Publish,
Punish, and Pardon
Nine Things Obama Could Do Before Leaving Office to
Reveal the Nature of the National Security State
By Pratap Chatterjee
December 05, 2016
"Information
Clearing House"
- "Tom
Dispatch" -
In
less than seven weeks, President
Barack Obama will hand over the government to
Donald Trump, including access to the White House, Air
Force One, and Camp David. Trump will also, of course,
inherit the infamous nuclear codes, as well as the
latest in warfare technology, including the Central
Intelligence Agency’s fleet of killer drones, the
National Security Agency’s vast surveillance and data
collection apparatus, and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation’s enormous system of undercover
informants.
Before the
recent election, Obama repeatedly warned that a Trump
victory could spell disaster. “If somebody starts
tweeting at three in the morning because SNL [Saturday
Night Live] made fun of you, you can’t handle the
nuclear codes,” Obama typically
told a pro-Clinton rally in November. “Everything
that we've done over the last eight years,” he added in
an
interview with MSNBC, “will be reversed with a Trump
presidency.”
Yet, just days
after Obama made those comments and Trump triumphed, the
Guardian reported that his administration was
deeply involved in planning to
give Trump access not just to those nuclear codes,
but also to the massive new spying and killing system
that Obama personally helped shape and
lead. “Obama’s failure to rein in George Bush’s
national security policies hands Donald Trump a fully
loaded weapon,” Anthony Romero, the executive director
of the American Civil Liberties Union,
observed recently. “The president’s failure to
understand that these powers could not be entrusted in
the hands of any president, not even his, have now put
us in a position where they are in the hands of Donald
Trump.”
In many areas,
it hardly matters what Barack Obama now does. In his
last moments, for example, were he to make good on his
first Oval Office
promise and shut down the prison at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, Trump could reverse that decision with the stroke
of a pen on January 20, 2017.
So, at this
late date, what might a president frightened by his
successor actually do, if not to hamper Trump's ability
to create global mayhem, then at least to set the record
straight before he leaves the White House?
Unfortunately,
the answer is: far less than we might like, but as it
happens, there are still some powers a president has
that are irreversible by their very nature. For example,
declassifying secret documents. Once such documents
have been released, no power on earth can take them
back. The president also has a virtually unlimited power
of
pardon. And finally, the president can
punish high-level executive branch or military
officials who abused the system, just as President Obama
recalled General Stanley McChrystal from his post in
Afghanistan in 2010, and he can do so until January
19th. Of course, Trump could rehire such individuals,
but fast action by Obama could at least put them on
trial in the media, if nowhere else.
Here, then, are
nine recommendations for action by the president in his
last 40 days when it comes to those three categories:
publish, punish, and pardon. Think of it as a political
version of “publish
or perish.”
Drones
1.
Name innocent drone victims:
Last July, the Obama administration quietly
released a statement in which it admitted that it
had killed between 64 and 116 innocent people in 473
drone strikes in Libya, Pakistan, Somalia, and Yemen
between January 2009 and the end of 2015. (Never mind
that the reliable Bureau of Investigative Journalism,
based in Britain, has
recorded a total closer to 800 innocent deaths from
the same set of strikes.)
President Obama
should immediately name those innocent people his
administration has admitted killing, while providing the
dates and locations of the incidents, where known. There
is a precedent for this: on April 23, 2015, Obama
apologized for the deaths in a drone strike in Pakistan
of Giovanni Lo Porto and Warren Weinstein, an Italian
and an American held captive by Al Qaeda, whom he
identified by
name. Why not release the names of the rest?
Faisal bin Ali
Jaber, a Yemeni engineer, has been asking for just such
a response. His brother-in-law Salem and nephew Waleed
were
killed by a U.S. drone strike in 2012. Yemeni
officials gave Jaber $100,000 in cash that they swore
was compensation from the U.S. government, but if so,
Washington has not acknowledged what it did. Reprieve, a
British-based group that supports drone victims, has
sued President Obama to get a public apology for
Jaber.
2.
Make Public Any Reviews of Military Errors:
When Obama apologized for the killings of Lo
Porto and Weinstein, he said that he had ordered a full
review of any mistakes made in that drone strike. “We
will identify the lessons that can be learned from this
tragedy and any changes that should be made,” he
announced. Until January 20th, he has the power to
make such documents public and prove that lessons have
actually been learned. (The only document available on
the subject to date is the $1.2 million
settlement agreement between Lo Porto’s parents and
the U.S. embassy in Rome published by Stefania Maurizi
in the Italian newspaper L’Espresso.)
There is
precedent for such publication. The Pentagon released
transcripts and data from an airstrike that resulted in
the
killing of 23 Afghan villagers on February 21, 2010,
in Uruzgan Province after a drone crew mistook them for
Taliban militants. Documents relating to U.S. air
strikes against a Médecins Sans Frontičres hospital in
the Afghan city of Kunduz on October 3, 2015, have also
been
released.
