Tuesday, June 26, 2007
Marty Lederman
(UPDATED to address the "substance" of the Addington letter)
More than one year ago, the Director of the Archives Information Security Oversight Office
wrote to David Addington asking for an explanation of why the Office of the Vice President was not complying with
Executive Order 12958, which requires all executive branch "entities" to issue reports to the ISOO so that the latter can oversee such entities’ handling of classified documents.
No response from Addington.
The ISOO Director
wrote to Addington again in August.
Once again, the OVP did not bother to respond.
At which point the ISOO Director
wrote to DOJ on January 9th, asking the AG and OLC to resolve the legal question that Addington would not even deem worthy of addressing.
More than half-a-year later, no word from DOJ, nor even a responsive memo from the OVP, even though the legal question is exceedingly simple.
Congressman Waxman
wrote to the Vice President last week, seeking an explanation.
The only response was
painful obfuscation from the White House Deputy Press Secretary.
Finally, just yesterday,
Senator Kerry wrote to Addington, concerned by recent reports that the Vice President refused to comply with the E.O. on the theory that he is both a legislative and an executive officer -- or perhaps that the VP is not quite in either branch!
And whadda ya know?: Within 24 hours,
Addington has responded!
In his two-paragraph letter, Addington writes that the E.O. "makes clear" that the Vice President and President are to be treated alike, and "distinguishes the two of them from 'agencies.'" Since only "agencies" (defined broadly to include all "entities" within the executive branch) have a reporting obligation, Addington suggests that the President and the VP -- non-agencies -- do not.
As the
Washington Post (which inexplicably does not publish or link to the actual Addington letter -- when are they going to learn?) gingerly puts the point, "Addington did not cite specific language in the executive order supporting this view, and a Cheney spokeswoman could not point to such language last night."
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(NOTE: Senator Kerry's quick reply letter to Addington is
here.)
I'm less interested here in the merits of Addington's arguments, however, than by the odd way in which the arguments were presented. The relevant Executive branch agency tasked -- by the President -- with enforcement writes to the OVP twice, and is unceremoniously ignored. That agency then writes to DOJ to break the logjam, and no one even bothers to acknowledge receipt of the letter, let alone answer the question.
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In a great series of posts, all linked
here, Hilzoy concludes that the Becker/Gellman story can only be explained by a bunch of cabinet officials who are dysfunctional, allowing an "insane" process to continue unabated. She focuses on the astonishing fact that Colin Powell and Condi Rice only found out about the August 2002 Torture memo from newspaper accounts two years after the fact:
Stop and think about that for a moment. A memo making an absolutely radical, 180 degree change in US detention and interrogation policy in ways that will predictably have an enormous impact on our standing in the world is signed, and neither the Secretary of State nor the National Security Advisor finds out about it until two years later? From a newspaper article?
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Hilzoy's co-blogger Publius offers
an even more comprehensive indictment -- of all of us: "The reason Cheney’s Office got to dominate the executive branch is because we -- America -- elected a neophyte who lacked the experience, knowledge, and judgment to be president. . . . Our nation’s political machinery elevated a grossly inexperienced and ignorant man to the Oval Office. The entirely predictable result is that he would be forced to rely on someone else to make the decisions he wasn’t able or willing to make."
I'm not sure about this. Even if Bush didn't have the chops to make decisions himself -- and in that respect, he wouldn't be alone among Presidents -- what explains his constant deference to Cheney, and his refusal to listen to any of his other trusted advisers? Publius surmises that Bush was simply rolled by Cheney and Rumsfeld, because they were more savvy than their competitors for the President's approval. I don't know, but it's a point worth considering:
It’s pretty simple. When you elect someone who doesn’t know what he’s doing, you’re essentially electing someone else to be president. Kerry and Gore had their flaws, but they would have been the Deciders. They certainly would not have tolerated a lawless, out-of-control operation such as Cheney’s Office. At the very least, they would have, you know, been aware of the debates and had some pre-existing knowledge to inform their judgment. Bush, by contrast, was simply no match for Cheney and Rumsfeld’s decades of experience. Thus, the failure that is Cheney is not merely an individual failure on the part of Bush. Cheney is an institutional failure -- a failure of our political system. That’s the key to understand. The rise of Cheney is itself an indictment of our political institutions and culture.