Editor's Note:
In the above segment of Bill Moyers Journal which aired Friday evening,
John Nichols of The Nation magazine states the case for impeachment
against President Bush, and Bruce Fein, a former Justice Department
official during the Reagan administration who drafted articles of
impeachment against Bill Clinton, provides the reasons he believes
Clinton deserved to be impeached. This video clip is a portion of the
full two part video program on impeachment (transcript below) that can
be viewed here.
Impeachment...the
word feared and loathed by every sitting president is back. It's in the
air and on your computer screen, a growing clamor aimed at both President
Bush and Vice-President Cheney.
This
week's news only agitated the clamor. The president acknowledged that
someone in his administration did leak the name of a CIA agent to the
press, but he said let's move on - even as he refused to let his former
White House counsel testify to Congress about political influence at the
Justice Department.
So
the talk in Washington was of executive arrogance. All the more so as the
Democratic House voted to withdraw US troops from Iraq by next spring
despite a threat of veto by President Bush. A public opinion poll from the
American Research Group reports that more than four in ten Americans - 45
per cent-favor impeachment hearings for President Bush and more than half
-54 per cent - favor putting Vice President Cheney in the dock.
Are
these the first tremors of a major shock wave…or just much ado about
nothing? First, let's take a look at the last time a president found
himself fighting off an impeachment campaign. It happened less than a
dozen years ago. And what was the issue:
President
Bill Clinton: I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Miss
Lewinsky...
Bill
Moyers: But he did. And even after that denial in early 1998,
President Clinton lied again seven months later - this time under oath to
a federal grand jury. But that very evening he had a change of heart.
President
Bill Clinton: "Indeed, I did have a relationship with Miss
Lewinsky that was not appropriate. In fact, it was wrong….I know that my
public comments and my silence about this matter gave a false impression.
I misled people, including even my wife. I deeply regret that."
Bill
Moyers: For one powerful Republican member of Congress, an apology
wasn't enough. Tom Delay, then the majority whip of the House, convinced
speaker Newt Gingrich and Republican leaders that Clinton's lie called for
nothing less than removing the president from office - impeachment.
Special prosecutor Kenneth Starr was commissioned to gather the evidence.
Starr eventually sent 36 boxes of evidence to the capitol. They catalogued
his investigation of Clinton's finances, a sexual harassment suit filed by
Paula Jones and sting operations mounted by the prosecutor to uncover the
details of the Lewinsky affair. Nearly 500 pages summarizing the report
were quickly posted on the internet. For the next month, the house
judiciary committee waded through the report. What the case meant depended
largely on party affiliation. Democrats insisted it all came down to lying
about sex.
Rep.
Robert Wexler (D-FL): The president betrayed his wife ...he did not
betray his country
Bill
Moyers: Republicans, who controlled the House, argued it was about
something more important.
Rep.
Bill McCollum (R-FL): Truthfullness is the glue that holds our justice
system together
Rep.
Bob Barr (R-GA): With his conduct and his arrogance...William
Jefferson Clinton has thrown a gauntlet at the feet of the Congress.
Rep.
John Conyers Jr. (D-MI): This is not Watergate. This is an
extramarital affair.
Rep.
James Sensenbrenner (R-WI): Even the president of the United States
does not have the license to lie.
Rep.
Robert Wexler (D-FL): Wake up, America, they are about to impeach our
president.
Bill
Moyers: on october 5, 1998, the house judiciary committee authorized a
full impeachment inquiry……only the third u.s. president in history to
be seriously threatened with removal from office. The constitution says a
president may be impeached for "treason, bribery or other high crimes
and misdemeanors". Experts were called to interpret those words:
Leon
Higginbotham Jr., Former US Appeals Court Judge: There has never been,
never been an impeachment proceeding on this miniscule level...
Arthur
Schlesinger, Jr., University of New York: All the independent
counsel's charges thus far derive from the president's lies about his sex
life. His attempts to hide personal misbehavior are certainly disgraceful.
But if they are to be deemed impeachable, then we reject the standards
laid down by the framers in the Constitution and trivialize the process of
impeachment.
Prof.
Alan Dershowitz, Harvard University: The only reason the majority of
this committee cares about perjury is because they believe that President
Clinton, their political opponent, is guilty of it.
Bill
Moyers: The House Judiciary listened…and then drafted two articles
of impeachment accusing Clinton of perjury…a third accusing him of
obstruction of justice and yet a fourth, of making false statements. A
week later, December 19, 1998, the full House met to consider the
articles. They approved two of them…one for perjury…another for
obstruction of justice. Republican leaders called for Clinton to resign.
He didn't, and now it was the Senate's constitutional task to conduct the
impeachment trial ordered by the House. The Senators met behind closed
doors …and on Friday, February 12, 1999, the verdict was delivered to
the chief justice of the Supreme Court.
Chief
Justice William Rehnquist: Is not guilty as charged in the second
article of impeachment.
President
Clinton: I want to say again to the American people how profoundly
sorry I am for what I said and did to trigger these events and the great
burden they have imposed on the Congress and on the American people.
Bill
Moyers: One of the fellows you're about to meet wrote the first
article of impeachment against President Clinton. Bruce Fein did so
because perjury is a legal crime. And Fein believed no one is above the
law. A constitutional scholar, Bruce Fein served in the Justice Department
during the Reagan administration and as general counsel of the Federal
Communications Commission. Bruce Fein has been affiliated with
conservative think tanks such as the American Enterprise Institute and the
Heritage Foundation and now writes a weekly column for THE WASHINGTON
TIMES and Politico.com.
He's
joined by John Nichols, the Washington correspondent for THE NATION and an
associate editor of the CAPITOL TIMES. Among his many books is this most
recent one, THE GENIUS OF IMPEACHMENT: THE FOUNDERS' CURE FOR ROYALISM.
Good to see you both. Bruce, you wrote that article of impeachment against
Bill Clinton. Why did you think he should be impeached?
Bill
Moyers: Bruce you wrote that article of impeachment against Bill
Clinton. Why did you think he should be impeached?
Bruce
Fein: I think he was setting a precedent that placed the president
above the law. I did not believe that the initial perjury or misstatements
- that came perhaps in a moment of embarrassment stemming from the Paula
Jones lawsuit was justified impeachment if he apologized. Even his second
perjury before the grand jury when Ken Starr's staff was questioning him,
as long as he expressed repentance, would not have set an example of
saying every man, if you're president, is entitled to be a law unto
himself. I think Bush's crimes are a little bit different. I think they're
a little bit more worrisome than Clinton's. You don't have to have -
Bill
Moyers: More worrisome?
