medium.com
Trevor Timm
7-8 minutes
The CIA’s approval rating among Democrats
is sky-high. Former FBI and Justice Department officials are being showered
with donations on GoFundMe. And now George W. Bush — the president who signed the Patriot Act, opened Guantanamo, started
the Iraq War, and warrantlessly wiretapped Americans — is a viral sensation being portrayed as our country’s most lovable grandpa.
Everyone expected Trump to be a nightmare
for Americans’ civil liberties. But very few could have guessed the strange way
this nightmare would manifest itself over the past 18 months. Of course, Trump
has used his executive power to implement countless cruel and rights-violating
policies. But he has also, with an assist from a frenzied media, turned many of
the individuals and agencies responsible for creating our unaccountable
national security apparatus into folk heroes at the same time.
It’s an infuriating and depressing state of
affairs for civil liberties advocates, many of whom have fought the CIA, FBI,
and Justice Department in the past two presidential administrations as these
agencies expanded executive power, restricted privacy rights, and shielded
officials from accountability under the guise of “national security” — the same tools Trump now regularly uses for his benefit.
Very few could have guessed the strange way this nightmare would
manifest itself over the past 18 months.
The nauseating sight this weekend of George
W. Bush being deified on social media because he passed a piece of candy to
Michelle Obama was only the latest example. The combination of Trump’s
relentless and inaccurate Twitter feed and the stampede of pundits who
instinctively feel the need take the exact opposite view has created a nonstop
cycle that has destroyed our ability to see the truth.
The examples come so fast that they are
almost impossible to enumerate. In just the past couple weeks, Trump has gone
after the FISA court, the Justice Department, and the FBI — all due to personal grievances or feuds
he has because of their perceived role in the Mueller investigation.
Virtually all of Trump’s specific
criticisms are baseless, but he has an uncanny ability to pick targets for his
tweet tirades that should be harshly criticized for entirely different reasons.
The FISA court has been radically reinterpreting Fourth Amendment law in
complete secrecy since the Bush administration. The FBI, still headquartered in
a building named after serial lawbreaker J. Edgar Hoover, has been a civil
liberties disaster since its inception and was recently handed increased
surveillance authorities under Trump’s watch. The Justice Department has
repeatedly tipped the scales against the powerless while shielding the
powerful.
Why, then, when Trump tweets something
idiotic about the Justice Department, do so many pundits have to say something
almost as ridiculous in response, like, “The statute of Justice is blindfolded
for a reason, it applies to all without fear nor favor”? Try telling that to
500 children still separated from their immigrant parents because of Justice
Department policies, or to the other countless victims of Attorney General Jeff
Sessions’ radical moves since he’s taken office.
When Trump criticizes law enforcement or
intelligence officials by name, this phenomenon somehow gets worse. His targets
are instantly turned into celebrities who must be morally pure, merely because
Trump has decided to turn his fire on them on a particular day. The same people
the Bush and Obama administration inoculated from accountability for similar
transgressions Trump commits on a daily basis — like lying — are being turned into liberal icons.
Former CIA Director John Brennan sworn in
before testifying during a House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence for
a hearing on Russian actions during the 2016 election at Capitol Hill in
Washington, DC, May 23, 2017. Photo by Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty
Take former CIA director John Brennan,
whose security clearance Trump revoked because he was upset that Brennan was
criticizing him. After Trump’s announcement, Brennan was lionized by the media
as a truth-telling luminary, instantly beloved by all Democrats. How quickly
people (pretend to) forget that Brennan, just a few years ago, ordered the CIA
to spy on Democratic Senate staffers who were investigating the agency’s
torture program, and then blatantly lied about it to the public.
It is indeed possible to condemn Trump’s vengeful actions against people
like Brennan without showering these people with unadulterated praise.
Yes, Trump’s retaliation against Brennan
for criticizing him is concerning, but why do so many pundits feel the need to
declare Brennan a “hero”? It is indeed possible to condemn Trump’s vengeful
actions against people like Brennan without showering these people with
unadulterated praise.
Cable news is littered with similar cases.
James Clapper, the former director of national intelligence, lied to Congress
about the NSA’s mass surveillance of Americans before the Snowden revelations.
He’s now a regular anti-Trump commentator on CNN. Michael Hayden, the former
Bush administration NSA and CIA chief who made so many false statements to
Congress that they are featured in a stand-alone section in the Senate’s 2014
torture report, is regularly seen on television ripping Trump for constant
falsehoods. Hayden even has a bestselling new book, The Assault on
Intelligence: American National Security in the Age of Lies, lamenting the
death of “truth.”
It is the height of irony that Trump
constantly rants about the “deep state,” yet the most coordinated PR campaign
involving ex-intelligence officials we’ve seen in his presidency was in support
of one of his major agenda items. It was Brennan, Clapper, and Hayden — along with dozens of other former intelligence officials — who banded together and and used their newfound media platforms to
lobby for Trump’s CIA nominee Gina
Haspel, who was personally involved in the agency’s appalling torture program
after 9/11.
The next time a Trump cabinet official is
caught lying under oath but faces no retribution for it — or when Trump’s CIA is involved in
its next human rights scandal — we should save part
of the blame for those who paved the way for such an act to go unpunished. By
uncritically glorifying law enforcement and intelligence officials who have
tramped on civil liberties for decades in the name of fighting Trump, we may
damage the cause of civil liberties long after Trump is gone.
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