by Dave Lindorff
Forget Nancy Pelosi's "100 Hours" agenda for the new Democratic Congress.
The first thing Democrats need to do when they walk into the Senate and
House chambers this January is to vote out a joint resolution repealing
the September 18, 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF),
which was the authorization for the U.S. attack Al Qaeda forces and the
Taliban government of Afghanistan.
That AUMF has been used,
wholly inappropriately and wantonly, by President Bush as the
justification for his assault on the US Constitution, for his willful
violation of laws domestic and international, and for his
unconstitutional usurpation of legislative and judicial power.
The president has claimed that the AUMF, far from simply being an
authorization to go to war against Afghanistan and against the Al Qaeda
organization there, was an open-ended authorization for him to initiate
an unending "War on Terror," which he has subsequently claimed has no
boundaries, and will be fought around the globe and within the U.S.
Bush has further claimed, without a shred of Constitutional authority,
that this AUMF makes him commander in chief in that never-ending global
conflict, and that as commander in chief, he is not bound by either law
or Constitution. It is this spurious and sweeping claim of dictatorial
power that the president has used to justify his signing statements,
which he has used to render inoperative in whole or in part some 850 or
more acts passed by Congress since 9-11. It is this same claim that the
president has used to justify his deliberate violation of the 1978
Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act-a felony and violation of the
Fourth Amendment.
It is likewise this AUMF that he has used to
justify his authorization of torture, kidnapping and detention without
charge, his refusal to answer legitimate requests for information from
Congress and the 9-11 commission, and his ignoring of direct orders
from the federal courts.
All of these actions by the president
are manifestly unconstitutional, and cry out for his impeachment. (The
Constitution clearly defines and limits the president's commander in
chief role to simply making him the senior officer of the military, not
a generalissimo. Furthermore, as Barbara Olshanski and I explain in our
book "The Case for Impeachment," the AUMF never gave Bush any authority
at all to conduct war inside the U.S. (In fact, Tom Daschle, who as a
Democratic Senator from South Dakota was the Senate Majority Leader at
the time the AUMF was passed, specifically denied a last-minute request
from the White House to have the words "in the United States" inserted
into the wording of the resolution authorization.)
Bush should
be impeached for all of his abuses of power, as well as for many other
crimes, such as his deception in leading the nation into an illegal war
against Iraq. But clearly, it will take time for a growing mass
movement to pressure a timid Democratic leadership into taking their
oath of office seriously and initiating impeachment proceedings.
Meanwhile, Congress can pull the rug out from under this usurper right away by simply revoking the September AUMF.
There is no justification for the continuation of the 2001 AUMF.
Afghanistan is no longer a war. The U.S. is simply contributing
military assets to a NATO action in that country at the request of the
elected government in Kabul. Such an action requires no AUMF.
Meanwhile, the prevention of terror is clearly an intelligence and
police issue, not a war. It too does not require an AUMF.
A
simple majority vote of House and Senate would put the U.S.
Constitution back in place, and would restore the balance of power
between executive, legislative and judicial branches.
Then
Congress can get to work on investigating the crimes and abuses of this
administration, and to passing progressive legislation without fear of
further unconstitutional signing statements and further presidential
law-breaking.
So how about it Rep. Pelosi and Senator Reid? Are you ready to uphold and defend the Constitution?


Mister Wong
Digg
Del.icio.us
Slashdot
Furl
Yahoo
Technorati
Newsvine
Googlize this
Blinklist
Facebook
Wikio