Reuters
The Raw
The Democrats have
now revealed the hand they're going to play for impeachment. I have been vehemently arguing against playing this game and pointing out how futile it
is, but, seeing the two cards actually laid out on the table, even I am
gobsmacked at what a loser of a hand they’ve got.
Of course, we have to
recognize Gerald Ford’s correct point that “An impeachable offense is
whatever a majority of the House of Representatives considers it to be at a
given moment in history,” and accept that the Democratic majority in the House
at the present moment will determine that their two charges against
Trump are impeachable offenses.
But it's equally true
that an acquitable charge is whatever more than a third of the Senate considers
it to be, and the issue will finally be decided by the political support the
charges can muster from Republican senators and their constituents.
Given the ideological
disposition of those senators and constituents, as well as the widespread
reluctance of Americans generally to impeach a president—an act that does annul
an election—over any but the most serious offenses, it is hard to believe the
Democrats think they will sway anybody with the thin gruel they are serving up.
The two Articles of Impeachment constitute a political indictment
presented by the prosecution that must be argued in a political trial before
the political jury of the Senate. Don’t let the judicial terms mislead you. It’s
an entirely political process, so much so that the House voted to impeach Andrew
Johnson before they voted any Articles of Impeachment. In the present case, it
is impossible to see, politically, how these charges can withstand the defenses
that are easily available against them.
The
first Article of Impeachment, Abuse of Power, accuses Trump of “abusing the
powers of the Presidency” by “engag[ing] in [a] scheme or course of
conduct for corrupt purposes in pursuit of personal political benefit.” Trump
did this, it is alleged, in a phone call with the president of Ukraine, when he
“conditioned two official acts [delivery of weapons and a presidential meeting]
on the public announcements that he had requested.” The “corrupt
purpose,” the high crime, here is the
“pursuit of personal political benefit.”
There
are two kinds of objections to this charge, which Trump (or any president) and
his supporters will make. One kind questions the specifics. It contends, first
of all, that the alleged “conditions” were not requirements, but more like “requests” or “suggestions.” This is evidenced
by the fact that the “official acts” said to be withheld were actually taken
without these “conditions” being met, and that the person upon whom those
“conditions” were supposedly placed denies any compulsion.
Another
specific objection contends that the benefits being sought were not, or not
just, personal, that there was and is
a legitimate US national interest in investigating corruption in Ukraine as
well as possible Ukrainian interference in the 2016 election. Joe Biden’s (and
his son’s) actions in 2016 with a Ukrainian energy company were not being
questioned because he was an election opponent—which he was not, is not, and
may never be—but because, as Vice President and overseer of American policy in
Ukraine at the time, he was an officer of the United States government.
The
possibility of Biden being a political opponent in 2020 cannot exempt examining
his very questionable actions as a Vice-President in 2014-16. And, contrary to
the charge in this Article, there was no assertion that Ukraine might have
interfered in the 2016 election “rather than Russia”; it was not stated, and it
is illogical to assume, that one alleged intervention excludes the other. In
sum, the objections go, any possibility of personal political benefit to Trump
from these investigations is, at worst, coincident with legitimate public
interests.
That’s it, the essence
of the Abuse of Power charge and the defenses against it.
Now, one can argue
that the context supports interpreting these acts of “withholding” as an
impeachable “abuse of power,” but there is no way around the fact that that is
an argument, a political argument, that must be made to the jury.
It’s not made by assertion. It requires “connecting dots,” making inferences, evaluating
witnesses and testimony, and quibbling over details. There is no forced
conclusion, and in fact, ample grounds for political reasonable doubt. There is
nothing here that is going to force Republican senators—let alone the few of
their constituents who will pay any attention to the details being quibbled
about—to come to an epiphany about the high justice of the Democrats’
charges.
