Source: Infowars
Paul Joseph Watson
White House demanded removal of language that would have protected U.S. citizens
Paul Joseph Watson
White House demanded removal of language that would have protected U.S. citizens
Human Rights Watch has labeled President Obama’s U-turn
on his decision to veto the NDAA bill, which empowers the government to
indefinitely detain Americans without trial, a “historic tragedy for
rights,” but should we really be surprised given the fact that it was
Obama’s White House which ensured language that would have protected
U.S. citizens was removed from the bill in the first place?
With the House passing a revised version of the bill
last night and the Senate set to follow, Obama could sign the
legislation into law before the end of the week after the White House
dropped its threat to veto the National Defense Authorization Act, which
under Section 1031 empowers the government to arrest Americans and hold
them in a detention camp with no legal recourse.
“By signing this defense spending bill, President Obama
will go down in history as the president who enshrined indefinite
detention without trial in US law,” said Kenneth Roth, executive
director of Human Rights Watch.
“In the past, Obama has lauded the importance of being on the right
side of history, but today he is definitely on the wrong side.”
HRW describes Obama’s about-face as a “historic tragedy for rights”.
The ACLU strikes a similar tone, warning “it will damage both his legacy and American’s reputation for upholding the rule of law,” if Obama signs the bill.
HRW and the ACLU’s opposition to the bill is
commendable, but in none of their press releases does it point out that
it was Obama’s White House itself which demanded language be removed
from the original version of the bill that would have protected U.S.
citizens from its most dangerous provisions.
Obama’s veto threat was never about stopping detention
without trial of American citizens, it was about ensuring that the
federal government didn’t completely hand such powers over to the U.S.
military, and enshrining into law Obama’s unconstitutional policy of
targeting Americans as terrorists without the legal requirement to offer
any proof.
Indeed, as the bill’s co-sponsor Senator Carl Levin said
during a speech on the floor last week, it was the Obama administration
that demanded the removal of language that would have precluded
Americans from being subject to indefinite detention.
“The language which precluded the application of Section
1031 to American citizens was in the bill that we originally
approved…and the administration asked us to remove the language which
says that U.S. citizens and lawful residents would not be subject to
this section,” said Levin, Chairman of the Armed Services Committee.
“It was the administration that asked us to remove the very language
which we had in the bill which passed the committee…we removed it at the
request of the administration,” said Levin, emphasizing, “It was the
administration which asked us to remove the very language the absence of
which is now objected to.”