Welcome to Post-Legal America
Is the Libyan war legal? Was bin Laden’s killing legal? Is it legal for the president of the United States to target an American citizen for assassination? Were those “enhanced interrogation techniques” legal? These are all questions raised in recent weeks. Each seems to call out for debate, for answers. Or does it?
Now, you couldn’t call me a legal scholar. I’ve never set foot inside a law school, and in 66 years only made it onto a single jury (dismissed before trial when the civil suit was settled out of court). Still, I feel at least as capable as any constitutional law professor of answering such questions.
My answer is this: they are irrelevant. Think of them as 20th-century questions that don’t begin to come to grips with 21st-century American realities. In fact, think of them, and the very idea of a nation based on the rule of law, as a reflection of nostalgia for, or sentimentality about, a long-lost republic. At least in terms of what used to be called “foreign policy,” and more recently “national security,” the United States is now a post-legal society. (And you could certainly include in this mix the too-big-to-jail financial and corporate elite.)
It’s easy enough to explain what I mean. if, in a country theoretically organized under the rule of law, wrongdoers are never brought to justice and nobody is held accountable for possibly serious crimes, then you don’t have to be a constitutional law professor to know that its citizens actually exist in a post-legal state. If so, “Is it legal?” is the wrong question to be asking, even if we have yet to discover the right one.
Pretzeled Definitions of Torture
Of course, when it came to a range of potential Bush-era crimes—the use of torture, the running of offshore “black sites,” the extraordinary rendition of terrorist suspects to lands where they would be tortured, illegal domestic spying and wiretapping, and the launching of wars of aggression—it’s hardly news that no one of the slightest significance has ever been brought to justice. On taking office, President Obama offered a clear formula for dealing with this issue. He insisted that Americans should “look forward, not backward” and turn the page on the whole period, and then set his Justice Department to work on other matters. But honestly, did anyone anywhere ever doubt that no Bush-era official would be brought to trial here for such potential crimes?
Everyone knows that in the United States if you’re a robber caught breaking into someone’s house, you’ll be brought to trial, but if you’re caught breaking into someone else’s country, you’ll be free to take to the lecture circuit, write your memoirs, or become a university professor.
Of all the “debates” over legality in the Bush and Obama years, the torture debate has perhaps been the most interesting, and in some ways, the most realistic. After 9/11, the Bush administration quickly turned to a crew of hand-picked Justice Department lawyers to create the necessary rationale for what its officials most wanted to do—in their quaint phrase, “take the gloves off.” And those lawyers responded with a set of pseudo-legalisms that put various methods of “information extraction” beyond the powers of the Geneva Conventions, the U.N.’s Convention Against Torture (signed by President Ronald Reagan and ratified by the Senate), and domestic anti-torture legislation, including the War Crimes Act of 1996 (passed by a Republican Congress).
In the process, they created infamously pretzeled new definitions for acts previously accepted as torture. Among other things, they essentially left the definition of whether an act was torture or not to the torturer (that is, to what he believed he was doing at the time). In the process, acts that had historically been considered torture became “enhanced interrogation techniques.” An example would be waterboarding, which had once been bluntly known as “the water torture” or “the water cure” and whose perpetrators had, in the past, been successfully prosecuted in American military and civil courts. Such techniques were signed off on after first reportedly being “demonstrated” in the White House to an array of top officials, including the vice president, the national security adviser, the attorney general, and the secretary of state.
In the U.S. (and here was the realism of the debate that followed), the very issue of legality fell away almost instantly. Newspapers rapidly replaced the word “torture”—when applied to what American interrogators did—with the term “enhanced interrogation techniques,” which was widely accepted as less controversial and more objective. At the same time, the issue of the legality of such techniques was superseded by a fierce national debate over their efficacy. It has lasted to this day and returned with a bang with the bin Laden killing.
Nothing better illustrates the nature of our post-legal society. Anti-torture laws were on the books in this country. If legality had truly mattered, it would have been beside the point whether torture was an effective way to produce “actionable intelligence” and so prepare the way for the killing of a bin Laden.
