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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: E. T. who wrote (203761)11/18/2001 11:58:08 AM
From: Gordon A. Langston  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Drilling in ANWR will be more and more popular politically as the price of oil rises. The prospect of $10 a barrel oil should be viewed as a positive by environmentalists yet their favorite ploy is to tax oil to the stratosphere. Cheap oil discourages exploration, expensive oil encourages it. Nice paradox.



To: E. T. who wrote (203761)11/18/2001 1:31:40 PM
From: E. T.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Newsweek: Bush Insisted Only He Should Decide Who Should Stand Trial Before Military Court
Secret Legal Document Gave Bush Wartime Powers,
Including Holding Secret Tribunals
prnewswire.com

NEW YORK, Nov. 18 /PRNewswire/ -- After he signed an order allowing the use of military tribunals in terrorist cases, President George W. Bush insisted he alone should decide who goes before such a military court, his
aides tell Newsweek. The tribunal document gives the government the power to try, sentence -- and even execute --suspected foreign terrorists in secrecy,
under special rules that would deny them constitutional rights and allow no chance to appeal.
Bush's powers to form a military court came from a secret legal memorandum, which the U.S. Justice Department began drafting in the days after Sept. 11, Newsweek has learned. The memo allows Bush to invoke his broad
wartime powers, since the U.S., they concluded, was in a state of "armed conflict." Bush used the memo as the legal basis for his order to bomb Afghanistan. Weeks later, the lawyers concluded that Bush would use his
expanded powers to form a military court for captured terrorists. Officials envision holding the trials on aircraft carriers or desert islands, report
Investigative Correspondent Michael Isikoff and Contributing Editor Stuart Taylor Jr. in the November 26 issue of Newsweek (on newsstands Monday, November 19).
The idea for a secret military tribunal was first presented by William Barr, a Justice Department lawyer -- and later attorney general -- under the first President Bush, as a way to handle the terrorists responsible for the
1988 bombing of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. The idea didn't take back then. But Barr floated it to top White House officials in the days after Sept. 11 and this time he found allies, Newsweek reports. Barr's inspiration
came when he walked by a plaque outside his office commemorating the trial of Nazi saboteurs captured during World War II. The men were tried and most were executed in secret by a special military tribunal.

newsweek.msnbc.com. Click "Pressroom.")