How many
similar military investigations (known as
AR 15-6 reviews) have been conducted into accidental
killings in the war on terror? According to Airwars,
another British-based organization, we know, for
instance, that the U.S. is looking into a strike that
killed at least 56 civilians in Manbij, Syria, this
past July. There are guaranteed to be many more such
investigations that have never seen the light of day.
The Obama
administration consistently claims that groups like
Airwars and the Bureau of Investigative Journalism do
not have the full story. This flies in the face of
multiple reports from
Amnesty International,
Human Rights Watch,
Al-Karama, researchers at
Stanford and
Columbia universities, and even the
United Nations, all of whom have investigated and
identified a growing number of drone-strike deaths among
those without any links to terror or insurgent
movements. If evidence to the contrary really exists,
this would be the moment for Obama to prove them wrong,
rather than simply letting more “collateral damage” be
piled on his legacy.
3.
Make Public the Administration’s Criteria for Its
“Targeted Killings”:
In July and August, under pressure from the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the Obama
administration released a series of
documents revealing the procedures it uses to
identify and target for assassination individuals
responsible for terrorist activities in much of the
world -- and the way it has justified such killings
internally. If anything, however, those documents (known
as the presidential policy guidance, or PPG) have merely
suggested how much of the process still remains beyond
public view.
“Frustratingly,
too much remains secret about the program, including
where the PPG actually applies, what its general
standards mean in practice, and how evidence that those
standards have been met is evaluated -- in addition to
who the government is killing, and where,”
writes Brett Max Kaufman, an ACLU staff attorney.
When Donald
Trump first sends out a CIA drone to kill someone chosen
by his White House, he will be able to claim that he is
doing so under the secret system set up by Obama.
Without access to the procedures that Obama pioneered,
we will have no way of knowing whether Trump will be
telling the truth.
None of these
three suggestions would be difficult or even
controversial (though don’t hold your breath waiting for
them to happen). With each, Obama could increase
transparency before he inevitably hands over control of
the targeted-killing program to Trump. None of this
would even faze a future Trump administration, however.
So here are a few suggestions of things that might
matter for all of us if Obama did them before Trump
enters the Oval Office.
Surveillance
4.
Disclose Mass Surveillance Programs:
Even though Senator Obama
opposed the collection of data from U.S. citizens,
President Obama has vigorously
defended the staggering expansion of the national
security state during his two terms in office. "You
can't have 100% security and also then have 100% privacy
and zero inconvenience," he said in 2013, days after
Edward Snowden
leaked a trove of National Security Agency data that
transformed our view of what our government has
collected about all of us. "You know, we're going to
have to make some choices as a society."
Thanks to
Snowden, we also now know that the U.S. government
secretly received
permission from the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court to collect all U.S. telephone
metadata via programs like
Stellarwind; created a program called
Prism to tunnel directly into the servers of nine
major Internet companies;
tapped the global fiber optic cables that lie on the
ocean beds; collected text messages via a program called
Dishfire; set up a vast database called
X-Keyscore to track all the data from any given
individual; and even built a program,
Optic Nerve, to turn on users’ webcams, allowing for
the collection of substantial quantities of sexually
explicit communications. And that’s just the tip of the
iceberg. (For a searchable index of all such revelations
so far, click
here.)
Ironically,
a report from the FBI that was finally published in
April 2015 shows that this vast effort was largely
useless in identifying terrorists. “In 2004, the FBI
looked at a sampling of all the [Stellarwind] tips to
see how many had made a ‘significant contribution’ to
identifying a terrorist, deporting a terrorism suspect,
or developing a confidential informant about
terrorists,”
wrote New York Times reporter Charlie
Savage who spent years fighting for access to the
documents. “Just 1.2 percent of the tips from 2001 to
2004 had made such a contribution. Two years later, the
FBI reviewed all the leads from the warrantless
wiretapping part of Stellarwind between August 2004 and
January 2006. None had proved useful.”
These days
smart criminals and terrorists use
encryption or other
means like burner phones to make sure that they
can’t be followed. The only senior operatives being
hacked these days seem to be Democratic Party officials
like
John Podesta and millions of ordinary citizens whose
data is stolen by criminals. So why not reveal just what
programs the government used in these years, what was
done with them, why it failed, and what lessons were (or
weren’t) learned? Evidence of the national security
state’s massive waste of time and resources might indeed
be useful for us to have as we think about how to
improve our less than 100% privacy and security. Such
disclosures would not imperil the government’s ability
to seek warrants to
lawfully intercept information from those suspected
of criminal wrongdoing or terrorism.
5.