There’s another kind
of objection to the Abuse of Power charge that is less legalistic and requires
no quibbling over details. That is to make the point that it is not
particularly unusual—and certainly not urgently impeachable—for a US president
to extract, or in this case try to extract, something of personal
political benefit from another head of state, particularly at the relatively
trivial level of the charge against Trump. Republicans can insist that what's
being charged as an outrageous abuse is, in fact, a normal use of
presidential power. Again, every president seeks, at least coincidentally, to
gain personal political benefit from every foreign policy interaction. S/he
would be remiss not to. High crime? It's expected behavior.
This
is the quintessential political defense. And it's a strong one, since it
corresponds to the American people's widespread and correct belief that, with
very few exceptions, whatever American politicians are doing they are doing
ultimately for themselves. It's going to be very hard to whip up popular
outrage about trying to condition two official acts on “public announcements.”
Most people will see the attempt to whip up such outrage as the moralizing
hypocrisy it is.
Indeed, it's not only
presidents who seek to use foreign heads of state to advance their own personal
political interests in ways that are contrary to national interest. When
members of Congress invited the Prime Minister of Israel to come here and
harangue them and the American people into opposing a crucial foreign policy
position of the US government (the Iran deal), when they constantly sprang from
their seats applauding that harangue, were they not doing so because, or at
least knowing, that would redound to their personal political benefit?
One politician’s abuse is another 535 politicians’ use of their
office.
Of course, no
Republican or Democratic member of Congress would embrace that example. And we
are going to ignore here all the profound implications of the fact that no
country interferes in US elections more thoroughly and systematically than the
state of Israel, and that no country interferes in foreign elections more
thoroughly and systematically, as an integral part of its policy, than the
United States. Nor can we get into the nauseating set of values that allows
Nancy Pelosi to proudly state that she “vehemently opposed” impeaching Bush for
committing “the supreme international crime” of initiating an aggressive war—on
grounds that he and she knew to be false—while sanctimoniously insisting
that Trump’s call for “public announcements” from Ukraine is “self-evidently”
an impeachable high crime, “something that cannot be ignored.” To get into any
of that would be to raise politico-ethical considerations of a kind that are
vehemently denied a place among either Democrats or Republicans in this
impeachment process, or in any other proceeding of the United States Congress.
Because the “abuse of
power” charge is so weak, there is actually another charge inserted within it—namely,
that “by such conduct” Trump has proven himself to be “a threat to national
security.” That charge has to be there to give “abuse of power” substance and
traction for Republican senators. Republicans would only vote to convict Trump if
they accept that he’s a “threat to national security”—although for a complex of
reasons not explicitly specified in the Article. We’ll come back to that below.
The
second formal Article of Impeachment. Obstruction of Congress charges that
“President Trump directed Executive Branch agencies, offices, and officials not
to comply” with “subpoenas seeking documents and testimony.” This has nothing
to do with the “10 different episodes of presidential obstruction of justice” the Democrats
identified in the Mueller report, for which they claimed “the evidence is
overwhelming”—though they’ve given up on trying to prove them.
The Democrats are
adopting here a position that’s been taken alternately by Republicans and
Democrats at various times: that defying subpoenas from a congressional
impeachment inquiry is itself an impeachable offense. This is a charge that, in
constitutional terms, is both important and, at this point, impossible to
resolve. For anyone who knows the history of it, it’s embarrassing to pretend it’s
settled by assertion.
It's important
because it touches on core issues of the separation of powers: whether a
president has the right, the “executive privilege,” to withhold documents and testimony
from Congress in order to preserve the confidentiality necessary for the
functioning of the executive branch. It's impossible to resolve because the
Supreme Court (the only arbiter that counts here) has upheld the right of
executive privilege and declared it is “limited,” but, despite anyone’s
insistence, has never clearly defined those limits in a way that constitutes
such defiance as an impeachable “high crime” in itself. Nor is there a precedent
from previous impeachment. It's a charge that was never voted on by the full
House against Nixon, and not included in the Articles of Impeachment against
Bill Clinton.