Bruce
Fein: More worrisome than Clinton's - because he is seeking more
institutionally to cripple checks and balances and the authority of
Congress and the judiciary to superintend his assertions of power. He has
claimed the authority to tell Congress they don't have any right to know
what he's doing with relation to spying on American citizens, using that
information in any way that he wants in contradiction to a federal statute
called the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. He's claimed authority
to say he can kidnap people, throw them into dungeons abroad, dump them
out into Siberia without any political or legal accountability. These are
standards that are totally anathema to a democratic society devoted to the
rule of law.
Bill
Moyers: You're talking about terrifying power but this is a terrifying
time. People are afraid of those people abroad who want to kill us. Do you
think, in any way, that justifies the claims that Bruce just said Bush has
made?
John
Nichols: I think that the war on terror, as defined by our president,
is perpetual war. And I think that he has acted precisely as Madison
feared. He has taken powers unto himself that were never intended to be in
the executive. And, frankly, that when an executive uses them, in the way
that this president has, you actually undermine the process of uniting the
country and really focusing the country on the issues that need to be
dealt with. Let's be clear. If we had a president who was seeking to
inspire us to take seriously the issues that are in play and to bring all
the government together, he'd be consulting with Congress. He'd be working
with Congress. And, frankly, Congress, through the system of checks and
balances, would be preventing him from doing insane things like invading
Iraq.
Bruce
Fein: In the past, presidents like Abe Lincoln, who confronted a far
dire emergency in the Civil War than today, sought congressional
ratification approval of his emergency measures. He didn't seek to hide
them from the people and from Congress and to prevent there to be
accountability. And, of course, Congress did ratify what he had done.
Secondly, sure, times can be terrifying. But that also should alert us to
the fact that we can make mistakes. The executive can make mistakes.
Take
World War II. We locked up 120,000 Japanese Americans, said they were all
disloyal. Well, we got 120,000 mistakes. They lost their property. They
lost their liberty for years and years because we made a huge mistake. And
that can be true after 9/11 as well. No one wants other downgrade the fact
that we have abominations out there and people want to kill us. But we
should not inflate the danger and we should not cast aside what we are as
a people. We can fight and defeat these individuals, these criminals,
based upon our system of law and justice. It's not a - we have a fighting
constitution. It's always worked in the past. But it still remains the
constitution of checks of balances.
Bill
Moyers: A fighting constitution -
Bruce
Fein: It's a fighting constitution that enables us-
Bill
Moyers: What do you mean?
Bruce
Fein: That with the - with the consent of Congress and the president
working hand in glove with consistent with due process of law, we have the
authority to suspend habeas corpus in times of invasion or rebellion. It
has enabled us to defeat all of our enemies consistent with the law.
Bill
Moyers: Congress did not stand up to George Bush for five years when
it was controlled by Republicans. And I don't see any strong evidence that
the Democrats are playing the role that you think the Congress should be
playing.
Bruce
Fein: That is correct. But it doesn't exculpate the president that
Congress has not sought immediately to sanctions his excesses.
Bruce
Fein: - exactly right. And Bill, this could not happen if we had a
Congress that was aggressive, if we had a Congress the likes of Watergate
when Nixon was president and he tried to - obstruct justice and defeat the
course of law. We have a Congress that basically is an invertebrate.
Bill
Moyers: But why is Congress supine?
John
Nichols: They are supine for two reasons. One, they are politicians
who do not - quite know how to handle the moment. And they know that
something very bad happened on September 11th, 2001, now five years ago,
six years ago. And they don't know how to respond to it. Whereas Bush and
Karl Rove have responded in a supremely political manner to it and,
frankly, jumped around them. That's one part of the problem.
Bill
Moyers: Jumped around Congress?
John
Nichols: Jumped around Congress at every turn. I mean, they don't even
tell them, they don't consult with them. They clearly have no regard for
the checks and balances. But the other thing that's - in play here - and I
think this is a - much deeper problem. I think the members of our Congress
have no understanding of the Constitution. And as a result, they - don't
understand their critical role in the governance of the country.
They
- it - when the Republicans are in charge, they see their job as
challenging - or as supporting the president in whatever he does,
defending him, making it possible for him to do whatever he wants. When
the Democrats are in charge, they seem to see their role as trying to
score political points as opposed to what ought to be sort of a - common
ground of -
Bill
Moyers: - because the fact of the matter is approaching an - election
year, you don't really think, do you, that the Democrats want to
experience a backlash by taking on a Republican president in an election-
John
Nichols: Well, it -
Bill
Moyers: - or that the Republicans want to impeach an administration
that they elected in 2000 and reelected in 2004? There is a political
element here, right?
Bruce
Fein: There's always going to be a political element, Bill. But in the
past, there's always been a few statesmen who have said, "You know,
the political fallout doesn't concern me as much as the Constitution of
the United States." We have to keep that undefiled throughout
posterity 'cause if it's not us, it will corrode. It will disappear on the
installment plan. And that has been true in the past. When we had during
Watergate Republicans and remember Barry Goldwater, Mr. Republican, who
approached the president and said, "You've got to resign." There
have always been that cream who said the country is more important than my
party. We don't have that anymore.
Bill
Moyers: It seems to me the country is ahead of Congress on this. How
do you explain all this talk about impeachment today out across the
country?
John
Nichols: People don't want to let this go. They do not accept Nancy
Pelosi's argument that impeachment is, quote/unquote, off the table.
Because I guess maybe they're glad she didn't take some other part of the
Constitution off the table like freedom of speech. But they also don't
accept the argument that, oh, well, there's a presidential campaign going
on. So let's just hold our breath till Bush and Cheney get done.
When
I go out across America, what I hear is something that's really very
refreshing and very hopeful about this country. An awfully lot of
Americans understand what Thomas Jefferson understood. And that is that
the election of a president does not make him a king for four years. That
if a president sins against the Constitution - and does damage to the
republic, the people have a right in an organic process to demand of their
House of Representatives, the branch of government closest to the people,
that it act to remove that president. And I think that sentiment is afoot
in the land.
Bill
Moyers: This is the first time I've heard talk of impeaching both a
president and a vice-president. I mean, this - as you saw in that poll,
more people want to impeach Dick Cheney than George Bush. What's going on?
Bruce
Fein: Well, this is an unusual affair of president/vice-president,
where the vice-president is de facto president most of the time. And
that's why most of people recognize that these decisions, especially when
it comes to overreaching with executive power, are the product of Dick
Cheney and his aide, David Addington, not George Bush and Alberto Gonzalez
or Harriet Miers, who don't have the cerebral capacity to think of these
devilish ideas. And for that reason, they equate the administration more
with Dick Cheney than with George Bush.
