-Caveat Lector-

>From http://www.canoe.ca/Columnists/margolis_jul28.html

July 28, 2002

Bush is becoming downright dangerous



By ERIC MARGOLIS -- Contributing Foreign Editor

NEW YORK -- Of all the bad ideas that have been pouring from the Bush administration - 
the faux war on
terrorism, the Palestine mess, invading Iraq, curtailment of civil liberties, 
unilateralism, growing deficits, farm
subsidies, steel tariffs - among the very worst is the dangerous proposal that U.S. 
military forces be given
domestic police powers.

Bush administration officials, notably the chief of the newly created Northern 
Command, Gen. Ralph
Eberhart, have been calling for the Pentagon to assume a much greater domestic role in 
the so-called war
against terrorism. A role, apparently, that would give the military power to conduct 
investigations and
surveillance, use troops to "maintain order and security" and arrest American 
citizens. Canadians might be
next, since Canada has been involuntarily placed under the U.S. Northern Command.

This frightening plan comes on the heels of Bush's cutely named but sinister TIPs 
program, a network of
citizen informers that recalls evil memories of ubiquitous Soviet and Chinese civilian 
informers, children
denouncing parents, and East Germany, where a quarter of the adult population spied 
for the Stasi secret
police.

In the magisterial Roman Republic, father of all our western democracies, consular 
armies were forbidden by
law to enter the city. The Romans realized over 2,400 years ago that soldiers had to 
be strictly kept out of
politics. The Roman Republic died during the 1st century BC civil wars after military 
leaders Marius, Sulla and,
later, Caesar, brought their armies into politics.

America's Congress - which was patterned on the Roman Senate - clearly recalled this 
history when it passed
the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 which outlawed the use of federal military forces for 
domestic law
enforcement. Congress was intent on maintaining supremacy of civilian rule and 
protecting civil liberties.
Properly restrained, the military was a useful tool; unrestrained, a dangerous and 
ruthless master.

Soldiers are trained to kill enemies, not to perform complex police duties that 
require professionalism,
restraint and knowledge of the law. Long, painful experience around the world has 
repeatedly shown that
once the military is brought in to "maintain order" or perform policing, it almost 
inevitably becomes corrupted,
despotic and politicized.

One need only look at the doleful history of Pakistan, Indonesia, Nigeria, Egypt, 
Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay,
Chile and Venezuela to see that when soldiers take over internal security, they 
inevitably end up taking over
the government as well. When soldiers are allowed to police, they suddenly realize 
their latent power and go
from being second-class citizens to cocks of the walk. Law quickly gives way before 
raw power. Those who
have served in the military - as this writer has - have a healthy fear of military 
justice and its drumhead
implementation.

Interestingly, the Soviet communists were even more sensitive to this threat. Lenin 
repeatedly warned of
"Bonapartism" and urged the party to keep control of internal security and police in 
the hands of civilians.

The Posse Comitatus Act was amended by the Reagan administration to allow use of the 
military in an earlier
bogus "war" - the war on drugs.

In this case, the military was sent to identify and intercept drug smugglers outside 
America's borders. At the
time, the idea seemed reasonable. But in retrospect, the inflow of drugs has barely 
been reduced while the
military has ended up with a boot in the door of domestic law enforcement.

In 1997, Congress gave the military the power to co-operate with other government 
departments in
countering biological or chemical attacks. This made sense because the military had an 
arsenal of biowarfare
detection, neutralization gear, vaccines and the training to use them. But Congress 
expressly forbade the
military from arresting civilians during biowarfare operations.

Now, some of the far-rightists who populate the darker corners of the Bush 
administration are using public
fear and hysteria generated by incessant claims of imminent nuclear or biowarfare 
attack to press for what
amounts to the beginning of national martial law. We hear calls for greater 
surveillance of phones and e-mail.
Next will come calls for limits on speech and dissent. George Orwell laid out this 
whole grim process in his
epochal novel, 1984. Anyone who wants a feel of what martial law would be like should 
see the gripping Burt
Lancaster film about a Pentagon coup against the White House, Seven Days in May.

Fortunately, Congress, much of the top brass and even Pentagon super-hawk Donald 
Rumsfeld seem
opposed to this daft idea. Good for them. Separation of the civil and military is even 
more basic and sacred
an American concept than separation of church and state.

The voice Americans should be listening to is that of the closest thing the United 
States had to a noble Roman
tribune - former president Dwight Eisenhower. As this great American and former 
general was leaving office,
he warned his people that the gravest threat they faced was not from abroad but from 
their own military-
industrial complex.

The U.S. has ample civilian law enforcement agencies to ensure domestic security - 
perhaps too many.
Americans don't need soldiers to act as super-cops. Osama bin-Laden and the far right 
must not be allowed
to stampede the U.S. into military policing.



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