So, Republican
defenders of Trump will say that you can't blithely accuse him of a high crime
that has not yet been defined; you can't convict him for actions that may very
well be within his constitutional authority; and you certainly can't say that
appealing to the court to defend yourself and clarify the limits of
congressional and presidential authority is “obstruction” just because it doesn’t
fit your accelerated timetable.
This “executive
privilege” argument between the legislature and the executive has been going on
for a long time, and has always been settled by which side in the substantive
debate the Congress was on. Indeed, those who (like myself) tend to favor the
prerogatives of congressional oversight should be aware that the claim of
“executive privilege” has a more complicated political history than we might
like to think.
Dwight Eisenhower was
the first President to coin the term, and he used
“executive privilege” in a way that liberals and leftists have always applauded—against
Joe McCarthy. He defied the McCarthy committee subpoenas, forbidding the
"provision of any data about internal conversations, meetings, or written
communication among staffers, with no exception to topics or
people"—effectively shutting down the Army-McCarthy hearings and throwing
Tail-gunner Joe’s career into a tailspin.
In
Emile de Antonio’s documentary Point of
Order, you’ll see McCarthy—in his inimitably hysterical way, with his
lawyer, Bobby Kennedy, sitting behind him—warning his colleagues, including
Missouri Democratic Senator Stuart Symington, that President Eisenhower’s
“executive privilege” claim has repercussions way beyond this particular
hearing or any partisan loyalty, and would come back to bite the Congress and
the country if it was accepted.
And so it came to
pass, twenty years later, when the Democrats in Congress—including the same
Stuart Symington—flipped their position on “executive privilege” when Nixon
used it to defend himself. The liberals had come to McCarthy’s position,
because it now suited their political objective.
So, no, there is no
definitive legal ruling on executive privilege, nothing about it is
“self-evident,” nobody has a privileged moral or legal position from which to
unequivocally declare that either the use of executive privilege or the appeal
to the courts about it is “obstruction,” and Republican senators and their
constituents are not going to accept Nancy Pelosi’s or Jerry Nadler’s attempt
to do so. Again, there is too much reasonable political doubt. The Obstruction
of Congress Article will fail in the Senate and among the people.
These Articles of
Impeachment are painfully weak, guaranteed to fail and, in doing so, help no
one but Donald Trump. I have characterized the Democrats’
impeachment bid as a dead man's hand, Aces & Eights. But the actual cards
on the table are even worse—more like two-seven, unsuited. It is hard to
believe the Democrats can imagine they will sway anybody with this dog.
I
agree with Jonathan
Turley: “when I look at the House efforts to impeach President Trump,… I
continue to look around scratching my head, wondering why others don’t see the
obvious gaps and conflicts.” Turley’s analysis
is devastating and right, and I’ll borrow his other
metaphor in saying that the Democrats are on, and insisting it’s your duty
to board, a political Titanic. I suggest to everyone who doesn’t want to
compound the disaster that Trump represents, including the Democratic
candidates: Get the fuck off, or don't be surprised when you go down with the
ship.
It’s less than a year
before the presidential election! From now until then, Trump’s Republican
supporters will play on an endless loop the wisdom of the Democrats’ own
political sages:
There must never be a narrowly voted impeachment or an impeachment substantially supported by one of our major political parties and largely opposed by the other. Such an impeachment would lack legitimacy, would produce divisiveness and bitterness in our politics for years to come and will call into question the very legitimacy of our political institutions. (Jerry Nadler, on why he opposed impeaching Bill Clinton)
I don’t want impeachment “to be a way of life in our country.” (Nancy Pelosi, on why she opposed impeaching George W. Bush)
So, what is their
agenda? Even
with the constant barrage of support from their allied media, assuring
everybody that the cards are coming their way, players as experienced as
Pelosi, Schiff, and Nadler must know it’s a bust. Trump is the only possible
winner of this hand. Do we really believe they’re staying in it for love of the
game? That they’re just expressing their
constitutional virtue? Even in those terms, as Pelosi and Nadler’s own words
above indicate, a win is a loss. Are they being deliberately self-destructive
or just stupid?