Bill
Moyers: Bruce, you talk about overreaching. What, in practical terms,
do you mean by that?
Bruce
Fein: It means asserting powers and claiming that there are no other
branches that have the authority to question it. Take, for instance, the
assertion that he's made that when he is out to collect foreign
intelligence, no other branch can tell him what to do. That means he can
intercept your e-mails, your phone calls, open your regular mail, he can
break and enter your home. He can even kidnap you, claiming I am seeking
foreign intelligence and there's no other branch Congress can't say it's
illegal - judges can't say this is illegal. I can do anything I want. That
is overreaching. When he says that all of the world, all of the United
States is a military battlefield because Osama bin Laden says he wants to
kill us there, and I can then use the military to go into your homes and
kill anyone there who I think is al-Qaeda or drop a rocket, that is
overreaching. That is a claim even King George III didn't make -
Bruce
Fein: - at the time of the Revolution.
John
Nichols: Can I - can I -
Bruce
Fein: That is clearly overreaching.
John
Nichols: Let me keep us on Cheney for a second here, because that is -
Bill
Moyers: You think Cheney should be subject to impeachment hearings?
John
Nichols: Without a doubt. Cheney is, for all practical purposes, the
foreign policy president of the United States. There are many domestic
policies in which George Bush really is the dominant player. But on
foreign policy Dick Cheney has been calling the shots for six years and he
continues to call the shots. Remember back in 2000, in the presidential
debates, George Bush said America should be a humble country in the world,
shouldn't go about nation building. And Dick Cheney, in the
vice-presidential debate, spent eight minutes talking about Iraq.
Now
the fact of the matter is that on foreign policy, Dick Cheney believes
that the executive branch should be supreme. He said this back to the days
when he was in the House during Iran-Contra. He wrote the minority report
saying Congress shouldn't sanction the president in any way, President
Reagan.
Bill
Moyers: And he's always taken an expansive -
John
Nichols: Right.
Bill
Moyers: - view of presidential power.
John
Nichols: And put these pieces together. If Cheney believes in this
expansive power. You've got a - unique crisis, a unique problem because
the vice-president of the United States believes that Congress shouldn't
even be a part of the foreign policy debate. And he is setting the foreign
policy. I mean -
Bill
Moyers: I served a president who went to war on his own initiative,
and it was a mess, Vietnam, Lyndon Johnson. There wasn't serious talk
about impeaching Lyndon Johnson or Hubert Humphrey. Something is different
today.
Bruce
Fein: Yeah, of course, the - difference is one thing to claim that,
you know, Gulf of Tonkin resolution, was too broadly drafted. But we're
talking about assertions of power that affect the individual liberties of
every American citizen. Opening your mail, your e-mails, your phone calls.
Breaking and entering your homes. Creating a pall of fear and intimidation
if you say anything against the president you may find retaliation very
quickly. We're claiming he's setting precedents that will lie around like
loaded weapons anytime there's another 9/11.
Right
now the victims are people whose names most Americans can't pronounce. And
that's why they're not so concerned. They will start being Browns and
Jones and Smiths. And that precedent is being set right now. And one of
the dangers that I see is it's not just President Bush but the
presidential candidates for 2008 aren't standing up and saying -
Bruce
Fein: - "If I'm president, I won't imitate George Bush."
That shows me that this is a far deeper problem than Mr. Bush and Cheney.
Bill
Moyers: That struck me about your writings and your book. You say your
great - your great fear is that Bush and Cheney will hand off to their
successors a toolbox that they will not avoid using.
John
Nichols: Well, let's try a metaphor. Let's say that - when George
Washington chopped down the cherry tree, he used the wood to make a little
box. And in that box the president puts his powers. We've taken things
out. We've put things in over the years.
On
January 20th, 2009, if George Bush and Dick Cheney are not appropriately
held to account this administration will hand off a toolbox with more
powers than any president has ever had, more powers than the founders
could have imagined. And that box may be handed to Hillary Clinton or it
may be handed to Mitt Romney or Barack Obama or someone else. But whoever
gets it, one of the things we know about power is that people don't give
away the tools. They don't give them up. The only way we take tools out of
that box is if we sanction George Bush and Dick Cheney now and say the
next president cannot govern as these men have.
Bruce
Fein: Well, that's accurate but also we do find this peculiarity that
Congress is giving up powers voluntarily. because there's nothing right
now, Bill, that would prevent Congress from the immediate shutting down
all of George Bush's and Dick Cheney's illegal programs. Simply saying
there's no money to collect foreign intelligence-
Bill
Moyers: The power of the purse-
Bruce
Fein: - the power of the purse. That is an absolute power. And yet
Congress shies from it. It was utilized during the Vietnam War, you may
recall, in 1973. Congress said there's no money to go and extend the war
into Laos and Cambodia. And even President Nixon said okay. This was a
president who at one time said, "If I do it, it's legal." So
that it we do find Congress yielding the power to the executive branch.
It's the very puzzle that the founding fathers would have been stunned at.
They worried most over the legislative branch in, you know, usurping
powers of the other branches. And -
Bill
Moyers: Well, what you just said indicts the Congress more than you're
indicting George Bush and Dick Cheney.
Bruce
Fein: In some sense, yes, because the founding fathers expected an
executive to try to overreach and expected the executive would be hampered
and curtailed by the legislative branch. And you're right. They have
basically renounced - walked away from their responsibility to oversee and
check. It's not an option. It's an obligation when they take that oath to
faithfully uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States. And I
think the reason why this is. They do not have convictions about the
importance of the Constitution. It's what in politics you would call the
scientific method of discovering political truths and of preventing
excesses because you require through the processes of review and vetting
one individual's perception to be checked and - counterbalanced by
another's. And when you abandon that process, you abandon the ship of
state basically and it's going to capsize.
John
Nichols: Can I mention another branch of government?
Bill
Moyers: Yeah, sure.
John
Nichols: Let me mention the unspoken branch of government, which is
the fourth estate: The media. The fact of the matter is the founders
anticipated that presidents would overreach. And they anticipated that at
times politics would cause Congress to be a weaker player or a
dysfunctional player. But they always assumed that the press would alert
the people, that the press would tell the people. And the fact of the
matter is I think that our media in the last few years has done an
absolutely miserable job of highlighting the constitutional issues that
are in play. You know, you can't have torture and extraordinary rendition.
You cannot have spying. You cannot have a - lying to Congress. You cannot
have what happened to Joe Wilson and Valerie Plame, you know?
Bill
Moyers: When she was outed and they tried to punish -
John
Nichols: Plotted out of the vice-president's office without question.
