There's a lot more about Alberto Gonzales that
will prepare you for what to expect for the next four years from the
Justice Department. In a January 2002 memorandum to George W. Bush, he
emphasized that this new war on terror "renders obsolete Geneva's
strict limitations on questioning of enemy prisoners and renders quaint
some of its provisions." (Emphasis added.) Gonzales also told George W.
Bush that in denying these "detainees"--many of them now held at
Guantánamo for nearly three years without charges--prisoner of war
status under the Geneva Conventions, the president didn't have to worry
about being held accountable by the courts. As commander in chief, his
actions were unreviewable. Said the Supreme Court, in June, concerning
the accuracy of the advice from the next attorney general of the United
States about deep-sixing U.S. citizens, "We have long since made clear
that a state of war is not a blank check for the president when it
comes to the rights of [American] citizens." And the Court also ruled
he was wrong about the noncitizen prisoners at Guantánamo. Alberto
Gonzales, moreover, will not in the least disturb John Aschroft's
beloved USA Patriot Act, because Gonzales helped write it, and he
wholly agrees with his patron, the president, that nothing in it should
be changed despite the act's "sunset clause" that allows Congress to
review sections of the act by December 2005. [more]