By analogy, it’s perfectly reasonable to argue that robbing banks can be a successful and profitable way to make a living, but who would agree that a successful bank robber hadn’t committed an act as worthy of prosecution as an unsuccessful one caught on the spot? Efficacy wouldn’t matter in a society whose central value was the rule of law. In a post-legal society in which the ultimate value espoused is the safety and protection a national security state can offer you, it means the world.
As if to make the point, the Supreme Court recently offered a post-legal ruling for our moment: it declined to review a lower court ruling that blocked a case in which five men, who had experienced extraordinary rendition (a fancy globalized version of kidnapping) and been turned over to torturing regimes elsewhere by the CIA, tried to get their day in court. No such luck. The Obama administration claimed (as had the Bush administration before it) that simply bringing such a case to court would imperil national security (that is, state secrets)—and won. As Ben Wizner, the American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who argued the case, summed matters up, “To date, every victim of the Bush administration’s torture regime has been denied his day in court.”
To put it another way, every CIA torturer, all those involved in acts of rendition, and all the officials who okayed such acts, as well as the lawyers who put their stamp of approval on them, are free to continue their lives untouched. Recently, the Obama administration even went to court to “prevent a lawyer for a former CIA officer convicted in Italy in the kidnapping of a radical Muslim cleric from privately sharing classified information about the case with a Federal District Court judge.” (Yes, Virginia, elsewhere in the world a few Americans have been tried in absentia for Bush-era crimes.) In response, wrote Scott Shane of the New York Times, the judge “pronounced herself ‘literally speechless.’”
The realities of our moment are simple enough: other than abusers too low-level (see England, Lynndie and Graner, Charles) to matter to our national-security state, no one in the CIA, and certainly no official of any sort, is going to be prosecuted for the possible crimes Americans committed in the Bush years in pursuit of the Global War on Terror.
On Not Blowing Whistles
It’s beyond symbolic, then, that only one figure from the national security world seems to remain in the “legal” crosshairs: the whistle-blower. If, as the president of the United States, you sign off on a system of warrantless surveillance of Americans—the sort that not so long ago was against the law in this country—or if you happen to run a giant telecom company and go along with that system by opening your facilities to government snoops, or if you run the National Security Agency or are an official in it overseeing the kind of data-mining and intelligence-gathering that goes with such a program, then—as recent years have made clear—you are above the law.
If, however, you happen to be an NSA employee who feels that the agency has overstepped the bounds of legality in its dealings with Americans, that it is moving in Orwellian directions, and that it should be exposed, and if you offer even unclassified information to a newspaper reporter, as was the case with Thomas Drake, be afraid, be very afraid. You may be prosecuted by the Bush and then Obama Justice Departments, and threatened with 35 years in prison under the Espionage Act (not for “espionage,” but for having divulged the most minor of low-grade state secrets in a world in which, increasingly, everything having to do with the state is becoming a secret).
If you are a CIA employee who tortured no one but may have given information damaging to the reputation of the national security state—in this case about a botched effort to undermine the Iranian nuclear program—to a journalist, watch out. You are likely, as in the case of Jeffrey Sterling, to find yourself in a court of law. And if you happen to be a journalist like James Risen who may have received that information, you are likely to be hit by a Justice Department subpoena attempting to force you to reveal your source, under threat of imprisonment for contempt of court.
If you are a private in the U.S. military with access to a computer with low-level classified material from the Pentagon’s wars and the State Department’s activities on it, if you’ve seen something of the grim reality of what the national-security state looks like when superimposed on Iraq, and if you decide to shine some light on that world, as Bradley Manning did, they’ll toss you into prison and throw away the key. You’ll be accused of having “blood on your hands” and tried, again under the Espionage Act, by those who actually have blood on their hands and are beyond all accountability.
When it comes to acts of state today, there is only one law: don’t pull up the curtain on the doings of any aspect of our spreading National Security Complex or the imperial executive that goes with it. As CIA Director Leon Panetta put it in addressing his employees over leaks about the operation to kill bin Laden, “Disclosure of classified information to anyone not cleared for it—reporters, friends, colleagues in the private sector or other agencies, former Agency officers—does tremendous damage to our work. At worst, leaks endanger lives. … Unauthorized disclosure of those details not only violates the law, it seriously undermines our capability to do our job.”