It’s all the more
senseless because the Democrats have an easy exit strategy: Pass a resolution
of censure in the House, and move on to getting rid of Trump through, you know,
the election, less than a year away. That’s the politically smart thing
to do, and it still allows them to signal their virtue. Declare your outrage,
fold the hand, take the small hit on the blind, and avoid the devastating loss
that will come by betting into the Senate. Keep your stack of political chips
for the general election.
Which makes me wonder.
The obviousness of this losing hand, and the fact that the most
politically-seasoned, can’t-be-that-stupid Democrats seem determined to play it
out, have my paranoid political Spidey senses all atingle. What are the cards they're
not showing? What lies beneath the thin ice of these Articles of Impeachment? If
the apparent agenda makes no sense, look for the hidden. Something that better
explains why Pelosi, et. al. find it so urgent to replace Trump before the
election and why they think they can succeed in doing that.
There is one thing
that I can think of that drives such frantic urgency: War. That would also
explain why Trump’s “national security” problem—embedded in the focus on
Ukraine arms shipments, Russian aggression, etc.—is the real issue, the whistle
to Republican war dogs. But if so, the Ukro-Russian motif is itself a screen
for another “national security”/war issue that cannot be stated explicitly.
There's no urgency about aggression towards Russia. There is for Iran.
So
here's my entirely speculative tea-leaf reading: If there's a hidden agenda behind the urgency to remove Trump, one
that might actually garner the votes of Republican Senators, it is to replace
him with a president who will be a more reliable and effective leader for a
military attack on Iran that Israel wants to initiate before next November. Spring
is the cruelest season for launching wars.
Crazy?
Maybe, but reliable reports say that the leadership in both Israel and Iran
have come to the conclusion that their two countries have reached a crossroad Israel
calculates that Iran has already gained too much power in the region, that it
has established a network of battle-hardened allies and a widening emplacement
of increasingly accurate missiles that could right now seriously damage the
Jewish state in any conflict. Indeed, the Pentagon reports that Iran is producing “increasingly capable
ballistic and cruise missiles” with “better accuracy, lethality and range.” And
“Axis of Resistance” sources tell Elijah J. Magnier that these missiles “have been delivered
to Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.”
The Houthi strike on Saudi Arabian oil fields in September confirmed
this and stunned Israeli and US observers, as it demonstrated that Iran and its
allies have missiles and attack drones that can avoid American anti-aircraft
defenses and, most worrying, strike with pinpoint accuracy. Like this:
US
Government / AFP
Four bull’s-eyes.
From over 1000km away.
This is the picture
of Israeli fear. These are not your daddy’s throwaway rockets that get fired
blind and land in the middle of wherever. They are harbingers of increased
military capability and confidence. They can find the Israeli Defense Ministry,
a big building in the middle of Tel Aviv.
Iran knows that
Israel knows all this and cannot allow it to go any further. That’s why Israel
is attacking Iranian Revolutionary Guard (IRGC) forces in Syria, Hezbollah
warehouses in Lebanon, and Iranian-allied forces in Iraq. But, as Iran knows
very well, that’s not enough, and Israel is determined, sooner rather than
later, to strike large and at the root—Iran itself. All the more so because
Iran is not backing down but beefing up, and proclaiming itself ready to fight
rather than get pushed back. Magnier quotes an “Axis of Resistance”
decision-maker: “There is no alternative to war. One day it will be war on a
large scale.”
It’s
not that Iran does not know the damage Israel can do; it’s that they also know
(and know that Israel knows) how little damage Israel can take. As the Deputy
Commander of Operations of the IRGC, Abbas Nilforoushan, says, quoted by defense analyst Yossef Bodansky: “Iran
has encircled Israel from all four sides…if only one missile hits the occupied
lands, Israeli airports will be filled with people trying to run away from the
country.”
Israel, even less
than the US, cannot take casualties. A couple of bull’s eyes, a lot of Israelis
go back to Brooklyn. The 82 million people in Iran have no place else to go.