Notations of the vice-president on news articles saying, "Let's go
get this guy." Right? You know, you can't have that and not have a
media going and saying to the president at press conferences, you know,
"Aren't - isn't what you're doing a violation of the
Constitution?" Now, just imagine if the - if the members of the White
House Press Corps on a regular basis were saying to Tony Snow, "But
hasn't what the president's done here violated the Constitution?" The
whole national dialogue would shift. And Congress itself would suddenly
become a better player. So I'm not absolving Congress. I'm certainly not
absolving Bush and Cheney. But I am saying that we have a media problem
here as well.
Bruce
Fein: Let me underscore one of the things that you remember, Bill,
'cause I was there at the time of Watergate. And this relates to one
political - official in the White House, Sara Taylor's testimony. And
claiming that George Bush could tell her to be silent.
Bill
Moyers: That was a great moment when Sara Taylor said, "I took an
oath to uphold the president." Did you see that?
Bruce
Fein: Yes. And that was like the military in Germany saying, "My
oath is to the Fuhrer, not to the country." She took an oath to
uphold the Constitution of the United States. I did, too, when I was in
the government. There's no oath that says, "I'm loyal to a president
even if he defiles the Constitution."
John
Nichols: Ever.
Bill
Moyers: Just this week Harriet Miers, the president's former counsel,
did not show up to testify before the congressional hearing. What do you
make of that in regard to this issue of power?
Bruce
Fein: Well, it shows how far we've come from even the mon -
monarchical days of Richard Nixon where he didn't have the audacity to
tell John Dean, "No, you can't testify before the Watergate committee
about conversations you had with me about obstructing justice or
otherwise."
Bill
Moyers: John Dean was his counsel -
Bruce
Fein: White House counsel -
Bill
Moyers: - just as Harriet Miers -
Bruce
Fein: - is to President Bush. Yes.
Bill
Moyers: And Nixon said to Dean, "You must go up there and
testify"?
Bruce
Fein: No. He didn't attempt to impose any objection at all. And Dean,
of course, broke the Watergate story that led to Nixon's impeachment and
the House's judiciary committee -
Bill
Moyers: And look what -
Bruce
Fein: - and resignation. And now we have a comparable situation where
a Harriet Miers could perhaps expose things regarding President - Bush's
knowledge of the electronic surveillance program or the firing of U.S.
attorneys, which seems to contradict what Alberto Gonzalez has said about
White House involvement. And yet President Bush is saying, "You can't
talk, Harriet Miers, because I don't want any of that political or legal
embarrassment." And unlike John Dean who brought the Constitution
forward with his testimony, Harriet Miers still is silent.
Bill
Moyers: And you would put that in the bill of particular about
impeachment?
Bruce
Fein: Certainly with regard to the one example of the abuse of
presidential authority, seeking to obstruct a legitimate congressional
investigation by a preposterous assertion of executive privilege.
Remember, in a democracy, in - under the Constitution, transparency and
sunshine is the rule. The exception is only for matters of grave national
security secrets. That certainly doesn't apply here.
Bill
Moyers: How does the Scooter Libby affair play into this? Do you think
that people - I mean, how did the Scooter Libby thing play into this?
People seem really angry about this. And this is, to me, where the tipping
point came.
John
Nichols: If it wasn't for the president's commutation of Scooter
Libby's sentence, we would not be sitting at this table and talking right
now.
Bill
Moyers: About impeachment?
John
Nichols: About impeachment. That sentence opened up a dialogue in this
country and even in Congress. A number of members of Congress stepped up
and signed on to Dennis Kucinich's articles of impeachment against
Vice-president Cheney after the Scooter Libby commutation.
John
Nichols: We're talking tonight because of the Scooter Libby affair.
And -
Bill
Moyers: You mean the impeachment -
John
Nichols: You - we're at this table because the fact of the matter is
that impeachment has moved well up the list of things we can talk about
because of the Scooter Libby affair. Now, should it be the - one that
tipped it? I think Bruce and I would probably both agree no. There are
probably more important issues. But the Scooter Libby affair gets to the
heart of what I think an awfully lot of Americans are concerned about with
this administration and with the executive branch in - general, that it is
lawless, that - it can rewrite the rules for itself, that it can protect
itself.
And,
you know, the founders anticipated just such a moment. If you look at the
discussions in the Federalist Papers but also at the Constitutional
Convention, when they spoke about impeachment, one of the things that
Madison and George Mason spoke about was the notion that you needed the
power to impeach particularly as regards to pardons and commutations
because a president might try to take the burden of the law off members of
his administration to prevent them from cooperating with Congress in order
to expose wrongdoings by the president himself. And so Madison said that
is why we must have the power to impeach. Because otherwise a president
might be able to use his authority and pardons and such to prevent an
investigation from getting to him.
Bill
Moyers: Are you suggesting that Libby had the goods on Cheney and
Bush?
John
Nichols: I think the bottom line is Scooter Libby was involved in
conversations that, frankly, if those conversations were brought up, the
American people would be very helpful to our discourse about whether we
entered this war illegally and whether we've continued this war in ways
which we never should have.
Bruce
Fein: I think the spark against the Libby commutation is a little bit
different focus. I think it's less on the idea he's covering up for Cheney
or Bush than the indication that Bush is totally heedless of any honor for
law and accountability. That he has special rules for him and his cabinet.
You may recall at the outset of the investigation he said, "Anybody
in my office who is responsible for this leak will not work for me."
Karl Rove was shown to leak and Karl Rove was still sitting in the White
House. And he says, "Well, he will issue a commutation here."
But he's not issued commutations in similar circumstances to anybody else.
Moreover,
the perjury of the obstruction of justice of Libby is a carbon copy of
Clinton, which Republicans, including me, supported. That's why I said
you've got to give a stiff sentence here. How can you say that Clinton's
deserves impeachment and here you're communing someone who did the same
thing. And it's that sort of outrage that this is now a sneering attitude
towards everybody else. "I am king. You play by other people's rules,
but as long as I am in the White House, I get to play by my rules."
That is something that-
Bruce
Fein: - offends everybody.
Bill
Moyers: Sneering is not an impeachable offense.
Bruce
Fein: Screening in isolation is not but this is combined with all of
the other things he's done outside the law. The intelligence gathering,
the enemy combatant status, the kidnappings in - dungeons abroad, all in
secret and never disclosing anything to Congress or the American people.
Indeed, we couldn't even be discussing some of these issues here like the
foreign intelligence collection program if it weren't leaked to the New
York Times. If he had his way, this would be secret forever.
