Sen. Leahy's and Rep. Conyers' Truth Commission Could Work but...

Tue, 02/10/2009  - dlindorff

The similar calls by Senate Judiciary Chair Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) and 
House Judiciary Chair Rep. John Conyers (D-MI) for a Truth and 
Reconciliation Commission to investigate the crimes of the Bush/Cheney 
administration are potentially a terrible idea, but one that could turn out 
to be an excellent one, if handled correctly.

It would be a terrible idea if a Truth and Reconciliation Commission was 
just another 9-11-type body. That commission turned out to be worse than 
nothing, given that it was manipulated by the Bush administration to be 
toothless and that it ended up covering up more than it uncovered. Aside 
from the behind the scenes manipulation, the biggest problem with the 9-11 
commission, though, was that is was not linked to any attempt to prosecute 
official wrong-doing.

A congressionally-established Truth and Reconciliation commission to examine 
Bush-era crimes like torture, lying to Congress, FISA violations, etc., 
would likely also end up doing more harm than good if it were just set up to 
call witnesses, issue a report and go home.

What is needed is a Truth and Reconciliation Commission that is linked to a 
plan for aggressively prosecuting wrongdoing. The idea, modelled on the 
commission set up by the popularly elected government under Nelson Mandela 
after the end of South Africa's white apartheid police state rule, would be 
to hold hearings designed to get to the bottom of the many crimes that were 
committed against the Constitution, the people of the United States, and the 
people of the world, and to air them fully so that they would not happen 
again.

But for that to really work, there would have to be aggressive investigators 
and jurists appointed to the commission, it would have to be given unlimited 
subpoena power and an open-ended congressional investigative mandate with 
access to all state secrets, and finally, it would have to have the legal 
authority to grant immunity from prosecution to those who, under oath, 
volunteered to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth to 
that body.

Linked to this, there would have to be a commitment on the part of the 
Justice Department, or ideally to an independent special prosecutor, to 
pursue those who either refused to testify before such a commission, or who 
were found to have lied to it.

I am not troubled by the idea that possible criminals, up to and including 
former President Bush and Vice President Cheney, might, as a result of their 
testimony before the commission, be allowed to live out their lives free 
from prosecution. If such men were to testify truthfully about what they had 
done, the effect on the American public would be so profound that it would 
be a powerful deterrent to any future leaders doing the same kind of thing, 
and those who were exposed would live lives of shame and be condemned by 
history. That's good enough for me. I don't need to see them locked up 
behind bars, or sentenced to death for murder. It's not vengeance that we 
should be seeking, it is the prevention of another such episode of 
presidential lawlessness.

That said, the threat of prosecution is crucial to ensure that all 
administration officials come before such a commission if called, and that 
they testify honestly. Only by doing so could they avoid the risk of actual 
prosecution. Note that since this would not be a trial, there would be no 
"Fifth Amendment" waiver against self-incriminating testimony--a big 
advantage. If a witness were called and refused to appear, that witness 
should automatically be subject to investigation by a federal prosecutor. If 
a witness, as a result of documentary evidence, or the testimony of other 
witnesses, were found to have lied to the commission, he or she would also 
be subject to investigation and prosecution.

The beauty of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission is that it can truly be 
presented as an effort to root out a problem and solve it, without there 
having to be a sense of retribution and political division. Any political 
contentiousness would be the result of witnesses' refusal to participate, or 
to come clean, not of the effort to elicit the truth.

The other advantage of the commission approach to dealing with the 
wrongdoing and unconstitutional actions and usurpations of power by the 
executive branch over the past eight years is that it would encourage many 
lower-level administration officials who may have participated in criminal 
behavior or conspiracies to come forward and clear themselves by telling the 
truth, making the job of prosecuting higher-ups much easier.

So I say a cautious yes to Leahy's and Conyers' initiative, but only with 
the proviso that any commission they propose be linked to a plan to 
prosecute liars and those who refuse to testify if called.


http://www.thiscantbehappening.net/?q=node/268

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