Bush Seeks to Affirm a Continuing War on Terror 
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
Published: August 29, 2008 
WASHINGTON - Tucked deep into a recent proposal from the Bush administration is 
a provision that has received almost no public attention, yet in many ways 
captures one of President Bush's defining legacies: an affirmation that the 
United States is still at war with Al Qaeda. 

Seven years after the Sept. 11 attacks, Mr. Bush's advisers assert that many 
Americans may have forgotten that. So they want Congress to say so and 
"acknowledge again and explicitly that this nation remains engaged in an armed 
conflict with Al Qaeda, the Taliban, and associated organizations, who have 
already proclaimed themselves at war with us and who are dedicated to the 
slaughter of Americans."

The language, part of a proposal for hearing legal appeals from detainees at 
the United States naval base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, goes beyond political 
symbolism. Echoing a measure that Congress passed just days after the Sept. 11 
attacks, it carries significant legal and public policy implications for Mr. 
Bush, and potentially his successor, to claim the imprimatur of Congress to use 
the tools of war, including detention, interrogation and surveillance, against 
the enemy, legal and political analysts say.

Some lawmakers are concerned that the administration's effort to declare anew a 
war footing is an 11th-hour maneuver to re-establish its broad interpretation 
of the president's wartime powers, even in the face of challenges from the 
Supreme Court and Congress.

The proposal is also the latest step that the administration, in its waning 
months, has taken to make permanent important aspects of its "long war" against 
terrorism. From a new wiretapping law approved by Congress to a rewriting of 
intelligence procedures and F.B.I. investigative techniques, the administration 
is moving to institutionalize by law, regulation or order a wide variety of 
antiterrorism tactics. 

"This seems like a final push by the administration before they go out the 
door," said Suzanne Spaulding, a former lawyer for the Central Intelligence 
Agency and an expert on national security law. The cumulative effect of the 
actions, Ms. Spaulding said, is to "put the onus on the next administration" - 
particularly a Barack Obama administration - to justify undoing what Mr. Bush 
has done. 

It is uncertain whether Congress will take the administration up on its 
request. Some Republicans have already embraced the idea, with Representative 
Lamar Smith of Texas, the ranking Republican on the Judiciary Committee, 
introducing a measure almost identical to the administration's proposal. "Since 
9/11," Mr. Smith said, "we have been at war with an unconventional enemy whose 
primary goal is to kill innocent Americans."

In the midst of an election season, the language represents a political 
challenge of sorts to the administration's critics. While many Democrats say 
they are wary of Mr. Bush's claims to presidential power, they may be even more 
nervous about casting a vote against a measure that affirms the country's war 
against terrorism. They see the administration's effort to force the issue as 
little more than a political ploy.

Mr. Bush "is trying to stir up again the politics of fear by reminding people 
of something they haven't really forgotten: that we are engaged in serious 
armed conflict with Al Qaeda," said Laurence H. Tribe, a constitutional scholar 
at Harvard and legal adviser to Mr. Obama. "But the question is, Where is that 
conflict to be waged, and by what means."

With violence rising in Afghanistan and Osama bin Laden still at large, there 
are ample signs of the United States' continued battles with terrorism. But Mr. 
Bush and his advisers say that seven years without an attack has lulled many 
Americans.

"As Sept. 11, 2001, recedes into the past, there are some people who have come 
to think of it as kind of a singular event and of there being nothing else out 
there," Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey told House lawmakers in July. "In a 
way, we are the victims of our own success, our own success being that another 
attack has been prevented."

Mr. Mukasey laid out the administration's thinking in a July 21 speech to a 
conservative Washington policy institute in response to yet another rebuke on 
presidential powers by the Supreme Court: its ruling that prisoners at 
Guantánamo Bay , were entitled to habeas corpus rights to contest their 
detentions in court. 

The administration wants Congress to set out a narrow framework for those 
prisoner appeals. But the administration's six-point proposal goes further. It 
includes not only the broad proclamation of a continued "armed conflict with Al 
Qaeda," but also the desire for Congress to "reaffirm that for the duration of 
the conflict the United States may detain as enemy combatants those who have 
engaged in hostilities or purposefully supported Al Qaeda, the Taliban and 
associated organizations." 

That broad language hints at why Democrats, and some Republicans, worry about 
the consequences. It could, they say, provide the legal framework for Mr. Bush 
and his successor to assert once again the president's broad interpretation of 
the commander in chief's wartime powers, powers that Justice Department lawyers 
secretly used to justify the indefinite detention of terrorist suspects and the 
National Security Agency's wiretapping of Americans without court orders. 

The language recalls a resolution, known as the Authorization for Use of 
Military Force, passed by Congress on Sept. 14, 2001. It authorized the 
president to "use all necessary and appropriate force" against those 
responsible for the Sept. 11 attacks to prevent future strikes. That 
authorization, still in effect, was initially viewed by many members of 
Congress who voted for it as the go-ahead for the administration to invade 
Afghanistan and overthrow the Taliban, which had given sanctuary to Mr. bin 
Laden. 

But the military authorization became the secret legal basis for some of the 
administration's most controversial legal tactics, including the wiretapping 
program, and that still gnaws at some members of Congress. 

Senator Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, the ranking Republican on the Judiciary 
Committee, said he wanted to make sure the Bush administration - or a future 
president - did not use that declaration as "another far-fetched 
interpretation" to evade the law, the way he believes Mr. Bush and aides like 
Alberto R. Gonzales, the former attorney general, did in using the wiretapping 
program to avoid the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. 

"I don't want to face another situation where we had the Sept. 14 resolution 
and then Attorney General Gonzales claimed that that was authorization to 
violate FISA," Mr. Specter said. 

For Bush critics like Bruce Fein, a Justice Department official in the Reagan 
administration, the answer is simple: do not give the administration the 
wartime language it seeks. 

"I do not believe that we are in a state of war whatsoever," Mr. Fein said. "We 
have an odious opponent that the criminal justice system is able to identify 
and indict and convict. They're not a goliath. Don't treat them that way."



http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/30/washington/30terror.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=lichtblau%20bush%20qaeda%20taliban%20war&st=cse&oref=slogin
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