John
Nichols: Sneering is not an impeachable sentence. But the founders who
had recently fought a revolution against a king named George would tell
you that monarchical behavior, the behavior of a king, acting like a king,
is an impeachable offense. You need not look for specific laws or
statutes. What you need to look for is a pattern of behavior that says
that the presidency is superior not merely to Congress but to the laws of
the land, to the rules of law. And that is why we ought to be discussing
impeachment. Not because of George Bush and Dick Cheney but because we are
establishing a presidency that does not respect the rule of law. And
people, Americans, are rightly frightened by that. Their fear is the fear
of the founders. It is appropriate. It is necessary.
Bill
Moyers: Very quickly, is there a - you and I have been on almost
parallel tracks. I'm older than you. But we've been in the been in and
around the presidency. We've been in Washington during the Cold War and
now the war on terrorism. Is there a pathology at work here in the
presidency that deeply troubles you?
Bruce
Fein: Well, it's - I'm not sure I would call it a pathology in the
sense that the founding fathers understood how power and national security
affairs would naturally tend to aggrandize the executive branch. But I do
think that we have this deforming of the Constitution when we have become
a superpower and we have been engaged then in global politics which
naturally gravitate authority to the executive branch. And what the
founding fathers couldn't have understood is why Congress has taken such a
back seat.
And
the American people I think, because the executive branch has tried to
exploit the natural fear factor instead of explaining this - yes, we have
a right to be concerned but we can do this within the law. They've
exploited that fear and say, "No, we've got to go outside the
law." And that's something that I'd say is very deep seated and it's
continued - started with the - Gulf of Tonkin resolution, you know, with
the administration, Johnson administration, and continued on with Nixon
and Ford and Carter. And it's - had, you know, periods where it's been
allegro and then adagio. So the speed has changed but otherwise the
direction has been the same.
Bill
Moyers: So practically, what do you think should happen now? And what
do people listening, what can they do?
Bruce
Fein: I think what ought to happen is there needs to be these hearings
in the judiciary hearing this is why we care.
Bill
Moyers: Impeachment hearing -
Bruce
Fein: Impeachment -
Bruce
Fein: This is why these are -
Bill
Moyers: You're saying you want the judiciary committee to call formal
hearings on the impeachment of George Bush and Dick Cheney?
Bruce
Fein: Yes. Because there are political crimes that have been
perpetrated in combination. It hasn't been one, the other being in
isolation. And the hearings have to be not into this is a Republican or
Democrat. This is something that needs to set a precedent, whoever
occupies the White House in 2009. You do not want to have that occupant,
whether it's John McCain or Hillary Clinton or Rudy Giuliani or John
Edwards to have this authority to go outside the law and say, "I am
the law. I do what I want. No one else's view matters."
John
Nichols: The hearings are important. There's no question at that. And
we should be at that stage. Remember, Thomas Jefferson and others, the
founders, suggested that impeachment was an organic process. That
information would come out. The people would be horrified. They would tell
their representatives in Congress, "You must act upon this."
Well, the interesting thing is we are well down the track in the organic
process. The people are saying it's time. We need some accountability.
Bill
Moyers: But Nancy Pelosi doesn't agree.
John
Nichols: Nancy Pelosi is wrong. Nancy Pelosi is disregarding her oath
of office. She should change course now. And more importantly, members of
her caucus and responsible Republicans should step up. It is not enough -
Bill
Moyers: Well, Bruce is not the only conservative -
John
Nichols: - and others are. But -
Bill
Moyers: And Bob Barr, who's been here.
Bruce
Fein: David Keene
John
Nichols: But they do so, by and large, in a cautious way. They say,
"Well, the president's done too much." Let's start to use the
"i" word. Impeach is a useful word. It is a necessary word. The
founders in the Constitution made no mention of corporation or political
parties or conventions or primaries or caucuses. But they made six
separate references to impeachment. They wanted us to know this word, and
they wanted us to use it.
Bill
Moyers: You're - does this process have to go all the way to the end?
Do Bush and Cheney have to be impeached before it serves the public?
John
Nichols: I think that what Bush and Cheney have done makes a very good
case that the public and the future would be well served if it did go all
the way to the end. But there is absolutely a good that comes of this if
the process begins, if we take it seriously. And the founders would have
told you that, - that impeachment is a dialogue. It is a discourse. And it
is an educational process. If Congress were to get serious about the
impeachment discussions, to hold the hearings, to begin that dialogue,
they would begin to educate the American people and perhaps themselves
about the system of checks and balances, about the powers of the
presidency, about, you know, what we can expect and what we should expect
of our government.
And
so I think that when Jefferson spoke about this wonderful notion of his
that said the tree of liberty must be watered every 20 years with the
blood of patriots, I don't know that he was necessarily talked about
warfare. I think he was saying that at a pretty regular basis we ought to
seek to hold our - highest officials to account and that process, the
seeking to hold them to account, wherever it holds up, is - a necessary
function of the republic. If we don't do it, we move further and further
toward an imperial presidency.
Bruce
Fein: The great genius of the founding fathers, their revolutionary
idea, with the chief mission of the state is to make you and them free to
pursue their ambitions and faculties. Not to build empires, not to
aggrandize government. That's the mission of the state, to make them free,
to think, to chart their own destiny. And the burden is on government to
give really good explanations as to why they're taking these extraordinary
measures. And on that score, Bush has flunked on every single occasion.
And we need to get the American people to think. Every time that there's
an incursion on freedom, they have to demand why. What is the explanation?
Give me a good reason before I give up my freedom.
Bill
Moyers: But read that prologue of the Constitution. The first
obligation is to defend the people, to defend their freedom, to defend
their rights. And I hear people out there talking in their living rooms
right now, Bruce and John, saying, "But wait a minute, you know,
we've got these terrorists. We know. Look what happened in London just two
weeks ago. We know they're out there. Who else is looking out for us
except Bush and Cheney?"
Bruce
Fein: And Cheney and Bush have shown that these measures are optical.
Take, for instance, these military conditions that combine judge, jury,
and prosecutors. What have they done? They tried the same offenses that
are tried in civilian courts. American Taliban John Walker Lindh got 20
years in the civilian courts. And then we have the same offense, David
Hicks, he gets nine months in military prison. Why are you creating these
extraordinary measures? They aren't needed. We have the foreign
intelligence -
Bill
Moyers: - we don't need to do what Bush-
Bruce
Fein: No, we don't. They're doing these for optical purposes.
Bill
Moyers: What do you mean "optical"?
