Is This the "Change We Can Believe In"?Presented with a first opportunity to break away from the Bush administration's legacy of abuse and secrecy, and uphold commitments of transparency and openness, the Obama Justice Department stood by the previous administration's claims of "state secrets" in our lawsuit (Mohamed et al. v. Jeppesen) against Boeing subsidiary Jeppesen DataPlan for its role in the extraordinary rendition program. Before the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals yesterday, once again, we heard government lawyers argue that the entire subject matter is a "state secret" — one that cannot be reviewed by any court. (You can listen to the oral argument here.) Needless to say, we're shocked and disappointed. And we're not the only ones. Over the past week, the case against Jeppesen and the questions it raises about transparency and accountability in a post-Bush era appeared all over editorial pages, news media and in the blogosphere. Both The New York Times and The Los Angeles Times penned editorials, urging the new administration to reconsider the Bush Justice Department's "state secret" claims. And, in an op-ed published in the San Francisco Chronicle, a former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations and the head of the Iraq Survey Group called on the new administration "to demonstrate its commitment to transparency, accountability and the rule of law by allowing judicial review of the state secrets claims in the Jeppesen case." News outlets, including the Washington Post, Associated Press, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, National Public Radio, ABC News, the Guardian, CBS News, Bloomberg, and the San Francisco Chronicle reported on the new Justice Department taking "exactly" the same position as the previous administration. Many of the articles also mentioned that while oral arguments were taking place in San Francisco, back in Washington, new Attorney General Eric Holder ordered a review of all cases in which the Bush administration claimed state secrets were at stake "to ensure that it is being invoked only in legally appropriate situations," according to Justice Department spokesman Matt Miller. The Los Angeles Times story provides a glimpse into the court room: At one point during the hearing, Judge Michael Daly Hawkins, a Clinton appointee, told the government's lawyer that he was not convincing. Meanwhile, in the blogosphere…
Slate mentioned our case against Jeppesen in their "Top 10 cases the Obama Justice Department should redo," only to later report "[s]o much for a perfect score." Over at Salon, Glenn Greenwald calls Obama out for the 180-degree reversal of his campaign position on "state secrets." Firedoglake's bmaz notes that, "In fairness, the Obama DOJ may view this as protecting information on rendition flights, not details of torture; however, the result is the same, and just as heinous. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss." The Atlantic's Andrew Sullivan points out, "This is a depressing sign that the Obama administration will protect the Bush-Cheney torture regime from the light of day. And with each decision to cover for their predecessors, the Obamaites become retroactively complicit in them." And begs the question, "So what are they hiding from us? Wouldn't you like to know?" Daphne Eviatar's piece in The Washington Independent notes: "None of this bodes well for the likelihood of obtaining additional information about the Bush administration's interrogation policies in the future." (In a separate piece she also reminds readers that the Obama administration's second test will come this Friday — when the government's reply is due in our request for critical memos written by the Bush administration's Office of Legal Counsel that supplied the legal basis for many of the policies regarding the treatment of detainees.) And blogger Valtin on Invictus reminds us our work is far from done. But what is the situation we have today? The conditions at Guantanamo worsen day by day, with 20 percent of the prison population on hunger strike. Binyam Mohamed himself lies near death. Obama has ordered a review of interrogation procedures which has some worried he will okay certain exceptions for the CIA. Meanwhile, the myth of a model humane Army Field Manual has been broken via exposure of abusive techniques inside its Appendix M, and elsewhere in its text. So now what?
Ben Wizner, who argued for the plaintiffs in our case against Jeppesen, explains, "Now we must hope that the court will assert its independence by rejecting the government's false claims of state secrets and allowing the victims of torture and rendition their day in court."
Tags: Rendition
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Feb 10th, 2009 at 7:39pm
I'm sure he'll get it right with enough time attention to this stuff (stupid economy taking up all his time). I actually find it hard to believe that Obama would agree with the position his lawyers are taking, and I hope this is more a case of lawyers carrying out their past arguments until told to do otherwise. Also, I'm jealous of your job.
Feb 11th, 2009 at 1:37am
But if you say, you can still pass the violations over, then I ask, hath your house been burnt? Hath your property been destroyed before your face? Are your wife and children destitute of a bed to lie on, or bread to live on? Have you lost a parent or a child by their hands, and yourself the ruined and wretched survivor? If you have not, then you are not a judge of those who have. But if you have, and can still shake hands with the murderers, then you are unworthy of the name of husband, father, friend, or lover, and whatever may be your rank or title in life, you have the heart of a coward and the spirit of a sycophant. – Thomas Paine
The secret of all of this.. liberty does not exist in a vaccuum. There are two things required for liberty. A government... and its lack of action. Wherein is this liberty? Should we stand back and be idle even as others are tortured, are we not as guilty as those directing pain against them?
By denying them their right to justice, their day in court, their investigation, their very humanity, we lose something far more vital than the information we seek to gain. We lose our humanity. We lose our authority. We abandon and abuse our own morality, visiting upon others pain for the very wrongs which we commit.
Were we not opposing brutality and the lack of the rule of law? By imposing that which we oppose, in order to oppose it, we become the very monsters we seek to destroy... as Friedrich Nietzsche put it...
Battle not with monsters, lest ye become a monster, and if you gaze into the abyss, the abyss gazes also into you.
If we deny them the freedoms and liberties we seek, for suspicion of wrong, and deny them due process, and full investigation of law, deny them the right to law, do we not also deny ourselves justice?
Justice is never just when it is applied unequally. It is never right to mete out its penalties without its benefits. It is never, ever just... to offer punishment without trial.
Lowering ourselves to the level of tyrants to preserve liberty guarantees we will only gain tyranny. Liberty cannot come from government action. Winning the love of others cannot come through compulsion. And forever, and always, becoming what you fight just means that you've become as big a monster as you perceived the other side to be.
Feb 11th, 2009 at 3:16pm
p.s. my school's Moot Cout competition this year is loosely based on this (and the Arar) case.
Feb 15th, 2009 at 3:51pm
Corporations were involved with directing our politicians in exerting influence. If this came to light that our politicians acted in accordance with corporate directive, then our political structure would wholely be in question.
Our political system was a revelation in 1776. Before indoor plumbing, before toilet paper, before corporations took over the majority of natural resources, before lobbyists, before the Fed, before ... the National Security Agency.
I propose that we the people elect “State elected doctors of science” as representatives to lead the National Security Agency (NSA). As such, their job would substantially be to Ethically monitor and guide the various factions of our Government so as to consistently make broad-based ethical decisions.
Ethically Eliminate ALL Political Corruption:
http://eliminate-all-corruption.pbwiki.com
O ur political STRUCTURE must keep pace with our government's corrupting influences.
In an ethical environment, Freedom and Security are NOT mutually exclusive.