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From: "Boyle, Francis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Institute for Public Accuracy
915 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045
(202) 347-0020 * http://www.accuracy.org * [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___________________________________________________

      Thursday, January 12, 2006

      Questions Not Asked:

      * Torturing People's Children * War Powers * Geneva Conventions

DOUG CASSEL, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Cassel is director of Notre Dame Law School's Center for Civil and
Human Rights. He said today: "At a time when the commander in chief
asserts that his war powers give him carte blanche, it is critical that
the Supreme Court be composed of individuals committed to the rule of
law. Justices must be prepared to tell a president who claims the power
to torture in our name, that American laws and values give a very simple
answer -- and that answer is no."

      On Dec. 1, 2005, Cassel debated John Yoo, who was mentioned by Sen.
Biden on Thursday morning and who has been one of the main legal
planners of the Bush administration's torture policies. Here is part of
their exchange:

    Cassel: "If the president deems that he's got to torture somebody,
including by crushing the testicles of the person's child, there is no
law that can stop him?"
    Yoo: "No treaty."
    Cassel: "Also no law by Congress -- that is what you wrote in the
August 2002 memo."
    Yoo: "I think it depends on why the president thinks he needs to do
that."

Audio is available at:
<http://dc.indymedia.org/media/all/display/28613/index.php>.
Further background on Yoo is available at:
<http://www.tomdispatch.com/index.mhtml?pid=32668>.

IVAN ELAND, [EMAIL PROTECTED],
http://www.independent.org/newsroom/article.asp?id=1651
      Senior fellow at The Independent Institute, a non-partisan think
tank, Eland commented today: "Alito said that the Constitution has
meaning independent of what he or anyone else might like it to say. I
couldn't agree more. The Constitution clearly states that it is up to
Congress to decide on war. That may not be fashionable, given that the
U.S. hasn't fought a declared war since World War II, but that is what
the Constitution says. All the senators asking him questions are pledged
to uphold the Constitution, including Article I, Sec. 8, which gives to
Congress its war powers. They should ask Alito what the Constitution
says about what branch of government should decide on war. Particularly
those members, mostly Republicans, who claim the mantle of original
intent of the Constitution, should be upholding the power of the
Congress on its war powers. The president is claiming extraordinary war
powers when there is no declared war.
      "Also, the Bush White House's lawyers have taken the position that
the president, in wartime, is allowed to disregard laws passed by
Congress. Examples are domestic spying without warrants, which are
required by statute, and declaring the option to circumvent an
anti-torture statute recently passed by Congress. The president is
reading his constitutional authority as commander-in-chief much much
wider than the founders had intended. Judge Alito should be asked to
delineate his conception of the scope of the executive power under the
commander-in-chief provision." Eland is a director of the Institute's
Center on Peace and Liberty and author of the book "The Empire Has No
Clothes."

FRANCIS BOYLE, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Boyle is professor of law at the University of Illinois. Alito
stated Wednesday: "I think that the war powers are divided between the
executive branch and the Congress."
      Boyle said today: "Article I, Sec. 8 of the Constitution says: 'The
Congress shall have power ... to declare war...' The president has
nothing to do with it. When Congress declares war, then that declaration
triggers the Commander in Chief Clause of the Constitution. Alito is
mistakenly attributing War Powers to the president in violation of the
War Powers Clause of the U.S. Constitution and in violation of
Congress's War Powers Resolution of 1973, which is 'the supreme Law of
the Land' according to Article VI of the Constitution. Alito's argument
is a fundamental alteration of one of the most basic principles for both
separation of powers and checks and balances set up for our Republic by
the Founders in the U.S. Constitution.
      "But this unconstitutional argument for presidential war powers is
part of the standard Federalist Society ideology propounded by its
prominent members such as Alito, John Roberts, and John Yoo. It has led
to the abuses of Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib, pervasive torture,
'extraordinary renditions,' criminal NSA spying on U.S. citizens, 'enemy
combatants,' wholesale violations of the Geneva Conventions,
assassinations, massive religious and racial profiling of
Muslims/Arabs/Asians, an unconstitutional war against Iraq and the
numerous other constitutional atrocities perpetrated by Bush's
hyper-imperial presidency. The Democrats have not asked serious
questions about most of these issues." Boyle is author of the book
"Destroying World Order."

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy: Sam
Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167

  

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