[NYTr] No Second Acts, Except in Iraq: Bushite Heads to Baghdad
All the News That Doesn't Fit
nytr at blythe-systems.com
Tue Nov 27 16:11:38 EST 2007
IPS - Nov 26, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=40212
US: No Second Acts, Except in Iraq
ControversialBushite heads Office of Legislative Statecraft in Baghdad
By Bill Berkowitz
OAKLAND, California, Nov 26 (IPS) - Earlier this decade, Manuel Miranda
spent a good deal of time figuring out how to pilfer documents related
to the Democratic Party's strategy for dealing with President George W.
Bush's judicial appointments.
He helped convince Republican Party senators to threaten the use of the
so-called "nuclear option", a procedure that would have ended the
minority's right to filibuster judicial nominations. He later led the
effort to put the kibosh on President Bush's nomination of Harriet
Miers, whom the right considered to be insufficiently hard-core on
certain issues, to the Supreme Court.
Less than a year ago, he was the spokesperson for Families First on
Immigration, a newly formed conservative Christian evangelical group
that was aiming to advance what it was calling "religiously grounded
positions on immigration".
Out of the spotlight for a while, in mid-November he re-surfaced,
shepherding a delegation of Iraqi lawyers and lawmakers around the
capital.
Given the Bush administration's penchant for cronyism -- rewarding
partisan political operatives with political appointments -- it was not
surprising to see Manuel Miranda reappear. What was surprising --
particularly to several Democratic senators -- is that despite his
unsavoury record regarding democratic practices, and once having been
characterised as having "one foot in the political graveyard", Miranda
is now the director of the Office of Legislative Statecraft at the U.S.
Embassy in Iraq.
His work includes giving instruction on democratic principles to Iraqi
lawyers and lawmakers.
Miranda's current placement would have likely continued to go
relatively unnoticed had he not shown up on Capital Hill last week
escorting a group of troubled Iraqi lawyers and lawmakers.
Led by Aswad al-Minshidi, the president of the Iraqi bar association,
the delegation was in town to hand-deliver a letter to House Minority
Whip Roy Blunt and Senate Judiciary Committee ranking Republican Arlen
Specter calling for better treatment of detainees in Iraq and
criticising the U.S. government for not doing enough to build Iraq's
legal system.
According to The Hill, The delegation was mainly "concerned about the
length of time -- ranging from three months to two years -- Iraqis
rounded up in broad security sweeps must wait behind bars before seeing
authorities with power to adjudicate their cases, said a State
Department source familiar with their views."
Quite often these suspects "rounded up on suspicion of having ties to
insurgents are let go, but they often have to wait months to trickle
through the legal process. In many cases, their families have little
idea of what happened to them."
According to a State Department official, in Iraq, 15,000 people are
incarcerated at Camp Bucca, and 5,000 are held at Camp Cropper.
"We all have an interest in justice and as American lawyers tell us,
justice delayed is justice denied," wrote al-Minshidi, the Shiite
president of the bar association. "Moreover, a people's respect for the
rule of law, which is the keystone of a lawful society, is also
affected by the mere appearance of injustice."
In the letter, which expressed thanks to the U.S. for helping rebuild
his country, al-Minshidi wrote that they were "ask[ing] that more
resources be made available to expedite the investigation and trial of
all prisoners held by multinational forces in Iraq."
"[O]ur legal culture is in need of assistance and America's millions of
dollars have done little to assist our institutions," wrote the head of
Iraq's bar association. "For example, you have established 18
benchmarks for Iraqi progress, seven are legislative, yet not one
American dollar has been spent to assist the State Council, the oldest,
most legitimate and respected legislative institution in our country.
Our 36 law schools graduate over 1,000 lawyers every year, yet your
embassy has done nothing to assist them to set their sights on the
future."
Hisham al-Fityan, a Sunni and vice president of the Iraqi bar
association, and Wrea Ahmad, president of the Kurdish bar association,
also attended the meetings with Blunt and other lawmakers. The lawyers
also met with Rep. Steve Chabot, a Republican member of the Judiciary
and Foreign Affairs committees.
In the Senate they met with a handful of Judiciary Committee members
including Jeff Sessions, Lindsey Graham and Tom Coburn. The delegation
also had a private meeting with Supreme Court Chief Justice John
Roberts and later met with Emmet Flood, special counsel to the
president.
Last winter, Miranda was an enthusiastic spokesperson for Families
First on Immigration, a coalition of long-time Christian conservative
leaders including former Republican Party presidential hopeful Gary
Bauer, who heads American Values; former Bush advisor on Catholic
matters, Deal Hudson of the Morley Institute for Church & Culture; and
David Keene of the American Conservative Union.
"Our position really is consistent with Christian teachings and with
the rule of law," Miranda, chair of the Third Branch Conference, a
coalition of over 150 leaders that brought together more than 30 top
conservatives on this issue, told the Washington Times. "Out of concern
for keeping families together, the religious leaders propose granting
citizenship to any illegal aliens in the country who are related to
U.S. citizens. This would include anyone who has had a child born here,
often referred to as an 'anchor baby'."
"In return, the federal government would end birthright citizenship,
which automatically grants U.S. citizenship to anyone born here,
regardless of his parents' legal status. The 14th Amendment says 'all
persons born or naturalised in the United States...are citizens of the
United States'."
"This is a real compromise," Miranda claimed. "On the one hand, there
is legalisation of a large number of people, but conservatives get the
settlement of the thorniest issue for them in the immigration debate."
Unlike Miranda, Families First on Immigration appears to have faded
from the political scene.
Miranda, who worked as judicial-nominations counsel for then-Senate
Majority Leader Bill Frist, was "forced from his job in early 2004
after an internal Senate investigation determined he and a junior aide
had swiped 4,670 documents, memos and e-mails" from Democratic Party
staffers, the Washington Post recently reported.
While acknowledging the operation, Miranda insisted that he had broken
no laws because the committee had no internal password protection at
the time when he looked through and printed out other aides' electronic
files.
That Manuel Miranda has earned his conservative stripes was apparent in
February 2006, when David Keene, head of the American Conservative
Union, presented him with the organisation's Reagan Award, saying,
"[Democrats] no doubt thought that it would all end with that, that
Manny Miranda would slink off into the darkness and never be heard from
again...But it turns out that he's more than just a principled
conservative: he's a man who doesn't know the meaning of surrender."
Although Miranda's charge in Iraq appears rather nebulous, he has in
the past shown a well-honed disregard for democratic principles and
practices. A veteran of the Karl Rove school of slash and burn
politics, Miranda's back-story doesn't bode well for Iraq's troubled
legal system.
[Bill Berkowitz is a longtime observer of the conservative movement.
His column "Conservative Watch" documents the strategies, players,
institutions, victories and defeats of the U.S. Right. ]
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