So, Netanyahu and the
Israeli military leadership are at the point where they think it’s necessary to
take Iran down now, before the strategic situation deteriorates for them
even further. As they correctly fear, doing nothing carries at least as great a
risk for them in the not-so-distant future as taking the risk of a direct
attack on Iran does now.
Thus,
Israeli journalist Ben Caspit tells former British diplomat Alastair Cooke that Israeli
ministers “clearly state that a widespread war is likely to erupt in the next
six months between Iran and its adversaries in the region, including Israel.” As
Magnier specifies: “Considering the date in the next six months, this means the
end of the spring and the beginning of the summer.” They don’t want to wait
until the second Tuesday in November, let alone January 20, 2021.
Everybody’s got a timetable.
Let’s try to remember:
It was in September, Bodansky notes, that Netanyahu, speaking to the IDF
General Staff, warned that Israel had “hitherto” avoided “a comprehensive
confrontation,” but “This might change soon… raising the specter of an all-out
war as a distinct possibility.” It was in September, he also notes, that IRGC commanders concluded: “all chances for a diplomatic breakthrough collapsed.” It
was in September, three months after Trump called off a strike against Iran at
the last minute, that those extremely accurate Houthi drones and/or missiles struck
key Saudi oil facilities. And it was ten days later in September that five
“badass” freshman congresswomen—plus two men, all CIA or military officers—“changed…the course of history” and “the dynamic for House Democrats”
with an op-ed in the Washington Post that called for impeaching Trump,
instantly converting a previously recalcitrant Nancy Pelosi to the cause.
There
followed Trump’s decision to withdraw from Syria—modified under pressure, but still “leaving the Kurds high and dry” and serving
as another “warning sign to Israel.” And there came considerable teeth-gnashing
about how Netanyahu’s “signature Iran policy … was
rocked by the president's reluctance to flex US military muscle,” and left
Israel “facing the reality of an unpredictable and transactional president who
has deep reservations about using US military might, is afraid of getting
involved in another Middle East conflict.”
Now
all of this—the coincidences of the September turning points and the Spring
2020 timetables for both “Netanyahu’s signature war” and Pelosi’s
“constitutional duty” of impeachment—may be, most probably are, just that: coincidences.
All the signs and proclamations about an impending war with Iran in the next
six months may be, as they have been before, bluster and bluff. They probably
are. There's probably no connection whatsoever between what's going on in the Israeli
Defense Ministry and what's going on in the hallowed Halls of Congress.
But the strategic
military balance in the Middle East is changing rapidly, the US is
a less reliable partner, and Iran and Israel have reached the zugzwang
point where some big move is necessary and every possible one is dangerous. Everyone
understands that any war with Iran will be widespread and immensely destructive.
That
is exactly why Serious People in Israel and the United States would really,
really want to have someone other than Donald Trump as President if there is
going to be a war with Iran: It’s more than a fear that Trump won’t go along
with it. (After all, he despises Iran, and can usually be made to do what the
neocons want.) It’s that Israel won’t, in this instance, be looking to strike
some weapons depots. It will be trying to eliminate the perceived strategic
threat Iran poses and any possibility of retaliation—quickly, thoroughly, and
for decades at least. That means destroying as much of the country as quickly as
possible. Given Iran’s size (680,000 sq. mi.), strength, and tenacity, that
means Israel will use overwhelming and ruthless force—including, I think, nuclear
weapons. And Iran and its allied forces will strike back against all countries
and all forces it considers complicit in the attack, everywhere they can reach.
In that situation, Israel will need not only US military support, but, perhaps
more importantly, the backing of an American president who projects the kind of
leadership that can solicit the support, or at least the forbearance, of countries
in the region, European countries, and the “international community.” That is
not Donald Trump.