And when someone in Congress actually moves to preserve some aspect of older notions of American privacy (versus American secrecy), as Sen. Rand Paul did recently in reference to the PATRIOT Act, he is promptly smeared as potentially “giving terrorists the opportunity to plot attacks against our country, undetected.”
Enhanced Legal Techniques
Here is the reality of post-legal America: since the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the National Security Complex has engorged itself on American fears and grown at a remarkable pace. According to Top Secret America, a Washington Post series written in mid-2010, 854,000 people have “top secret” security clearances, “33 building complexes for top-secret intelligence work are under construction or have been built since September 2001 … 51 federal organizations and military commands, operating in 15 U.S. cities, track the flow of money to and from terrorist networks … [and] some 1,271 government organizations and 1,931 private companies work on programs related to counterterrorism, homeland security, and intelligence in about 10,000 locations across the United States.”
Just stop a moment to take that in. And then let this sink in as well: whatever any one of those employees does inside that national security world, no matter how “illegal” the act, it’s a double-your-money bet that he or she will never be prosecuted for it (unless it happens to involve letting Americans know something about just how they are being “protected”).
Consider what it means to have a U.S. Intelligence Community (as it likes to call itself) made up of 17 different agencies and organizations, a total that doesn’t even include all the smaller intelligence offices in the National Security Complex, which for almost 10 years proved incapable of locating its global enemy number one. Yet, as everyone now agrees, that man was living in something like plain sight, exchanging messages with and seeing colleagues in a military and resort town near Islamabad, the Pakistani capital. And what does it mean that, when he was finally killed, it was celebrated as a vast intelligence victory?
The Intelligence Community with its $80 billion-plus budget, the National Security Complex, including the Pentagon and that post-9/11 creation, the Department of Homeland Security, with its $1.2 trillion-plus budget, and the imperial executive have thrived in these years. They have all expanded their powers and prerogatives based largely on the claim that they are protecting the American people from potential harm from terrorists out to destroy our world.
Above all, however, they seem to have honed a single skill: the ability to protect themselves, as well as the lobbyists and corporate entities that feed off them. They have increased their funds and powers, even as they enveloped their institutions in a penumbra of secrecy. The power of this complex of institutions is still on the rise, even as the power and wealth of the country it protects is visibly in decline.
Now, consider again the question “Is it legal?” When it comes to any act of the National Security Complex, it’s obviously inapplicable in a land where the rule of law no longer applies to everyone. If you are a ordinary citizen, of course, it applies to you, but not if you are part of the state apparatus that officially protects you. The institutional momentum behind this development is simple enough to demonstrate: it hardly mattered that, after George W. Bush took off those gloves, the next president elected was a former constitutional law professor.
Think of the National Security Complex as the King George of the present moment. In the areas that matter to that complex, Congress has ever less power and, as in the case of the war in Libya or the PATRIOT Act, is ever more ready to cede what power it has left.
So, democracy? The people’s representatives? How quaint in a world in which our real rulers are unelected, shielded by secrecy, and supported by a carefully nurtured, almost religious attitude toward security and the U.S. military.
The National Security Complex has access to us, to our lives and communications, though we have next to no access to it. It has, in reserve, those enhanced interrogation techniques and when trouble looms, a set of what might be called enhanced legal techniques as well. It has the ability to make war at will (or whim). It has a growing post-9/11 secret army cocooned inside the military: 20,000 or more troops in special operations outfits like the SEAL team that took down bin Laden, also enveloped in secrecy. In addition, it has the CIA and a fleet of armed drone aircraft ready to conduct its wars and operations globally in semi-secrecy and without the permission or oversight of the American people or their representatives.
And war, of course, is the ultimate aphrodisiac for the powerful.
Theoretically, the National Security Complex exists only to protect you. Its every act is done in the name of making you safer, even if the idea of safety and protection doesn’t extend to your job, your foreclosed home, or aid in disastrous times.
Welcome to post-legal America. It’s time to stop wondering whether its acts are illegal and start asking: Do you really want to be this “safe”?