Make Public All Surveillance Agreements With Private
Companies: To this day, the
U.S. government has secret agreements with a variety of
data companies to trawl for information. Some companies
are deeply uneasy about this invasion of their
customers’ privacy, if only because it probably violates
the terms of service they have agreed to and could cause
them to lose business (given that they face competition
from non-U.S. companies and more secure alternatives).
Take Yahoo, for
example. The Justice Department obtained a court order
in 2015 to search all users’ incoming emails for a
unique computer code supposedly tied to the
communications of a state-sponsored “terrorist”
organization. The company has requested that the
government
declassify the order to clear its name. It has yet
to do so.
Of course, not
all companies are as eager to see their government deals
revealed. Consider AT&T, the telecommunications giant.
Police departments across the country pay it as much as
$100,000 a year for
special access to the telephone records of its
clients (without first obtaining a warrant). The program
is called “Hemisphere” and the company requires buyers
to keep its existence secret.
The Electronic
Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based activist
group, calls this “evidence
laundering.” As Adam Schwartz, senior staff attorney
on the Electronic Frontier Foundation's civil liberties
team,
puts it: "When police hide their sources of
evidence, the accused cannot challenge the quality or
veracity of the government’s investigation, or seek out
favorable information still in the government’s
possession. Moreover, hiding evidence from individuals
who are prosecuted as a result of such surveillance is
antithetical to our fundamental right to an open
criminal justice system."
Surely such an
argument ought to convince a former law professor?
President Obama could easily strike a major blow for
fair trials by revealing the extent and the details of
these local police contracts, which are essentially an
open secret, as well as any other agreements the
national security state has with private companies to
spy on ordinary citizens. Once again, this would not
hamper the government’s ability to seek warrants when it
can convince a judge that it needs to intercept
individual communications.
6.
Make Public All Secret Law Created in Recent Years:
The last thing we’d want would be for Donald
Trump and his future White House adviser,
white nationalist Steve Bannon, to enter the Oval
Office and start making secret law by wielding executive
powers to, say, round up Muslims or deny women their
rights.
Stopping Trump
from taking this route and creating his own body of
secret law is going to be hard indeed, given that Obama
has probably signed more secret orders than any previous
president. As Elizabeth Goitein, the co-director of the
Brennan Center’s Liberty and National Security Program,
noted in a recent report, the Obama administration
has failed to release a minimum of 74 of the Justice
Department’s Office of Legal Counsel opinions and memos
that have been the secret basis for government actions
on national security issues -- including detention,
interrogation, intelligence activities,
intelligence-sharing, and responses to terrorism. In
addition, as many as 30 rulings of the Foreign
Intelligence Surveillance Court between 2003 and 2013
have not been made public. And an astonishing 807
international agreements, including bilateral ones to
control the transportation of narcotics, signed by the
U.S. between 2004 and 2014 have
never seen the light of day.
Trump, of
course, has refused even to publish his tax returns
(previously a presidential campaign ritual), so if Obama
doesn’t come clean, don’t expect Trump to release any of
the secret law his predecessor made in the next four
years. This moment, then, represents a unique
opportunity for the president to fulfill his
promise of 2009 to create the most open presidency
of all time. Sadly, no one expects him to do so. The
Obama administration has apparently “abandoned even the
appearance of transparency,” according to Anne Weisman,
executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and
Ethics in Washington, a nonpartisan NGO that tracks
government accountability.
Since it’s very
unlikely that Obama will reverse course on surveillance
and secret law in the next 40 days, here at least are
some suggestions on what he might still accomplish as
the nation’s chief law enforcer.
Punish
7.
Punish Anyone Who Abused the Drone or Surveillance
Programs: We
don’t really know who ordered the drone strikes that
knocked off so many innocent people.
But the names of the
architects of the program are known and, more
importantly, the president undoubtedly has all the names
he needs.
And if Obama
does want to clean house before Trump takes over, why
not identify and dismiss the individuals who designed
the NSA’s surveillance programs that infringed in major
ways on our privacy without uncovering any terrorists?
8.
Punish Those Responsible for FBI Domain Management
Abuses:
Since the attacks of September 11, 2001, the FBI has
developed a network of more than 15,000 informants as
part of its Domain Management program. Many of them were
recruited to infiltrate Muslim communities to identify
terrorists. For the last 15 years, this vast sting
program has been used to round-up Muslims -- those dumb
enough to fall for FBI enticements at least -- and put
them in prison.
In the process,
plenty of “terror operations” were created, but few real
ones broken. We already know the details of many of the
abuses involved. Back in 2011, for instance, a
Mother Jones investigation found that 49
“successful” prosecutions of “terrorists” were the
result of
sting operations set up by FBI agents provocateurs.
