Fein: Impeachable offenses?
"Wouldn't [impeachment] honor the original intent
of the Founding Fathers?"
By Bruce Fein
Washington Times, September 23, 2008
go to original
See Article III.1 Manipulating
Intelligence and Lying to Justify War
|
|
Constitutional Lawyer Bruce Fein,
testifying on impeachment before the Judiciary
Committee on July 25, 2008
source: YouTube /
C-SPAN
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Have President Bush and Vice President Richard Cheney
committed impeachable offenses for which the duumvirate
should be convicted and removed from office by duping
then-House Majority Leader Richard K. Armey into supporting
legislation authorizing war against Iraq with twin
lies -- that Iraqi President Saddam Hussein had personal
ties to Osama bin Laden's terrorist network; and that
Saddam had miniaturized nuclear weapons, which could
be unleashed by employing al Qaeda as a delivery system?
The facts - uncontradicted by either Mr. Bush or
Mr. Cheney - are chronicled in Barton Gellman's new
book "Angler."
In late September 2002, Majority Leader Armey met
the vice president in H-208 in the Capitol Building.
Mr. Armey was no liberal or RINO (Republican In Name
Only). He adamantly opposed taxes and earned a stellar
97 percent rating from the American Conservative Union
during his long years in Congress. But Mr. Armey initially
opposed an Iraqi war authorization because Saddam
was no menace to the security of the United States.
If Mr. Armey voted no, he would give political cover
to any Democrat or Republican Doubting Thomas to vote
likewise and probably foil an Iraqi war resolution.
Mr. Cheney's mission was to flip Mr. Armey. He succeeded
by stooping to lies that bettered the instruction
of President Clinton's perjury in Monicagate that
occasioned Mr. Clinton's impeachment. According to
Mr. Armey, Mr. Cheney sounded the tocsin that Iraq's
"ability to miniaturize weapons of mass destruction,
particularly nuclear," had been "substantially
refined since the first Gulf war." They were
"miniaturizing weapons, developing packages that
could be moved even by ground personnel." Not
a crumb of intelligence supported these falsehoods.
Without any supporting evidence, Mr. Cheney also
maintained that al Qaeda was "working with Saddam
Hussein and members of his family." He falsely
added that "we now know [Iraq] ha* the ability
to develop these [nuclear] weapons in a very portable
fashion, and they have a delivery system in their
relationship with organizations such as al Qaeda."
The vice president's lies convinced Mr. Armey to
vote in favor of the Iraqi war resolution. Relying
on the deceit, the majority leader explained his flip-flop
on the floor of Congress: "If you're going to
conduct a war on terrorism, then you must stop that
person who is most likely and most able to arm the
terrorists with those things that will frighten us
most."
After discovering the truth, Mr. Armey lamented he
could probably have prevented the Iraqi war debacle:
"Had I known or believed then what I believe
I know now, I would have publicly opposed the resolution
right to the bitter end, and I believe I might have
stopped it from happening, and I believe I would have
done a better service to my country had I done so."
Indeed, the war in Iraq has diverted hundreds of
billions of dollars that could have been better spent
upgrading defenses at home; strengthened Iran, arch-enemy
of the United States; caused vastly more American
deaths and injuries than did the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks; and made the United States less safe by creating
new enemies in Iraq by flouting its sovereignty and
killing innocent civilians in pursuing genuine insurgents
or terrorists.
Under the law of impeachment, Mr. Bush is responsible
for the misdeeds of his agents in the executive branch,
including the vice president. James Madison, father
of the Constitution, amplified in the House of Representatives
that the president would be subject to impeachment,
"if he suffers [his subordinates] to perpetrate
with impunity high crimes and misdemeanors against
the United States, or neglects to superintend their
conduct, so as to check their excesses." Vice
President Cheney, in contrast to other executive branch
officials, does not serve at the pleasure of the president.
But in approaching Mr. Armey in support of Mr. Bush's
legislative initiative authorizing war against Iraq,
Mr. Cheney was acting as Mr. Bush's agent for whom
the president was accountable.
Article II, section 4 of the Constitution declares
the, "president [and] vice president ... shall
be removed from office on impeachment for, and conviction
of ... high crimes and misdemeanors." Alexander
Hamilton explained in Federalist 65 that impeachable
high crimes and misdemeanors are "political"
offenses because "they relate chiefly to injuries
done immediately to society itself." James Iredell,
later appointed to the Supreme Court by President
George Washington, made explicit at the North Carolina
ratification convention that presidential duplicity
with Congress over war or comparable matters of great
national moment would be an impeachable offense.
Although his statement specifically addressed lies
to the Senate, its rationale applies equally to deceit
of the House of Representatives to obtain an authorization
for war: "The president must certainly be punishable
for giving false information to the Senate. ... If
it should appear that he has not given them full information,
but has concealed important intelligence which he
ought to have communicated, and by that means induced
them to enter into measures injurious to their country,
and which they would not have consented to had the
true nature of things been disclosed to them - in
this case, I ask whether, upon an impeachment for
a misdemeanor upon such an account, the Senate would
probably favor him."
Mr. Armey should be summoned to testify under oath
before the House Judiciary Committee about his statements
in "Angler" implicating Mr. Bush and Mr.
Cheney in lies to dupe the House of Representatives
over war in Iraq. The president and vice president
should be given an opportunity to respond under oath
but subject to cross-examination.
If the totality of evidence corroborates Mr. Armey's
recollection, shouldn't the House immediately vote
to impeach Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney and send their
cases for trials in the Senate? Wouldn't that action
honor the original intent of the Founding Fathers
that the Bush administration professes to cherish?
Bruce Fein is a constitutional lawyer at Bruce Fein
& Associates Inc. and author of "Constitutional
Peril: The Life and Death Struggle for our Constitution
and Democracy" (Palgrave Macmillan).
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