We Won—for Now
  

 
 
 
 
 
Posted on Sep 17, 2012
 
AP/John Minchillo 
Truthdig columnist Chris Hedges, who is suing the government over a 
controversial provision in the National Defense Authorization Act, is 
seen here addressing a crowd in New York’s Zuccotti Park.  
By Chris Hedges
In January I sued President Barack 
Obama over Section 1021(b)(2) of the National Defense Authorization Act 
(NDAA), which authorized the military to detain U.S. citizens 
indefinitely, strip them of due process and hold them in military 
facilities, including offshore penal colonies. Last week, round one in 
the battle to strike down the onerous provision, one that saw me joined 
by six other plaintiffs including Noam Chomsky and Daniel Ellsberg, 
ended in an unqualified victory for the public. U.S. District Judge 
Katherine Forrest, who accepted every one of our challenges to the law, 
made her temporary injunction of the section permanent. In short, she declared 
the law unconstitutional. 
Almost immediately after Judge Forrest 
ruled, the Obama administration challenged the decision. Government 
prosecutors called the opinion “unprecedented” and said that “the 
government has compelling arguments that it should be reversed.” The 
government added that it was an “extraordinary injunction of worldwide 
scope.” Government lawyers asked late Friday for an immediate stay of 
Forrest’s ban on the use of the military in domestic policing and on the 
empowering of the government to strip U.S. citizens of due process. The request 
for a stay was an attempt by the government to get the judge, 
pending appeal to a higher court, to grant it the right to continue to 
use the law. Forrest swiftly rejected the stay, setting in motion a 
fast-paced appeal to the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and possibly, if her 
ruling is upheld there, to the Supreme Court of the United 
States. The Justice Department sent a letter to Forrest and the 2nd 
Circuit late Friday night informing them that at 9 a.m. Monday the Obama 
administration would ask the 2nd Circuit for an emergency stay that 
would lift Forrest’s injunction. This would allow Obama to continue to 
operate with indefinite detention authority until a formal appeal was 
heard. The government’s decision has triggered a constitutional showdown 
between the president and the judiciary.  
“This may be the most significant 
constitutional standoff since the Pentagon Papers case,” said Carl 
Mayer, co-lead counsel for the plaintiffs. 
“The administration of President Obama 
within the last 48 hours has decided to engage in an all-out campaign to block 
and overturn an order of a federal judge,” said co-lead counsel 
Bruce Afran. “As Judge Forrest noted in her opinion, nothing is more 
fundamental in American law than the possibility that journalists, 
activists and citizens could lose their liberty, potentially forever, 
and the Obama administration has now lined up squarely with the most 
conservative elements of the Republican Party to undermine Americans’ 
civil liberties.” 
The request by the government to keep the 
law on the books during the appeal process raises a disturbing question. If the 
administration is this anxious to restore this section of the 
NDAA, is it because the Obama government has already used it? Or does it have 
plans to use the section in the immediate future? 

