Obama ‘Releases’ Pres. Bush’s Secret Post 9-11 Anti-Terror Memos

March 3rd, 2009 Posted By Erik Wong.

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“Secret terror memos vs. authentic birth certificate?

Damn! I feel so much safer everyday with this guy!

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Secret anti-terror Bush memos made public by Obama

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department on Monday released a long-secret legal document from 2001 in which the Bush administration claimed the military could search and seize terror suspects in the United States without warrants.

The legal memo was written about a month after the Sept. 11 terror attacks. It says constitutional protections against unlawful search and seizure would not apply to terror suspects in the U.S., as long as the president or another high official authorized the action.

Even after the Bush administration rescinded that legal analysis, the Justice Department refused to release its contents, prompting a standoff with congressional Democrats.

The memo was one of nine released Monday by the Obama administration.

Another memo showed that, within two weeks of Sept. 11, the administration was contemplating ways to use wiretaps without getting warrants.

The author of the search and seizure memo, John Yoo, did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

In that memo, Yoo wrote that the president could treat terrorist suspects in the United States like an invading foreign army. For instance, he said, the military would not have to get a warrant to storm a building to prevent terrorists from detonating a bomb.

Yoo also suggested that the government could put new restrictions on the press and speech, without spelling out what those might be.

“First Amendment speech and press rights may also be subordinated to the overriding need to wage war successfully,” Yoo wrote, adding later: “The current campaign against terrorism may require even broader exercises of federal power domestically.”
(AP)

WaPo:

Post-9/11 Memos Show More Bush-Era Legal Errors

By R. Jeffrey Smith and Dan Eggen

The number of major legal errors committed by Bush administration lawyers during the formulation of its early counterterrorism policies was far greater than previously known, according to internal Bush administration documents released for the first time by the Justice Department yesterday.

Those policies were based on at least 10 legal opinions conferring broad powers on the president that the Justice Department later deemed flawed and ordered withdrawn, including several approving the military’s search, detention or trial of civilians in the United States without congressional input, according to the documents.

While the Bush administration had previously acknowledged rescinding two of those memos — authorizing the infliction of pain and suffering on detainees and claiming unquestioned authority to interrogate suspects outside the United States — the government’s eventual repudiation or rewrite of the eight other early legal memos was secret until now.

In one of the newly disclosed opinions, Justice Department appointee John Yoo argued that constitutional provisions ensuring free speech and barring warrantless searches could be disregarded by the president in wartime, allowing troops to storm a building if they suspected terrorists might be inside. In another, the department asserted that detainees could be transferred to countries known to commit human rights abuses so long as U.S. officials did not intentionally seek their torture.

The opinions were initially drafted — and later repudiated at least in part — by the Justice Department’s storied Office of Legal Counsel, which issues interpretations of laws and presidential authorities considered binding on the entire executive branch. The multiple policy shifts during Bush’s two presidential terms reflect an unprecedented degree of turmoil in that office, experts say.

In releasing some of the discredited memos, including three that the Bush administration had argued must be kept secret as recently as November, Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. declared that “Americans deserve a government that operates with transparency and openness.” He also said he hoped to make future legal opinions by his department on such matters “available when possible while still protecting national security information and ensuring robust internal” debate.

The new batch of opinions does not include any repudiated for the first time by the Obama administration or reflect a government shift on the underlying legal issues since Bush’s departure. They also do not include the most controversial memos that Democratic lawmakers and human rights experts have been asking to see for several years, including those justifying the CIA’s use of harsh interrogation techniques and the National Security Agency’s program to surveil certain Americans without warrants.

But the new administration’s swift release of seven of the discredited opinions, as well as an official summary of why they were withdrawn, drew praise yesterday from Capitol Hill and human rights activists. Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.) said the collection begins “to provide details of some of the Bush administration’s misguided national security policies” that have long been withheld from public scrutiny.

The defects in most of the early opinions were summarized in a document titled “Memorandum for the Files” and signed by Steven G. Bradbury, who served as the acting head of the legal counsel’s office for the Bush administration’s last three years without being confirmed by the Senate. Bradbury dated the memo five days before Obama’s inauguration and said its purpose was to “confirm that certain propositions” asserted previously by the office were no longer supported. He said key national security officials had already been advised of the change of heart but did not say when.

