves us with the military.
If
ordered to turn their guns and bayonets on their fellow Americans,
would our heroes in uniform follow their consciences, and their oaths
to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States? Or would
they follow the orders of their Commander in Chief?
It has
to be a plus that National Guard and Reserve units are on their third
and sometimes fourth deployments to Iraq, and are fuming at the abuse.
It has to be a plus that active duty troops are refusing to re-enlist
in drovesespecially mid-level officers.
If we are headed
for martial law, better that it be with a broken military. Maybe if
its broken badly enough, the administration will be afraid to test the
idea.
-------------------
Sidebar: Why US troops should question orders:

Mounting
evidence (1 & 2) that football star Pat Tillman, who famously gave
up a high-paying pro career to sign up as an Army Ranger and fight Al
Qaeda in Afghanistan, may have been assassinated in a high-level
conspiracy to prevent him from returning to the US as a prominent war
critic should make even hardened military people question orders from
their commander in chief, particularly if those orders involve
arresting or shooting American citizens. Tillman, it is now known, had
turned strongly against the war in Iraq as early as late 2003, and was
telling his platoon to vote against Bush. There are reports too that he
was contacting war critics like Noam Chomsky from Afghanistan about
coming out as a war critic in 2004--a prospect which must have
terrified the war-mongers in the White House and Pentagon.
The
military initially claimed Tillman had been killed in combat, then
later claimed his death was from friendly fire. It is now known that an
investigation at the time found no evidence of any enemy fire at all,
and Tillman's death came from three close shots from an M-16 to the
forehead, execution-style. Memos have been found from Pentagon lawyers
congratulating each other for having buried a doctor's report on the
possibility of murder.
If this is what the government does to its critics, how can soldiers believe anything they are being told?
Of course, the shabby treatment afforded to insured troops should also be having an effect on morale.
Maybe
the way to respond to a declaration of martial law is, like the
Israelites on the first Passover, to prominently display a sign on
one's front door saying, "Support the troops: Bring them home!"