Untitled Document
It was Representative Ron Paul of Texas who read into the Congressional Record
on June 25, 1997—well before the malfeasance of George Bush, the Constitution-bashing
Patriot Act, and the reckless so-called war on terror—the following: “In
a police state the police are national, powerful, authoritarian. Inevitably,
national governments yield to the temptation to use the military to do the heavy
lifting…. [O]nce the military is used, however minor initially, the march
toward martial law … becomes irresistible.”
Fast-forward to the present. In the wake of Hurricane Katrina,
General Peter Grace, soon to become Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, has called “for Posse Comitatus to be reconsidered in response
to suggestions that it slowed down deployment of troops,” according
to Jurist,
a legal research website.
Virginia Republican John Warner, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee,
“has questioned restrictions under the law since the September 11th attacks,
and has promised to do so again.”
In February, 2002, soon after the nine eleven attacks, Colonel
John R. Brinkerhoff, US Army Retired, and acting associate director for
national preparedness of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), wrote:
“President Bush and Congress should initiate action to enact a
new law that would set forth in clear terms a statement of the rules for using
military forces for homeland security and for enforcing the laws of the United
States. Things have changed a lot since 1878, and the Posse Comitatus Act is
not only irrelevant but also downright dangerous to the proper and effective
use of military forces for domestic duties.”
“Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution grants the power to Congress
to make the rules governing the armed forces,” writes Diane
Alden. “In recent years Congress has acted less like the source
of legitimacy for the use of the military force and more like a rubber stamp
for military adventurism by the executive branch, regardless of who is president….
both Republicans and Democrats can share the blame for blurring lines between
the military and police…. Both can share blame in the unconstitutional
laws passed and the open checkbook they offer federal police agencies that don’t
seem to be concerned with the niceties of the Bill of Rights.” Alden
wrote this in the 1990s, during the Clinton administration and after the outrage
of Waco. Her words are even more urgent today as Bush and Congress have eroded
the Constitution and the Bill of Rights even further.
Our corporate media has blamed FEMA’s response to Katrina on
bureaucratic inertia and ineptitude. However, a cursory examination of events
reveal something else: FEMA (and the Department of Homeland Security) deliberately
exacerbated the situation in New Orleans and up and down the Gulf Coast by withholding
crucial assistance, thus creating a chaotic situation and “anarchy”
in the streets as desperate people “looted” stores in search of
water and food. FEMA turned away experienced
firefighters; turned away Wal-Mart
supply trucks; prevented the Coast Guard from delivering
diesel fuel; prevented the Red
Cross from delivering food; blocked morticians
from entering New Orleans; blocked a 500-boat
citizen flotilla from delivering aid; turned away generators;
told first responders
not to respond. As Jefferson Parish President Aaron Broussard revealed during
an emotional plea on NBC’s Meet the Press, FEMA basically declared war
on local authorities and sabotaged local communications. FEMA went out
of its way to make the situation worse, thus sending the message: without military
occupation and a watering down of the Posse Comitatus Act, FEMA and the feds
cannot do their job, a message dutifully echoed by the corporate media.
“The Posse Comitatus Act reflects the political sensitivities of a period
in American history when Union troops enforced laws on the former Confederate
states,” opines the San
Antonio Express-News.
It also reflects the American concept of federalism and a traditional distrust
of powerful government.
Hurricane Katrina sheds new light on these subjects. Emergency-management planning
is now inextricably linked with national security. The military is, in effect,
a first responder for both humanitarian relief and law enforcement. The federal
government may be the only source of available help in some disaster situations.
Congress and the American people will examine what went wrong in the homeland
security bureaucracy and why the federal government was slow to respond to Katrina’s
destructive force.
They also need to examine the Posse Comitatus Act to make sure it—or
at least government lawyers’ understanding of it—does not remain
an obstacle to common-sense response to national disasters.
If the Posse Comitatus Act is an obstacle to anything, it is the federal government’s
desire send in the Marines—who are trained to fight wars, not provide
disaster relief and augment (or supplant) local law enforcement. “One
of the United States’ greatest strengths is that the military is responsive
to civilian authority and that we do not allow the Army, Navy, Marines or the
Air Force to be a police force,” Marine Corps General Stephen Olmstead
testified before Congress. “History is replete with countries that allowed
that to happen. Disaster is the result.” Or, as Maryland delegate Luther
Martin argued during the Constitutional Convention in 1787, “When
a government wishes to deprive its citizens of freedom, and reduce them to slavery,
it generally makes use of a standing army.”
“If this were a dictatorship, it’d be a heck of a lot easier,
just so long as I’m the dictator,” Bush
joked on December 18, 2000. However, as we have witnessed since, Bush
was not joking and the result of his desire to be a dictator has resulted in
a serious erosion of the Bill of Rights, most notably the First, Second, Fourth,
and Six Amendments. Indeed, if the barriers to military rule are removed by
Bush’s rubberstamp Congress, and the American people are not vigilant,
“slavery,” as Luther Martin noted, will be the ultimate result.