Bruce
Fein: They're trying to create the appearance that they're tougher
than all of their opponents 'cause they're willing to violate the law,
even though the violations have nothing to do with actually defeating the
terrorism. And we have instances where the president now for years has
flouted the Foreign Intelligence Act. He's never said why the act has ever
inhibited anybody. Remember, this act has been around for over a quarter
of a century, and no president ever said it impaired his gathering of
foreign intelligence. And suddenly the president's, "No, we have to
violate it and flout it because it doesn't work." Well, why? He's
never explained it. He's never explained why this act stopped gathering of
all the intelligence that was needed to fight the terrorists.
Bill
Moyers: No president and no vice-president have been sitting in the
White House or sitting in Washington when terrorists, when killers tried
to come in airplanes and crashed into the White House, crashed into the
Capitol. Can - isn't there something to be said for -
Bruce
Fein: Let me - there's truth and then there's an inaccuracies.
Certainly in the immediate aftermath of 9/11 we were in a fog. There could
have been hundreds of thousands terrorist cells. You could understand the
president, "I've got to take any action I need right now to uncover a
possible second edition of 9/11." And, of course, as soon as I do
that, I will go to Congress as soon as possible. I will seek ratification.
That's an immediate aftermath of 9/11. We know a lot more in 2007, in
July. We know this is not 100 or 1,000 terrorist cells.
We
know this is not the danger of the Soviet Union or Hirohito or the Third
Reich. And yet the president continues to insist. That's why we need
military commissions. We need to say you're an enemy combatant and stick
you in prison forever without any judicial review and otherwise.That is a
total distortion of what the genuine nature of the problem is and our
ability to fight and defeat these terrorists with ordinary civil - the
criminal proceedings. And then - and as you say, they have utilized, Bill,
repeatedly. The World Trade Center bombings in 1993, in the aftermath of
9/11 we've had countless conspiracy cases that stopped the terrorist -
enterprises in the bud. And the - fact is that the utilization of these
extraordinary measures has been relatively infrequent, showing that
they're largely, they're relevant to the quest to defeat al-Qaeda.
John
Nichols: Let's go to another zone of this where, you know, they've
really been way off the deep end and that is torture. Has the use of
torture has the vice-president sort of winking and nodding enthusiasm for
the use of torture, has Abu Ghraib helped America? Are we in a better
position in the world, in - getting cooperation from other countries? Are
we in a better position in Iraq because of those pictures from Abu Ghraib?
I would suggest to you that using these extraordinary powers and doing so
in a non-transparent way, in a secretive way, which certainly suggests
that even a - an awareness of the illegality of it, that - does more harm
than good.
And
this is, again, what the founders intended. They intended a consultative
process. When the president seizes power, extraordinary power unto
himself, he isolates himself. He isolates himself from the rest of the
government, and he isolates himself from the people. And so I think that
people out there in America who are worried, you know, "Wow, if we
take on and try and constrain the president in a time of war, in a time of
danger, we may be endangering the country," are actually going the
wrong direction.
Bruce
Fein: And, in fact, without the dialogue you continue the folly like
in Vietnam when you shut off debate. And that's what's happened in Iraq,
why we continue to persist. Like the 88th charge of the Light Brigade that
keeps failing. You think it'll work on the 89th time. But I want to go to
a more important point that John mentioned, with specifics as to how -
what the president has done, has made us less safe. We have now
indictments in both Italy and Germany against CIA operatives because they
abducted and threw into dungeons and tortured people abroad. We need their
cooperation if we're going to defeat al-Qaeda.
Bill
Moyers: You mean the cooperation of those governments.
Bruce
Fein: Of those governments. And now they're saying, "The heck
with it. You know, you can't come on our soil and kidnap people outside
the law and throw them into dungeons."
Bill
Moyers: That's what Putin does. Putin is doing that -
Bruce
Fein: Polonium 210, you know? You - can we borrow some from you? And
moreover, think, Bill, of the precedent it sets. It is basically saying,
"Mr. Putin, you can kidnap an American outside the Louvre in Paris,
throw him in a dungeon in Belarus and say, "Hey, he said sympathetic
things about the Chechyans." And therefore, you can operate outside
the law because the Chechyans are people you oppose. That's the precedent
the president is saying is legal. But the other element with regard to the
abuses to point out are Abu Ghraib. That's - those pictures are all on
al-Jazeera television. And they get shown every single day, 24 hours a
day, to the Muslim youth that's seeking some meaning in their life. And
that's what increases the recruitment attractiveness of al-Qaeda. Those
Abu Ghraib abuses -
Bill
Moyers: Well, did you see the Associated Press reported a day or two
ago that al-Qaeda, according to intelligence reports, al-Qaeda is now at
greater strength than it was before 9/11.
Bruce
Fein: And that's because of the recruitment. That's - and because of
the abuses, they are able to portray the United States' conflict with
terrorism as a conflict with Islam, not with terrorists.
John
Nichols: And let us -
Bruce
Fein: And that is a terrible, terrible danger for the American people.
John
Nichols: But let's take President Bush at his word. Let's take him at
his word. He says that what he is doing is that this is a war on terror.
That the goal is to weaken al-Qaeda, that is to make America more secure.
And so throw out all this other discussion, all the other dialogue we've
had. Has he been successful? Has - is he doing it the right way? Well, I
think we have an awful lot of evidence from the government itself, from
the CIA itself is that it hasn't worked. It has been a highly ineffective
strategy. And so the question of whether he's making us more secure really
is a debatable one. And the role of Congress at such a point becomes
absolutely critical. We don't - you don't say, "Oh, well, you know,
the Congress - the president seems to be screwing up. And so - well, let's
sit back and see what he does next." And that seems to be what
Democrats in Congress are saying.
Bill
Moyers: Remember in the setup to our discussion I pointed out that Tom
DeLay, then the third most powerful Republican in the House, made it his
mission to impeach Bill Clinton. Is there a Tom DeLay in the Congress
today making it his or her mission to impeach Bush and Cheney?
John
Nichols: Look - I'm glad there - I'm glad there isn't a Tom DeLay.
Because Tom DeLay was seeking to impeach Bill Clinton for political
reasons. He did not -
Bill
Moyers: Infidelity.
John
Nichols: No, it wasn't infidelity. It was he didn't like the fact that
Bill Clinton was president. He wanted to remove the president by means
other than an election. I hope there is someone there who seeks to
constrain the presidents of the United States and constrains the
presidency of the United States, not merely because they happen to
disagree with the guy but because -
Bill
Moyers: I have to interrupt you and say, look, you guys don't live in
la-la land. Both of you are in - in and around power all the time. Why
doesn't Nancy Pelosi see it her duty to take on at least the impeachment
hearings that you say would educate the public about the states that you
think -
Bruce
Fein: Because I think that politics has become debased so that it's a
matter of one party against another and jockeying and maneuvering. There
is no longer any statesmanship.