“A Department of Homeland Security bulletin was issued Friday claiming 
that the riots [in the Middle East] are likely to come to the U.S. and 
saying that DHS is looking for the Islamic leaders of these likely 
riots,” Afran said. “It is my view that this is why the government wants to 
reopen the NDAA—so it has a tool to round up would-be Islamic 
protesters before they can launch any protest, violent or otherwise. 
Right now there are no legal tools to arrest would-be protesters. The 
NDAA would give the government such power. Since the request to vacate 
the injunction only comes about on the day of the riots, and following 
the DHS bulletin, it seems to me that the two are connected. The 
government wants to reopen the NDAA injunction so that they can use it 
to block protests.”
The decision to vigorously fight Forrest’s 
ruling is a further example of the Obama White House’s steady and 
relentless assault against civil liberties, an assault that is more 
severe than that carried out by George W. Bush. Obama has refused to 
restore habeas corpus. He supports the FISA Amendment Act, which 
retroactively makes legal what under our Constitution has traditionally 
been illegal—warrantless wire tapping, eavesdropping and monitoring 
directed against U.S. citizens. He has used the Espionage Act six times 
against whistle-blowers who have exposed government crimes, including 
war crimes, to the public. He interprets the 2001 Authorization to Use 
Military Force Act as giving him the authority to assassinate U.S. 
citizens, as he did the cleric Anwar al-Awlaki. And now he wants the 
right to use the armed forces to throw U.S. citizens into military 
prisons, where they will have no right to a trial and no defined length 
of detention. 
Liberal apologists for Barack Obama should 
read Judge Forrest’s 112-page ruling. It is a chilling explication and 
denunciation of the massive erosion of the separation of powers. It 
courageously challenges the overreach of Congress and the executive 
branch in stripping Americans of some of our most cherished 
constitutional rights. 
In the last 220 years there have been only 
about 135 judicial rulings that have struck down an act of Congress. 
Most of the cases involved abortion or pornography. Very few dealt with 
wartime powers and the separation of powers, or what Forrest in her 
opinion called “a question of defining an individual’s core liberties.” 
Section 1021(b)(2) authorizes the military 
to detain any U.S. citizen who “substantially supported” al-Qaida, the 
Taliban or “associated forces” and then hold them in military compounds 
until “the end of hostilities.” The vagueness of the language, and the 
refusal to exempt journalists, means that those of us who as part of our 
reporting have direct contact with individuals or groups deemed to be 
part of a terrorist network can find ourselves seized and detained under the 
provision. 
“The Government was unable to offer 
definitions for the phrases ‘substantially support’ or ‘directly 
support,’ ” the judge wrote. “In particular, when the Court asked for 
one example of what ‘substantially support’ means, the Government 
stated, ‘I’m not in a position to give one specific example.’ When asked about 
the phrase ‘directly support,’ the Government stated, ‘I have not thought 
through exactly and we have not come to a position on ‘direct 
support’ and what that means.’ In its pre-trial memoranda, the 
Government also did not provide any definitional examples for those 
terms.”
The judge’s ruling asked whether a news 
article deemed by authorities as favorable to the Taliban could be 
interpreted as having “substantially supported” the Taliban.
“How about a YouTube video?” she went on. 
“Where is the line between what the government would consider 
‘journalistic reporting’ and ‘propaganda?’ Who will make such 
determinations? Will there be an office established to read articles, 
watch videos, and evaluate speeches in order to make judgments along a 
spectrum of where the support is ‘modest’ or ‘substantial?’ ”Forrest concurred 
with the plaintiffs that the statute violated our free speech rights and 
due-process guarantees. She noted that “the Court 
repeatedly asked the Government whether those particular past activities could 
subject plaintiffs to indefinite detention; the Government 
refused to answer.” The judge went on to criticize the nebulous language of the 
law, chastising the government because it “did not provide 
particular definitions.” She wrote that “the statute’s vagueness falls 
far short of what due process requires.”  
Although government lawyers argued during 
the trial that the law represented no change from prior legislation, 
they now assert that blocking it imperils the nation’s security. It is 
one of numerous contradictions in the government’s case, many of which 
were illuminated in Forrest’s opinion. The government, she wrote, 
“argues that no future administration could interpret § 1021(b)(2) or 
the AUMF differently because the two are so clearly the same. That 
frankly makes no sense, particularly in light of the Government’s 
inability at the March and August hearings to define certain terms in—or the 
scope of—§ 1021(b)(2).” The judge said that “Section 1021 appears 
to be a legislative attempt at an ex post facto ‘fix’: to provide the 
President (in 2012) with broader detention authority than was provided 
in the AUMF [Authorization to Use Military Force Act] in 2001 and to try and 
ratify past detentions which may have occurred under an 
overly-broad interpretation of the AUMF.” 
The government, in effect, is attempting to push though a law similar to the 
legislation that permitted the 
government to intern 110,000 Japanese-Americans during World War II. 
This law, if it comes back into force, would facilitate the mass 
internment of Muslim Americans as well as those deemed to “support” 
groups or activities defined as terrorist by the state. Calling the 1944 ruling 
“an embarrassment,” Forrest referred to Korematsu v. United States, which 
upheld the government’s internment of Japanese-Americans.  
The judge said in her opinion that the 
government “did not submit any evidence in support of its positions. It 
did not call a single witness, submit a single declaration, or offer a 
single document at any point during these proceedings.” She went on to 
write that she found “the testimony of each plaintiff credible.”
“At the March hearing, the Court asked 
whether Hedges’ activities could subject him to detention under § 1021; 
the Government stated that it was not prepared to address that question. When 
asked a similar question at the August hearing, five months later, the 
Government remained unwilling to state whether any of plaintiffs’ 
(including Hedges’s) protected First Amendment future activities could 
subject him or her to detention under § 1021. This Court finds that 
Hedges has a reasonable fear of detention pursuant to § 1021(b)(2).”
The government has now lost four times in a litigation that has gone on almost 
nine months. It lost the preliminary injunction in May. It lost a motion for 
reconsideration shortly 
thereafter. It lost the permanent injunction. It lost its request last 
week for a stay. We won’t stop fighting this, but it is deeply 
disturbing that the Obama administration, rather than protecting our 
civil liberties and democracy, insists on further eroding them by 
expanding the power of the military to seize U.S. citizens and control 
our streets. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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