So, if there is
preparation for a war with Iran going on behind the scenes, one can easily imagine
that Israel will use every tool in its kit to emplace the American leadership
it considers most helpful—maybe someone who isn’t openly mocked by his closest allies. Those tools include the strong
financial, political, and other kinds of incentives at its disposal, which can be
quite effective in changing Senators’ votes, and, perhaps, some of the handiwork
of Mossad agents Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
But
that’s a huge “if.” I accept that this is speculation, if not entirely baseless.
Call it a paranoid political thought
experiment, which adds some spice to the excruciatingly boring impeachment
theater.
Of
course, there is no way of knowing if there will be an attack on Iran in the
next six months. (That’s the kind of thing that would be a surprise at any
time.) Although for the last six months there has been so much concern in the
US government that “the prospect of a confrontation with Iran
continues to rise” that a bipartisan congressional coalition attached an
amendment (constitutionally redundant!) to the NDAA specifically preventing national-security-threat,
all-roads-lead-to-Putin Donald Trump from
waging war against Iran without congressional authorization. Which was just dropped from the final version of the NDAA passed by
the Democratic-controlled House. ‘Cause constitutional duty. This was in the
national interest of the United States, and whatever national benefit it gives to
Israel for its interests and plans is purely coincidental.
I
also agree that there’s nothing we can see out there strong enough to overcome,
for at least twenty Republican Senators, the punishment they would face from
their constituents for voting against Trump. The only visible hint of danger right now for Trump comes,
as always, from himself. If he browbeats Mitch McConnell into orchestrating the
extensive, multi-witnessed extravaganza of a trial that Trump seems to want,
he’ll be opening a pandora’s box of potential traps.
One
conservative commentator does caution against taking the Senate for granted: “Over
the past week, I have heard from three seasoned Republicans who fear that
President Trump and the West Wing are seriously underestimating the potential
danger of a Senate trial... the weight of history is settling upon the
shoulders of these senators …private conversations are taking place and a trap
may be sprung for the president in that trial. A potential trap set by
seemingly loyal Republican senators.” We are not told where that “weight of
history” comes from or what those conversations are about, just that: “there
very well may be enough Republican senators willing to topple the first domino
and set in motion a chain reaction—no matter the consequences.”
But that remains a
vague warning, not based on (though not inconsistent with) the possible scenario
I evoked. I still see, and would bet on, no other outcome than a quick
acquittal by the Senate.
I present my version
of a hidden agenda as an intriguing frame for explaining what I don’t
see: I don’t see why the Democratic leadership is pursuing impeachment with these
lame Articles at this point and at this pace. If their purpose is
to corral the Democratic constituency into a cul-de-sac that diverts from critiquing
the party’s own failings, they’ve already done that with three years of
Russiagate. If they are trying to self-sabotage the Party in order to throw the
election and keep Trump as a straw man to kick around, because they have no credible
governance program of their own, that’s a lot more easily accomplished by
nominating one of the “nothing would fundamentally change” centrists who are running—which is
exactly what they're going to do anyway. There are simpler ways to do any of
these things, or nothing—which is exactly what they are doing with this.
Really, why? What’s
the agenda? With these weak-tea Articles, what impeachment agenda isn’t
imaginary?
So, I am sure there will
be a quick dismissal of these Articles of Impeachment by the Senate. 99+44/100%
sure. It’s the bet. A surer thing even than Hillary Clinton winning the
election. One other thing I’m absolutely sure of—not even .56% of a doubt—is
that if the unforeseeable and impossible occurs, if John Bolton
takes the stand and flops two more sevens, if twenty Republican Senators
start hedging their bets and wavering in their defense of Trump, it will not be
because of their allegiance to the Constitution, or to Ukraine.
And April may be a very cruel month.
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Related articles: Aftermath: The Iran War After The Soleimani Assassination, Defeat or Impeach? The (Il)Logic of Impeachment, Dead Man’s Hand: The Impeachment Gambit
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Related articles: Aftermath: The Iran War After The Soleimani Assassination, Defeat or Impeach? The (Il)Logic of Impeachment, Dead Man’s Hand: The Impeachment Gambit
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