Bruce
Fein: I go back to the real vulnerability and weakness of Congress,
that they don't have anybody who can, as a chairman or even asking a
question like John or me say, "Mr. Attorney General, you answer that
question. This is the United States of America. Transparency is the rule
here. We don't have secret government. That's what Alexander Solzhenitsyn
wrote about in the Gulag. That's not the United States of America. We pay
your salary. We have a right to know 'cause it's our duty to decide
whether what you're doing is legal and wise, not yours. Answer that
question or you're held in contempt right now." And that's - and all
you need is that tone of voice. But what happens up there? "Well,
would you please answer?" Well, are you sure? When - could you get
John Ashcroft? I mean, it's just staggering.
John
Nichols: And you know what?
Bruce
Fein: All you would need a lecture like that and they'd answer. They'd
be embarrassed - And you have to have a certain vision, Bill. You have -
you have to have a certain depth of conviction about philosophy and what
the Constitution means, why those people died. They reached that last full
measure of devotion, Cemetery Hill, Guatel Canal, Iwo Jima, the Battle of
the Bulge, because there was something higher. You have to feel that in
your body and your stomach cause you've mastered all those people who have
sacrificed in the past and you know the danger of unchecked power 'cause
you read history. You're not a novice. There isn't anybody in the Congress
who's able to do that because they don't have that background. But they
don't have that temperament.
John
Nichols: - there may be such people but their first step, their first
step must be something that is very hard in these days of extreme
partisanship and these days in money and politics and a media that doesn't
cover politics very well. Their first step has to be to say, "I
cherish my country more than my party and more than the next
election." And so - probably. We're talking about a Democrat.
Bill
Moyers:BILL MOYERS: - to take the lead?
John
Nichols: And that Democrat's first responsibility is to go to Nancy
Pelosi, the speaker of the House, the person who decides what committee
assignments they may have and even how nice an office they may get, and
say, "You know, Nancy, I respect you. I respect you greatly, Mrs.
Speaker. But the country's more important. So you can - you can get mad at
me. You can, you know, push back internally and whatever. But I'm going to
the American people and I'm going to talk to them like Bruce Fein just
did. Now, my sense is the response to the American people and, frankly,
the response of a lot of other members of Congress would be to stand up
and applaud. But you have to have that initial courage to do so.
Bruce
Fein: I think that you have to have not only the courage but you have
to have that conviction because it's part of your being.
Bill
Moyers: But the -
Bruce
Fein: You understand what the United States is about.
Bill
Moyers: But by your - by what you're saying, you're admitting that
nobody has that conviction because it's not happening.
Bruce
Fein: I agree. And it's hard to know how to just make it happen by
spontaneous combustion, Bill. And that's the frustrating element here.
Because without that those intellectual and temperamental ingredients, it
just isn't going to happen. You do need a leadership element in there. And
I don't see it either in the House or the Senate now.
Bill
Moyers: You just said in one sentence there "impeach Bush and
Cheney." You're talking about taking that ax against the head of
government, both of them.
John
Nichols: No. No, no, no.
Bruce
Fein: It's not an ax, Bill.
John
Nichols: We're talking -
Bruce
Fein: It's not an ax - it's not - Impeachment is not a criminal
proceeding.
John
Nichols: You are being -
Bruce
Fein: - we cannot entrust the reins of power, unchecked power, with
these people. They're untrustworthy. They're asserting theories of
governments that are monarchical. We don't want them to exercise it. We
don't want Hillary Clinton or Rudy Giuliani or anyone in the future to
exercise that.
John
Nichols: Bill Moyers, you are making a mistake. You are making a
mistake that too many people make.
Bill
Moyers: Yes.
John
Nichols: You are seeing impeachment as a constitutional crisis.
Impeachment is the cure for a constitutional crisis. Don't mistake the
medicine for the disease. When you have a constitutional crisis, the
founders are very clear. They said there is a way to deal with this. We
don't have to have a war. We don't have to raise an army and go to
Washington. We have procedures in place where we can sanction a president
appropriately, do what needs to be done up to the point of removing him
from office and continue the republic. So we're not talking here about
taking an ax to government. Quite the opposite. We are talking about
applying some necessary strong medicine that may cure not merely the
crisis of the moment but, done right-
Bruce
Fein: Moreover, it's -
John
Nichols: - might actually cure -
Bruce
Fein: It's not an attack on Bush and Cheney in the sense of their
personal - attacks. Listen, if you impeach them, they can live happily
ever after into their-
John
Nichols: And go to San Clemente.
Bruce
Fein: Yes, go to San Clemente or go back to the ranch or whatever. But
it's saying no, it's the Constitution that's more important than your
aggrandizing of power. And not just for you because the precedent that
would be set would bind every successor in the presidency as well, no
matter Republican, Democrat, Independent, or otherwise.
John
Nichols: The fact of the matter is that, again, the genius of
impeachment is it tells the president that, wow, there is a Congress. And
that Congress is on your case. And it causes, I think at its best, it
causes a president to want to prove he can cooperate, to want to prove he
can live within the law.
Bruce
Fein: Can I interrupt just a second here?
Bill
Moyers: Yeah, sure, sure.
Bruce
Fein: 'Cause it seems to me very important. I think that if
impeachment proceedings began and the president and the vice-president sat
back and said, "We understand now. We both understand. We renounce
this claim. No military commissions. We're going to comply with the
law," the impeachment proceedings ought to stop and they should. It's
not trying to be punitive and recriminate against the officials but you've
got to get it right. And it's that what I hope would happen.
I've
said if the president now renouncing the power and said, "It was
wrong and I now respect and honor the separation and the genius of the
founding fathers," that's great. And all of the purpose of
impeachment would have been accomplished. They could stay in office and
we'd have the greatest precedent with regards to executive authority and
the separation of powers and checks and balances. This is not an effort to
try to blacken the names of the president and vice-president. And nothing
would gratify me more than having them stand up and say, "Yeah, I've
thought about this now. My mind is concentrated wonderfully," as Sam
Johnson would say. The prospect of impeachment, I've been convinced.
John
Nichols: But also we would have hit that educational moment, that rare
moment where a president of the United States has been forced to - go
before the American people and say, "Oh, yeah, I just remembered,
you're the boss. You are the bosses. Not me. And that I am not a
king." Again, this is why raising impeachment at this point, it's a
very late point, is so important. Because we are defining what the
presidency will be in the future today because we do know the high crimes
and misdemeanors of George Bush and Dick Cheney. They have been well
illustrated even by a - rather lax media. They have been discussed in
Congress
If
we know these things and we do not hold them to account, then we are
saying, as a people and as a Congress, we are saying that we can find out
that you have violated the rule of law. We can find out that you have
disregarded the Constitution. You - we can find out that you've done harm
to the republic. But there will still be no penalty for that. If that's
the standard that we've set, it will hold. It will not be erased in the
future.