Bradbury explained the defective legal opinions were issued “in the wake of the atrocities of 9/11, when policy makers, fearing that additional catastrophic terrorist attacks were imminent, strived to employ all lawful means to protect the Nation.” He said the fact that legal flaws were noticed later was not meant to suggest that the authors did not “satisfy” professional standards.

Yoo’s previously secret 37-page memo asserting that the president could authorize a broad use of military force to combat terrorist activities inside the United States was completed six weeks after the terrorist attacks. In it, Yoo said any terrorists in the United States could be treated like an invading army, justifying warrantless searches and the subordination of free speech and press rights if needed to “wage war successfully.”

Jameel Jaffer, head of the American Civil Liberties Union’s national security project, yesterday called this “a quite astounding proposition.”

Nearly seven years later, on Oct. 6, 2008, Bradbury declared that the memo contained several “propositions that are either incorrect or highly questionable.” He said that in fact, the Fourth Amendment prohibition against warrantless search and seizure was “fully applicable to domestic military operations” and called the claims about ignoring free speech and press rights “overbroad” and “not sufficiently grounded.”

Jennifer Daskal, senior counterterrorism counsel for Human Rights Watch, said the documents taken together “read like a how-to document on how to evade the rule of law.” Daskal said she was particularly troubled by a March 2002 memo arguing there were few restrictions on transferring prisoners to a third country, regardless of whether the country had a record of abuse. The memo emphasized that transfers were okay if no explicit or implicit agreement was made to torture.

“That is [the Office of Legal Counsel] telling people how to get away with sending someone to a nation to be tortured,” Daskal said. “The idea that the legal counsel’s office would be essentially telling the president how to violate the law is completely contrary to the purpose and the role of what a legal adviser is supposed to do.”

Me: So, let me get this straight … Bush based his post 9-11 defense of this country’s soil on the best ‘legal opinions’ he could muster … NOT just dictatorial tactics. And everything in the last four weeks this administration and its congress have completely raped the people of this country for generations above and beyond their designated and defined “representation” of said people/generations.

Demonize the Bush Administration to pave the way for every dirty trick and tactic you are about to inflict on this nation. The facts are the facts, Hussein … we were NOT attacked after 9-11-01, and it’s NOT for the lack of planning and trying on the terrorists’ part.

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8 Responses to “Obama ‘Releases’ Pres. Bush’s Secret Post 9-11 Anti-Terror Memos”

  1. Birdddog(You think waterboarding is bad? Wait til we bring out the needles!)

    Asshole Barry needs to keep the Bush hating in the news so he can continue to gut this country behind everyones back. :gun: :gun:

  2. BradW (the Infidel)

    This country has been under terrorist attack since November 4th, 2008, Maggie. Anything the MSM or the Obama Whtehouse puts out needs to be viewed with utmost suspicion. The attacks have stepped up in regualrity since January 20th, 2009, and are basically at a 24/7 pitch.

    If anyone is surprised by this, you are at the wrong website.

    By the way, either a .45 or 9MM, whichever fits your hand best. and then practice practice practice, learn to strip it and clean it regularly. No weapon works best when dirty

  3. ALPHA

    Democrat Play Book: Divert attention away from one’s own malfeasance and continue feeding Red Herrings. Plain as day, this is all they are trying to do and I for one have reached my saturation point with this entire charade.

  4. ?

    slight of hand … look over there at that! not at what I am doing, but look at that!!

  5. WestCoastGirl

    I read somewhere else today that his releasing these documents will come back to bite him in the ass in the form of him being forced to release his BC and college records. They argued that his releasing these documents will lose him the right in court to continue to hide his info. Anyone else think that is true?

  6. American Woman (bitter clinger to my guns and religion)

    This sick mother fucker is raping this country at gun point right in front of our faces.

    :arrow: westcoastgirl,
    I would hope so but dont hold your breath. Ofuck and his admin are above the law, there are 2 sets of laws in this country.
    the obeyers and the dim o cRATS!!!! :gun:

  7. Mike Mose

    Obama is what the devil himself flushes down the toilet in HELL.

    All are waiting for the moment when this nation unleashes everything we have on Obama and Washington DC. We are going to hang every Marxist on the planet starting with ………..

    10 million men in DC

  8. Mike Mose

    Obama is what the devil himself flushes down the toilet in HELL.

    All are waiting for the moment when this nation unleashes everything we have on Obama and Washington DC. We are going to hang every Marxists ………..

    10 million angry men in DC

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