IRAQ: FORMER U.S. ATTORNEY GENERAL, LAW
PROF, WORK TO IMPEACH BUSH
By Gabriel Packard
NEW YORK, Mar. 14 (IPS) -- Is impeaching President George W. Bush an
unrealistic goal? Not according to former U.S. attorney general Ramsey
Clark, who believes that his 'Vote to Impeach' campaign has a genuine chance
of succeeding.
"The probabilities may not be so high," concedes Clark, 75, in an
exclusive interview at his office in Manhattan. "But I think we could be
successful."
But political analysts think that the chances of success of this campaign -
and a range of other groups' legal and constitutional attempts to block the
threatened war - are very slim.
Still, long odds do not mean that it is not worth a try, some observers say.
In fact, Clark says that impeachment "seems to be the minimum requirement for
anybody who wants integrity in a constitutional government."
And that, he says, is his goal.
According to Clark, known as a progressive during his term as attorney general
from 1967-69, Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld and Attorney General John Ashcroft should be impeached for a range of
alleged offences, including the president's threat to invade Iraq, U.S.
actions in Afghanistan, and alleged
breaches of civil liberties both at home and abroad.
For an impeachment bill to succeed, it must first be proposed by a member of
the House of Representatives and then voted on by that body.
Next, the Senate considers the House's verdict. Clark points out that,
"ultimately Congress will have to draft their own articles: I wouldn't urge
them to limit themselves (with regard) to who's impeached."
"They ought to look at the facts," he says. The main aim of the 'Vote to
Impeach' movement is to prevent a U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. "If the war
starts in two weeks, deterring it is very unlikely. But if it went over to the
fall, I think the Vote to
Impeach campaign could be a tremendous inhibition," says Clark, who had
a famous showdown with FBI director J. Edgar Hoover when he tried to block
Hoover's wiretaps of black civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
Impeachment is "something with potential and
something that could happen. And even if it didn't, I think it's important to
have the idea and the concern put as widely before the people as possible,
before the fact (of war) rather than after it."
Legal Director of the Center for Constitutional Rights, Jeff Fogel, agrees
that making people aware of the opportunity to impeach is good, but he is less
optimistic about the likelihood of success.
"It is an understatement to say that the chances of impeachment are limited,"
says Fogel. "It's highly, highly, highly unlikely with the present Congress."
But if enough people expressed support for the
move, he adds, "I do believe that there are some people in Congress who have
the courage to propose this kind of impeachment."
"Not many, though," he says.
But popular support for the campaign has been
strong.
Within 10 days of the website being launched, 50,000 people had voted to
impeach. (When people vote online they state the name of their congressman;
all congressmen are notified of the total number of votes and the number of
votes for their own district.)
In February, Clark spoke in front of 500,000 at the anti-war rally in
Washington DC.
Various groups and individuals, including several Congressmen, are trying a
range of legal and constitutional approaches to halt the threatened war.
A group comprising a dozen House Democrats, 15
parents of soldiers, and three anonymous soldiers have filed a lawsuit
claiming that the president has no right to declare war on Iraq without
Congress issuing a formal declaration of war.
The American Gulf War Veterans Association (AGWVA) has called for Rumsfeld's
resignation over alleged U.S. sales of biological weapons to Iraq in the
1980s.
In addition to Clark's, the other major impeachment campaign is organised by
Francis Boyle, a professor of law at the University of Illinois Law School.
The two impeachment campaigns are independent of each other, but both are
headed by men with experience in the area.
In fact, Boyle collaborated with Clark in an impeachment campaign during the first Gulf War. In that instance, a resolution to impeach former president George Bush was introduced to the House by the late Congressman Henry B. Gonzalez.
The president was not impeached, but, Boyle
says, "Bush Sr. in his memoirs says that in the run-up to the first Gulf War
he did fear impeachment."
"I think we need to put the fear of God into Bush Jr.," Boyle adds. "So for
that reason we launched this initiative."Most of Boyle's articles of
impeachment for George W Bush are based on the ones used against his father.
They are also similar to Clark's articles - the only major difference is
Boyle's second article, which alleges that Bush is violating the equal
protection clause of the Constitution by "calling on the poor and minorities
to fight a war for oil to preserve the lifestyles of the wealthy power elite
of this country."
Both campaigns seek to prevent war. Both say that the threat of
impeachment will be a deterrent. But both are still searching for a
Congressman to propose the bill.
These campaigns follow a long history of impeachment attempts that
stretch back to the administration of the first George to hold the presidency.
Perhaps the most famous is the attempt against former president Bill Clinton
after his sexual relations with a White House intern.
"The Republicans ratcheted up the stakes of
impeachment with Clinton, and they did this for mainly political reasons,"
says Fogel. "Now Bush is committing what are, by most people's standards, much
worse crimes than lying about extra-marital sex."
---- INDEX REFERENCES ----
NEWS SUBJECT: English language content (ENGL)
STORY ORIGIN: NEW YORK
REGION: Iraq; Iraq; United States - New York; Northeast
U.S.; United States;
North American Countries; New York; North America; United States;
Middle Eastern
Countries; Persian Gulf Countries; Western Asian Countries; Asian
Countries (IZ IRAQ
USNY USE USA NAMZ NY NME US MEASTZ GULFSTZ WASIAZ ASIAZ)
Word Count: 950
3/14/03 INTERPS (No Page)
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