“You realize that many of these people would never have
committed a crime if not for law enforcement
encouraging, pressuring, and sometimes paying them to
commit terrorist acts,” Andrea Prasow of Human Rights
Watch
wrote in a report on the program in 2014.
Whistleblowers
have come forward to expose the abusive tactics employed
by the FBI in such cases. Take Craig Monteilh, an
ex-convict hired by the Bureau to
infiltrate mosques in southern California. After he
had a change of heart, Monteilh helped local Muslims sue
the agency. The case was, in the end, reluctantly
dismissed by District Judge Cormac Carney who wrote
that "the state secrets privilege may unfortunately mean
the sacrifice of individual liberties for the sake of
national security." Other informants, like Saeed Torres,
have since come
forward to expose other aspects of the program. The
government has never acknowledged any of this.
It is very
likely that this same group will be called upon to
support Donald Trump’s orders if a Muslim registry is
ever set up. So this would be the moment for Obama to
crack down in some fashion on this hapless system of
profiling and entrapment before the Trump administration
can expand it.
Pardon
9.
Pardon Edward Snowden, Chelsea Manning, and the other
whistleblowers: Last but not
least, why not
pardon Edward Snowden, Chelsea Manning, and the
other whistleblowers who served the public good by
letting us know what the president wouldn’t? As of now,
Barack Obama will go down in history as the president
who prosecuted
more truth-tellers, often under the draconian World
War I-era Espionage Act, than all other presidents
combined. Stephen Kim, Jeffrey Sterling, John Kiriakou,
and Thomas Drake were government officials who talked
with journalists. They were subsequently jailed or had
their lives turned upside down. Others like Chelsea
Manning and Barrett Brown have been jailed for hacking
or for the release of documents relating to
surveillance, U.S. wars abroad, and other national
security matters.
Gabe Rottman of
the ACLU sums the situation up
this way: “By my count, the Obama administration has
secured 526 months of prison time for national security
leakers, versus only 24 months total jail time for
everyone else [who ever leaked] since the American
Revolution.”
On this issue,
Obama has already made his position clear enough. Of
Snowden, in particular, he
told Der Spiegel earlier this month, “I
can't pardon somebody who hasn't gone before a court and
presented themselves.”
For a
constitutional law professor, that’s a terrible
argument. “The power of pardon conferred by the
Constitution upon the President is unlimited except in
cases of impeachment,” the Supreme Court
ruled in 1866. “It extends to every offence known to
the law, and may be exercised at any time after its
commission, either before legal proceedings are taken or
during their pendency, or after conviction and judgment.
The power is not subject to legislative control.”
It also flies
in the face of history and of the president’s own
actions. “Richard Nixon hadn’t even been indicted when
Gerald Ford issued a full, free, and absolute pardon
unto Richard Nixon,”
comments the Pardon Snowden campaign. “Nor had the
thousands of men who had evaded the Vietnam War draft,
who were pardoned unconditionally by Jimmy Carter on his
first day in office. President Obama himself pardoned
three Iranian American men earlier this year in the
framework of the nuclear deal with Iran. Like Snowden,
the three had been indicted but hadn’t stood trial when
they were pardoned.”
Given how
rarely Obama has issued presidential pardons, it seems
unlikely that he will act. “He’s pardoned fewer people
than any president since James Garfield, who was fatally
shot in 1881 after less than three months in office,”
writes Steven Nelson at U.S. News & World Report.
Indeed, Bush pardoned twice as many people as Obama in
his first seven years in office, a record that he might
want to ameliorate. (In fairness, it should be noted
that Obama has
set a record for commuting jail sentences.)
Will Obama act
on any of these nine recommendations? Or will he simply
hand over the vast, increasingly secretive national
security state that he helped build to a man whom he
once declared to be “unfit” not just for the presidency
but even for a job at a retail store. “The guy says
stuff nobody would find tolerable if they were applying
for a job at 7-Eleven,” Obama
told an election rally in October.
Now, it’s his
move. Forget about 7-Eleven; Obama will not have to
apply for, or campaign for, his next well-paid job,
whatever it may be. But there is the little matter of
his legacy, of truth, and oh, yes, of the future
security of the country.
Pratap Chatterjee, a
TomDispatch regular, is executive director of
CorpWatch. He is the author of
Halliburton's Army: How A Well-Connected Texas Oil
Company Revolutionized the Way America Makes War.
His next book, Verax, a
graphic novel about whistleblowers and mass surveillance
co-authored with Khalil Bendib, will be published by
Metropolitan Books in 2017.
Follow TomDispatch on
Twitter and join us on
Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Nick
Turse’s Next
Time They’ll Come to Count the Dead, and Tom
Engelhardt's latest book,
Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a
Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.
Copyright 2016
Pratap Chatterjee
The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
not necessarily reflect Information Clearing House
editorial policy. |