Read more by Tom Engelhardt
- How to Forget on Memorial Day – May 24th, 2012
- How Much Does Washington Spend on ‘Defense’? – May 22nd, 2012
- Hail to the Cheerleader in Chief! – May 15th, 2012
- Predator Nation – May 13th, 2012
- The Energy Wars Heat Up – May 10th, 2012





mickperry
May 30th, 2011 at 11:43 pm
This period of our history described by the professional intellectual class as 'post modernist', and now by Tom Englehart in this excellent summary as 'post legal' might also rightly be called 'post fascist', and the urgent question now is whether it is about to morph into full blown Nazism. Economic factors weighing heavily on people's lives today are rightly producing popular outrage, but with little or no rational analysis among the majority of the public as to the causes of our distress; rather, minority sections of the population who are conveniently unable to defend themselves are being sought out and held to be responsible for our woes. In the US this seems to be Muslims and Latinos, and in the UK it is Muslims and immigrants in general. The fact that these people enjoy legal rights at all is scornfully denounced as 'political correctness', and the entire concept of 'law' is seen by an increasingly dumbed down and distracted population as a 'high brow' subject that they have little or no interest in, and care even less about. Meanwhile, for the status quo, 'law' has become the preserve of the 'lawyers'; the mandarins of the globally corporate elites, entirely devoted to circumventing and undermining national laws governing the regulation of industries and local tax obligations.
The most challenging issues of economic and environmental degradation that should concern us all today remain ignored other than by a few brave souls who risk being tagged as 'terrorists' also.
The racketeers have seized power everywhere, and as Major General Smedley Butler noted way back in 1933, war is the biggest racket of all.
Nike
May 31st, 2011 at 4:09 am
The one MAIN factor that Engelhardt left out – along with nearly everybody else commenting on the subject – is that the American people MASSIVELY supported Bush's torture chambers, and indeed rewarded the guy with reelection AFTER his torture chambers and other war crimes were already widespread public knowledge. How is it that those who intentionally empowered these torturers to commit MORE war crimes escape any and all blame for their actions? The Nazis NEVER would have risen to power without the support of the German people, nor would the Bush regime have managed to run torture chambers for the better part of EIGHT YEARS without Americans cheering it on. Prosecutions? Polls are clear that Americans are OUTRAGED at the very thought of charging their torturers with anything! But they're not at fault? They're all victims of propaganda? Please.
Claus Eric Hamle
May 31st, 2011 at 5:49 am
In Panama City they killed about 6,000 unarmed civilians in December 1989. Fallujah is worse than Hiroshima. In Iraq they raped small boys and forced their mothers to watch. It was videofilmed by a female soldier in uniform. The Nazis, SS and Gestapo, were nice people compared to the evil, crazy Americans.
me again
May 31st, 2011 at 6:09 pm
The notion of "representative democracy" dissipates into thin air in the face of the notion of "state secret". Too bad the "we the sheeple" neither realize that, nor give a damn..
Jamie N
May 31st, 2011 at 7:34 pm
It's almost Unbelivable the evil done by a country witch once was the beacon for freedom and law.But when you look back they have been evil for as long as could be rememberd from the murder of the Native Americans and averything after.But not all Americans are evil more than half are most likly good people but live with closed eyes to the evils they are the most responsible to correct.As sad as it is they are to busy to care or to dumb and the rest could care less as long as there familys are fine.Cowards.If a man that has nothing he is willing to die for he dosent deserve to live.(Martin Luther King) All evil one day comes to an end well we wait for the next hopfully humanity will stop all forms of evil can't exist if there known.Right no it's in front of us lauphing time to stand for the moral compass GOD gave us to know write from wrong and have courage to stand for all rights.When you no all people are equal than you feel more human and closer to GOD than you can imagine just take the time to see it if thats you.
John_Muhammad
May 31st, 2011 at 7:56 pm
At least OBL and Co. kept on the same message and didn't keep jerking us around. They told us what's what and what they were going to do about it- and then, for good or bad, they did it. We can't even get a single straight answer out of our own elected officials- I won't call them 'leaders' for obvious reasons- and the public is getting paranoid and jumpy and bordering on a national psychosis of fear. When that happens, as it has throughout history, it is time for the government to think fast and decisively on which direction it's taking, because the public isn't going to stand for it much longer. When John Q. Public gets scared, he gets dangerous, but when he's at his most dangerous, he won't run- he'll stand his ground and reload.