*War on the Constitution

*Jordan Paust
Special to The National Law Journal

http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1138356345347
01-30-2006

There are prior and current members of the Bush administration, including
Vice President Dick Cheney, who openly argue that if the country is at war,
the president should be able to ignore domestic and international law
outlawing torture, prohibiting illegal detention, providing due process and
jurisdictional restraints on military commissions and limiting domestic spy
ing under alleged commander in chief powers. Such claims are unacceptable.
Under Article II, Section 3 of our Constitution, the president has an
express and unavoidable duty to faithfully execute the "Laws" and has no
power to violate them. As Richard Nixon learned, presidential authorizations
to violate the law are, in the words of the House Judiciary Committee,
"subversive of constitutional government."

The radical jurisprudence of adherents to the commander-can-violate-laws
theory is not "conservative," since it necessarily ignores views of the
founders and framers and overwhelming recognitions in judicial opinions to
the contrary. In particular, it ignores unanimous recognitions by the
judiciary that all within the executive branch are bound by the laws of war,
and numerous affirmations of a constitutionally based judicial power to
apply law in cases before the courts and ultimately to review executive
decisions taken in time of war.

Since 1800, Supreme Court opinions have also recognized the power of
Congress to limit certain commander in chief powers during actual war. More
generally, this power does not apply outside of an actual war, and the
United States cannot be at "war" with al-Queda or terrorism as such. Even
during actual war, Justice David H. Souter recognized, "the President is not
Commander in Chief of the country, only of the military."

*Domestic spying: no authority*

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and President Bush claim that domestic
spying in manifest violation of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act
(FISA) is permissible under the commander in chief power and is authorized
by Congress in broad language in the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military
Force (AUMF) regarding individuals responsible for the 9/11 attacks. Similar
claims were made in a letter to four members of Congress on Dec. 22 by
Assistant Attorney General William E. Moschella. The claims are patently
false.

With respect to presidential power, Moschella seriously misread the *Prize
Cases* by ignoring the fact that, immediately before the language he quoted,
the Supreme Cour t expressly referred to two early federal statutes that
"authorized . . . [and] bound" the president to use armed force,
demonstrating another instance of congressional power to regulate portions
of the commander in chief power during actual war. Moreover, any "inherent
presidential authority" to spy on Americans at home is not an exclusive
power and has been clearly limited in the FISA.

Additionally, there is no congressional authorization in the AUMF to engage
in domestic spying. First, there is no persuasive evidence that Congress
intended to override any provisions of the FISA. Second, the AUMF contains
no express or implied authorization concerning surveillance. With respect to
executive action, the purpose of the AUMF is clearly contained in the
authorization to use merely "necessary and appropriate force" against those
"nations, organizations, or persons" that "planned, authorized, committed,
or aided" the 9/11 terrorist attacks or that "harbored such . . . pers ons."
The authorization of appropriate "force" is not an authorization to torture
or to use cruel, inhuman, degrading or humiliating treatment against any
person; it is not an authorization to create military commissions that are
otherwise without jurisdiction and fail to provide due process required by
constitutional and international law; and it is certainly not an
authorization to spy on individuals in the United States. The word
"appropriate" also impliedly requires compliance with law.

Third, whatever authorizations exist in the AUMF to use force, it is evident
that they are restricted in two important respects. The first restriction is
recognizable in language reflecting past events. The words "planned,
authorized, committed, or aided" refer to the past and more specifically to
the events of 9/11. The second restriction is more significant. With respect
to the people against whom appropriate force can be directed, the
authorization is expressly tied to those who "pla nned, authorized,
committed, or aided" the 9/11 attacks as such or who "harbored such . . .
persons." Not covered are those who merely have, in the president's words,
"known links" with al-Queda or, in Moschella's words, links with "an
affiliated terrorist organization." Also not covered are misguided people
who merely sympathize with the 9/11 terrorists, people who pose "a threat of
future terrorist attacks" or people who simply communicate with them.

The FISA provides an appropriate national security tool for spying on
transnational communications with the 9/11 and other terrorists. The AUMF
does not do so and offers no aid for presidents and others who violate laws
concerning inhumane treatment of detainees, military commissions and
domestic spying.

*Jordan Paust is the Mike & Teresa Baker Law Center Professor at the
University of Houston and a former captain, U.S. Army judge advocate
general's corps and member of the faculty at the Judge Advocate General' s
School (1969-1973).*



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Nick Arnett
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