#2 Bush Moves Toward Martial Law
in Top 25 Censored Stories for 2008 Sources:
Toward Freedom , October 25, 2006
Title: “Bush Moves Toward Martial Law”
Author: Frank Morales
http://www.towardfreedom.com/home/content/view/911
Student Researchers: Phillip Parfitt and Julie Bickel
Faculty Evaluator: Andy Merrifield, Ph.D.
The John Warner Defense Authorization Act of 2007, which was quietly
signed by Bush on October 17, 2006, the very same day that he signed
the Military Commissions Act, allows the president to station military
troops anywhere in the United States and take control of state-based
National Guard units without the consent of the governor or local
authorities, in order to “suppress public disorder.”
By revising the two-century-old Insurrection Act, the law in
effect repeals the Posse Comitatus Act, which placed strict
prohibitions on military involvement in domestic law enforcement. The
1878 Act reads, “Whoever, except in cases and under circumstances
expressly authorized by the Constitution or Act of Congress, willfully
uses any part of the Army or Air Force as a posse comitatus or
otherwise to execute the laws shall be fined under this title or
imprisoned not more than two years, or both.” As the only US criminal
statute that outlaws military operations directed against the American
people, it has been our best protection against tyranny enforced by
martial law—the harsh system of rules that takes effect when the
military takes control of the normal administration of justice.
Historically martial law has been imposed by various governments during
times of war or occupation to intensify control of populations in spite
of heightened unrest. In modern times it is most commonly used by
authoritarian governments to enforce unpopular rule.1
Section 333 of the Defense Authorization Act of 2007, entitled
“Major public emergencies; interference with State and Federal law,”
states that “the President may employ the armed forces, including the
National Guard in Federal service—to restore public order and enforce
the laws of the United States when, as a result of a natural disaster,
epidemic, or other serious public health emergency, terrorist attack or
incident, or other condition in any State or possession of the United
States, the President determines that domestic violence has occurred to
such an extent that the constituted authorities of the State or
possession are incapable of (or “refuse” or “fail” in) maintaining
public order—in order to suppress, in any State, any insurrection,
domestic violence, unlawful combination, or conspiracy.”
Thus an Act of Congress, superceding the Posse Comitatus Act, has
paved the way toward a police state by granting the president
unfettered legal authority to order federal troops onto the streets of
America, directing military operations against the American people
under the cover of “law enforcement.”
The massive Defense Authorization Act grants the Pentagon $532.8
billion to include implementation of the new law which furthermore
facilitates militarized police round-ups of protesters, so-called
illegal aliens, potential terrorists, and other undesirables for
detention in facilities already contracted and under construction, (see
Censored 2007, Story #14) and transferring from the Pentagon to local
police units the latest technology and weaponry designed to suppress
dissent.
Author Frank Morales notes that despite the unprecedented and
shocking nature of this act, there has been no outcry in the American
media, and little reaction from our elected officials in Congress. On
September 19, a lone Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) noted that
2007’s Defense Authorization Act contained a “widely opposed provision
to allow the President more control over the National Guard [adopting]
changes to the Insurrection Act, which will make it easier for this or
any future President to use the military to restore domestic order
without the consent of the nation’s governors.”
A few weeks later, on September 29, Leahy entered into the
Congressional Record that he had “grave reservations about certain
provisions of the fiscal Year 2007 Defense Authorization Bill
Conference Report,” the language of which, he said, “subverts solid,
longstanding posse comitatus statutes that limit the military’s
involvement in law enforcement, thereby making it easier for the
President to declare martial law.” This had been “slipped in,” Leahy
said, “as a rider with little study,” while “other congressional
committees with jurisdiction over these matters had no chance to
comment, let alone hold hearings on, these proposals.”
Leahy noted “the implications of changing the [Posse Comitatus]
Act are enormous.” “There is good reason,” he said, “for the
constructive friction in existing law when it comes to martial law
declarations. Using the military for law enforcement goes against one
of the founding tenets of our democracy. We fail our Constitution,
neglecting the rights of the States, when we make it easier for the
President to declare martial law and trample on local and state
sovereignty.”
Morales further asserts that “with the president’s polls at a
historic low and Democrats taking back the Congress it is particularly
worrisome that President Bush has seen fit, at this juncture to, in
effect, declare himself dictator.”
Citation
1. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martial_law, “Martial Law,” May 2007
UPDATE BY FRANK MORALES
On April 24, 2007, Major General Timothy Lowenberg, the Adjutant
General, Washington National Guard, and Director of the Washington
Military Department, testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee on
“The Insurrection Act Rider and State Control of the National Guard.”
He was speaking in opposition to Section 1076 of the recently passed
2007 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which President Bush
quietly signed into law this past October 17. The law clears the way
for the President to execute martial law, commandeer National Guard
units around the country and unilaterally authorize military operations
against the American people in the event of an executive declaration of
a “public emergency.”
This move toward martial law, which is intended to facilitate more
effective counterinsurgency measures on the home front, took place,
according to Lowenberg, “without any hearing or consultation with the
governors and without any articulation or justification of need.” This,
despite the fact that Section 1076 of the new law “changed more than
one hundred years of well-established and carefully balanced
state-federal and civil-military relationships.” In other words, with
one swipe of the pen, says the General, “one hundred years of law and
policy were changed without any publicly or privately acknowledged
author or proponent of the change.”
Its “Federal Plans for Implementing Expanded Martial Law
Authority” are to be executed via the recently created domestic
military command, the Northern Command or NORTHCOM. “One key USNORTHCOM
planning assumption,” says Lowenberg, “is that the President will
invoke the new Martial Law powers if he concludes state and/or local
authorities no longer possess either the capability or the will to
maintain order.” In fact, this “highly subjective assumption,” as
Lowenberg puts it, has been in the works for some time now. According
to the General, the “US Northern Command has been engaged for some time
in deliberative planning for implementation of Section 1076 of the 2007
National Defense Authorization. The formal NORTHCOM CONPLAN 2502-05 was
approved by Secretary of Defense Gates on March 15, 2007,”
Further, according to the General, the 2007 NDAA provisions “could
be used to compel National Guard forces to engage in civil disturbance
operations under federal control.” In that case, NORTHCOM will
effectuate its move to martial law, its “CONPLAN,” by way of its very
own “civil disturbance plan,” Department of Defense Civil Disturbance
Plan 55-2, code-named Garden Plot. Major Tom Herthel, of the United
States Air Force Judge Advocate General School, recently laid out the
Rules of Engagement & Rules for the Use of Force during the
implementation of “GARDEN PLOT,” which according to Herthel, is ”the
plan to provide the basis for all preparation, deployment, employment,
and redeployment of all designated forces, including National Guard
forces called to active federal service, for use in domestic civil
disturbance operations as directed by the President.” Among other
things, the “rules” allow for the use of lethal force during domestic
“civil disturbance operations.”
That is why many are urging Congress to repeal Section 1076 of the
2007 NDAA through immediate enactment of Senate Bill 513. Introduced in
February 2007, and sponsored by Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), the bill
seeks to repeal, or as the Congress puts it, “revive previous authority
on the use of the Armed Forces and the militia to address interference
with State or Federal law, and for other purposes,” through the “Repeal
of Amendments made by Public Law 109-364-Section 1076 of the John
Warner National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007.”
It is critical that Senate Bill 513 becomes law, and that our
popular struggle succeeds in beating back the President’s attempt to
further codify the immoral and criminal seizure of state control via
woefully ill-advised and dictatorial moves toward martial law and
military rule.