Bruce
Fein: One of the lessons we should have learned from the Nixon
impeachment is that it didn't quite fulfill its purpose because Nixon was
never compelled to renounce what he'd done.
John
Nichols: Yes.
Bruce
Fein: And after which he boasted that what the president does it it's
legal. He wasn't repentant at all. If we had insisted maybe as a condition
of the pardon or otherwise, you need to repent. We are a government of
laws, not of men. And it's wrong for anyone to assert unchecked power.
That would have had such a pedagogical effect that would have deterred
anything in the future. We've got to make certain this time around we get
that proper acknowledgement from the -
John
Nichols: - there was a group of members, Democratic members of the
House, who went to Tipp O'Neil and to-
Bill
Moyers: Then speaker of the House.
John
Nichols: - back in 1974, after Nixon had resigned, and said, "We
must continue the impeachment process." It's - it is under the
Constitution certainly appropriate to do so. And we must continue it
because we have to close the circle on presidential power. And the leaders
in Congress, the Democratic leaders in Congress at the time said,
"No, the - country has suffered too much." Well, this is the
problem. Our leaders treat us as children. They think that we cannot
handle a serious dialogue about the future of our republic, about what it
will be and how it will operate. And so, you know, to an extent, we begin
to act like children. We, you know, follow other interests. We decide to
be entertained rather than to be citizens.
Well,
you know, and Bruce makes frequent references to the fall of the Roman
Empire. You know, that's the point at where the fall comes. It doesn't
come because of a bad leader. It doesn't come because of a dysfunctional
Congress. It comes when the people accept that - role of the child or of
the subject and are no longer citizens. And so I think this moment becomes
so very, very important because we know the high crimes and misdemeanors.
The
people themselves have said, if the polls are correct, that, you know,
something ought to be done. If nothing is done, if we do not step forward
at this point, if we do not step up to this point, then we have, frankly,
told the people, you know, you can even recognize that the king has no
clothes, but we're not gonna put any clothes on him. And at that point,
the country is in very, very dire circumstances.
Bill
Moyers: Bruce Fein and John Nichols, thanks to both of you for being
with us on The Journal. It's been a very interesting discussion.
Bruce
Fein: Thank you.
John
Nichols: Thank you.
Bill
Moyers: As we just heard from Bruce Fein and John Nichols, our country
is in a constitutional crisis that could change the nature of our
democracy. There was a sense it earlier in the week as the Senate debated
what to do about the war in Iraq. Here are some excerpts.
Sen.
Joseph Biden: Do we continue to send our kids into the middle of a
meat grinder based on a policy that is fundamentally flawed? I don't think
there are a dozen Republicans on that side of the aisle who agree with the
President's strategy.
Sen.
Gordon Smith: Some of my colleagues have said just cut off the
funding. I have felt that dangerous and dishonorable. President Bush has
said stay the course, and I find that troubling.
Sen.
Lindsey Graham: This is a democracy that's less than four years old.
Their constitution's less than 18 months old. The army and the police
force four years ago was there to support the dictator, not democracy. So
if you expect from the ashes of the dictatorship a functioning democracy
in four years, I think you're sadly mistaken, because it took us 11 years
to write our own Constitution.
Sen.
Joe Lieberman: We were elected to defend our beloved country, it's
security and it's values. All that is on the line in Iraq today. So I
appeal to my colleagues, let's not undercut our troops and legislate a
defeat in Iraq where none is occurring.
Sen.
John McCain: When you lose a war, the consequences of failure are far,
far more severe on the military than the strain that is put on the
military when they are fighting. It is a fact. It is a fact of military
history. It is a fact of the war that we lost in Vietnam, which took us
well over a decade to restore any kind of efficiency in our military.
Sen.
Barbara Boxer: After this weekend's violence, senior Iraqi officials
called on Iraqi civilians to arm themselves and fight insurgents. That's
from the government. They're not telling the people this government will
protect you, the Americans have drained 300,000 of us, no, we're ready to
protect you, no. The answer is arm yourselves so that when the insurgents
break down your door you can kill them before they kill you. What a
situation.
Sen.
John McCain: I welcome this debate, as I said earlier. I think it is
important to inform the American people. I think it is important to have a
respectful exchange of views. And I will continue to respect the views of
the Senator from California, but I will tell her that I have seen this
movie before, and I have seen what happens when we have a defeated
military and we have people who assure us that a withdrawal is without
consequences.
Sen.
Joseph Biden: This administration has not made, when given a choice, a
single correct decision on Iraq. Hear me. That is a bold statement. I
cannot think of a single decision when they have been faced with a choice
that theyÕve made the right choice. I cannot think of one. Way back, when
the President asked me why I was calling for Rumsfeld's resignation, and
the Vice President was in the room, in the Oval Office, I said: With all
due respect, Mr. President, Mr. Vice President, if, Mr. Vice President, if
you were not a constitutional officer, I would call for your resignation
too. He looked at me and said: Why? I said: Because, Mr. President, name
me one piece of advice either Rumsfeld or Cheney have given you in Iraq
that has turned out to be right. Name me one. One. One.
Bill
Moyers: As that debate revealed Congress is polarized and paralyzed.
And down at the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue, President Bush still was
insisting Congress should stay out of the war. he and Vice President
Cheney are holding out for better news from Iraq in September. But when
September comes, you can count on more appeals for delay or excuses.
that's the formula for perpetual war - what our founders most feared,
because it would turn our Constituion on its head, throwing off the checks
and balances so crucial to liberty, and leaving all power in an imperial
executive. Already the war in Iraq is in its 5th year, costing $10 billion
a month, with the casualties mounting. All week a line from the poet
Marvin Bell floated through my mind:
"What/shall
we do, we who are at war but are asked/to pretend we are not?"
What
shall we do? impeachment hearings are one way to go, as you heard Fein and
Nichols say. In the meantime, those of us in public television have an
obligation to make sure viewers like you stay in the loop. I wish we had
carried the congressional debate this week in full - all of it - in prime
time. When we broadcast teach-ins on the Vietnam war, and the Watergate
hearings during the trial of Richard Nixon, it was a real public service -
the reason PBS was created. We should keep Iraq in prime time every week -
the fighting and dying, the suffering, the debate, the politics - the
extraordinary costs. It's months until September. This war is killing us
now, body and soul.