Tuesday, May 01, 2007

WATERGATE-ERA SLEUTH GIVES LOWDOWN ON GONZALEZ’S CURIOUS STAYING POWER (GUEST COLUMNIST)


http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-holtzman1may01,0,3365495.story?coll=la-opinion-rightrail
From The Los Angeles Times
May 1, 2007
By Elizabeth Holtzman
NO MATTER how many members of Congress lose confidence in Atty. Gen. Alberto R. Gonzales, President Bush is unlikely to let him go. If Gonzales resigns, the vacancy must be filled by a new presidential nominee, and the last thing the White House wants is a confirmation hearing.

Already, the Senate is outlining conditions for confirming a Gonzales successor. Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.), chairman of the Judiciary Committee, has said that his panel would not hold confirmation hearings unless Karl Rove and other White House aides testify about the firing of U.S. attorneys to clarify whether "the White House has interfered with prosecution."

All this is reminiscent of the Watergate scandal. In 1973, as the coverup was unraveling, the Senate imposed a condition on the confirmation of President Nixon's nominee for attorney general, Elliot Richardson. Richardson's predecessor had resigned because of Watergate troubles. Concerned that the Justice Department would not get at the truth, the Senate insisted that Richardson would name a special prosecutor to investigate Watergate. Richardson duly appointed Archibald Cox.

The rest is history. Cox's aggressive investigations led to the prosecution of top administration officials and the naming of Nixon as an unindicted co-conspirator in the coverup. When Cox sought White House tapes of Nixon's conversations with his staff, the president had him fired, unleashing a firestorm of protests. Americans demanded that a previously reluctant Congress start impeachment proceedings against Nixon. Congress complied; the House Judiciary Committee, of which I was a member, voted for impeachment, and Nixon resigned.

Aspects of this history could easily repeat themselves. The Senate could demand, as it did in 1973, that a new attorney general appoint a special prosecutor, and this could again have dire consequences for the White House.

A new special prosecutor would have many questions to investigate.

For starters, were any of the firings of U.S. attorneys federal crimes — such as obstruction of justice, designed to stymie investigations or to retaliate for prosecutions of Republicans? If so, who is responsible and how high up does that responsibility go? Did Deputy Atty. Gen. Paul J. McNulty, who gave inaccurate testimony to Congress about the firings, commit any crime in doing so? Were those who briefed him for that testimony complicit?

And what happened to the missing e-mail messages from Rove and others? Did these apparent violations of the Presidential Records Act — failure to keep copies of the exchanges — constitute federal crimes?

So there is ample work for a special prosecutor. The Senate could call for appointing one without waiting for Gonzales to resign. But in that case, Gonzales or McNulty would be making the appointment, and the integrity of the choice would be highly questionable.

That leaves Senate confirmation hearings of a new attorney general nominee as the main leverage for Congress to secure an independent criminal investigation of the U.S. attorney firings.

Moreover, the Senate might use such hearings to do more than secure testimony from White House aides about the firings, as Leahy indicated. It also might use the opportunity to probe the Justice Department's role in mistreatment of detainees, four years of flouting the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act and other serious matters.

Rather than face such scrutiny, the White House may prefer keeping a drastically weakened Gonzales in place. But doing so exacts a high price for the Justice Department and the nation. It damages department morale and credibility, undermines its ability to recruit and could affect perceptions of federal prosecutors, jeopardizing important cases. By retaining Gonzales to preempt Senate action, the president has signaled that this is a price he is willing to make the nation pay.

ELIZABETH HOLTZMAN, a former Democratic congresswoman from New York, is the coauthor of "The Impeachment of George W. Bush: A Practical Guide for Concerned Citizens."

IRAQ COMMANDER'S FORECAST FOR U.S. CASUALTIES? HIGHER


DIGGING DEEPER
By Ivan G. Goldman
We’re so tired and disgusted with lies about Iraq that we sometimes pay insufficient attention to what people in government tell us about it. Army Gen. David Petraeus, the commander there, has recently divulged hugely significant changes in strategy that will, he’s conceded, result in a higher U.S. casualty rate.
Patraeus, an intellectual soldier who literally and truly wrote the book on counterinsurgency fighting, is repositioning troops, placing them in forward patrol bases like the one in Diyala Province where nine U.S. paratroopers were killed and approximately 20 wounded in two horrific, coordinated suicide bombings on April 23. The repositioning allows U.S. troops to interact on a daily basis with Iraqi civilians while they aggressively patrol their new neighborhoods.
But with our troops spread out in these smaller enclaves, they stay in positions that can’t be defended as easily. Engineers placed formidable concrete barriers and other defensive structures around the Forward Operating Bases (FOBs) that had been the typical headquarters area for ground troops. But those structures aren’t in place around the kind of small base used by those soldiers of the famed 82nd Airborne Division who were killed April 23. Patraeus, who said the new strategy is already bringing some progress, told military personnel at a Pentagon briefing:
“Our achievements have not come without sacrifice. Our increase in operational tempo, location of our forces in the populations they are securing and conduct of operations in areas where we previously had no presence, as well as the enemy's greater use of certain types of explosive devices, have led to an increase in our losses."
Also, in an interview on NPR last week, Patraeus was the first commander of any rank to admit that troop levels are well beyond the announced 160,000. Without citing figures, the forthright general officer pointed out private contractors carry out everyday missions such as guarding the Baghdad airport that would ordinarily be performed by military units, and so these non-uniformed fighters must be included in the force level. Other sources number the mercenary contingent at 112,000. These civilians performing soldier functions for as much as $30,000 a month have been The Great Invader’s stealth method of raising force levels without alarming the public by calling for a draft. They’ve also allowed him to hand out lucrative, no-bid contracts to business pals who accept the casualty rate of their work force as a cost of business.
Patraeus, asked to devise a strategy that could vanquish the many enemies that make up the insurgency, put one together, but in addition to resulting in the killing and maiming of more U.S. troops, it will take years to yield significant results. Patraeus has been telling us this, but no one’s listening. Also, he's not talking about training Iraqis to take our place because he recognizes that strategy has, after four years of failure, proved useless.
The Great Invader has, without asking us, signed America on for a ten-year war at least. Get used to it, or get out in the street and make the government step back from placing all these resources into a war that couldn’t possibly be worth all the lives and treasure it expends in our name.