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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!NETXWEST.COM!JFISHER
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- Message-ID: <9212311933.AA01548@wizard.netx.com>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.politics
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 11:33:23 PST
- Sender: Forum for the Discussion of Politics <POLITICS@UCF1VM.BITNET>
- From: Jonathan Fisher <jfisher@NETXWEST.COM>
- Subject: Re: well, pardon me!, Version 5
- Comments: To: POLITICS@ucf1vm.cc.ucf.edu
- Lines: 152
-
- andy says,
-
- > >> I didn't say that the president was exempt from the law. I said that
- > >> the president had approval authority. For example, suppose that the
- > >> law says that arms can't be sent to terrorist nations, but the
- > >> president defines "terrorist nations".
- > >And he defined Iran as a terrorist nation. He never recinded it and it
- > >still is defined as a terrorist nation. Further, even though he wrote a
- > >"Finding" at a later time, allowing him to sell arms to Iran, that doesn't
- > >cut it, IMHO.
- >
- > I must have missed the "Ask Fisher his opinion" section of the Export
- > Control Act.
- Obviously you did. :-)
- >
- > Lots of things are authorized by presidential findings. (No, they
- > aren't the result of a court proceeding.) Arguably delegating that
- > authority to the president is as bad as Congress' other habit of
- > delegating of authority to write regulations, but it is the law.
- But is it? This finding happened _after_ the illegal activity. Does that
- make it legal? Shouldn't that be something that the special prosecutor
- looks into?
- >
- > >If they weren't owned by Israel, then obviously
- > >we were involved in the shipping of the arms.
- >
- > It isn't obvious; shipping requires on physical possession, not legal
- > ownership.
- So if we own arms that are in stored in Israel, we tell Israel to
- load them onto one of our transport planes and our people (McFarlane et al.)
- get onto the plane and fly into a terrorist nation to sell them the
- arms, this isn't shipping of arms?
- >
- > >Israel, they need express permission from us to sell them to anyone.
- >
- > That's seems to be SOP for US arms sold, but if the Israelis don't
- > bother to get that permission, they're on the hook, not some US
- > official. (Now, if they think they have permission but they don't,
- > things turn on why they think it.)
- right.
- >
- > >My understanding is that by having a government official beg people
- > >for money for the contras, the law has been violated.
- >
- > We'll have to see the text of the law. I would be very surprised if
- > it covered lobbying.
- OK. But don't you think that that is what the special prosecutor was
- going to find out?
- >
- > >> And, he came up with squat.
- > >As I stated before, (in versions 1 - 4), the reason that he came up with
- > >'squat' (good word BTW!) was because the Reagan/Bush administrations did
- > >all that they could to inhibit his investigations.
- >
- > All they could do? (I can think of several things they could have
- > done, and didn't do.) Do we have evidence of illegal activity to
- > inhibit investigations or are we just assuming that it happened.
- That's what the special prosecutor was doing. He had already convicted
- a couple (more?) of people for "obstruction of justice". Since Bush has
- just announced that he had notes and Walsh has been asking him for notes
- for years, I think that Bush should be put on trial for
- "obstruction of justice".
- >
- > >> Were they related in any useful sense? I'll bet that North speeds; if
- > >> we're going with the "the same people" theory, shouldn't Walsh be out
- > >> there with a radar gun too? (Aren't detectors are illegal in VA?)
- > >And was North charged with speeding? No. He was convicted with crimes
- > >relating to the Iran/Contra mess/scandal.
- >
- > Where in the charge to the special prosecutor did it mention security
- > systems or even gifts? Remember - Walsh was supposedly looking for
- > arms for hostages stuff. We don't appoint special prosecutors to look
- > into gift receipt.
- No, that's true. And if North's security system wasn't related to Iran/Contra,
- Walsh wouldn't have worried about it. The security system illustrated how
- North profited by the transactions.
- >
- > The connection between North's conviction and the special prosecutor's
- > charge is that North was involved.
- >
- > >> Where is this "our behest" law written down?
- The question is what does violating the Arms Export Control Act mean?
- That was for the special prosecutor to find out.
-
- >
- > >> >was not exempt for the above named law. Further, even though it was
- > >> >an ally that actually sent the arms to Iran, it was at our behest.
- > >> >Since the arms were sold for an outrageous amount, the extra monies
- > >> >should have been deposited into our treasury, not in various peoples
- > >> >pockets.
- >
- > If they weren't our arms, why are we necessarily entitled to any
- > profit on the deal? (Sure, we may choose to make that a condition of
- > permission, but where's the law that says that we have to do so?)
- >
- > >The president of the United States
- > >calls you up and says "send these arms there. You will be compensated".
- > >What would you do?
- >
- > I ask "how much?" If I don't like the answer, I don't do it.
- >
- > What law says that a president can't ask?
- Could be the Arms Export Control Act?
- That was what the special prosector was to find out.
-
- > >Israel believed
- > >that Iran was less dangerous than Iraq. So they wanted to tilt the war
- > >towards Iran. They didn't need a lot of help to sell arms to Iran.
- >
- > In other words, they wanted to do it. That makes them easy to convince.
- > Is it against the law to try to convince them?
- Let me more clear. Apparently, according to stuff that I have read, Israel
- was doing it's own selling of arms to Iran, in violation to our law. This
- had nothing to do with Iran/Contra.
-
- >
- > >they did need our express permission and we forbade the selling of arms
- > >to Iran and to Iraq.
- >
- > Except, we didn't actually forbid it. It appears that the relevant
- > law, the Export Arms Control Act, was obeyed. Fisher thinks we should
- > have forbidden it, but his opinion lacks standing.
- I'm sure that it does. But the opinion that doesn't lack standing were the
- judges and juries that Walsh was going to bring people in front of, if
- he had been allowed to do so.
- >
- > >> However, it agrees with what Weinburger says that that note actually
- > >> says, as opposed to Walsh's interpretations.
- > >The note is pretty clear. You don't need to depend on interpretations
- > >to understand it.
- >
- > I agree that it is pretty clear, which is why I think Walsh is
- > stretching things quite a bit.
- Which why I disagree with you.
-
- >
- > >This could be true. But the note says, that Reagan said that given a
- > >choice between doing something illegal and getting the hostages back and
- > >not getting the hostages back, he would choose the illegal choice and he
- > >believed that selling arms for hostages was illegal.
- >
- > So? Is that a crime?
- Is the fact that the president believed what he was doing was illegal a crime?
- There's an interesting question. I guess that it doesn't matter what the
- president believed, if what he was doing wasn't a crime. Although, maybe you
- like your president to be doing illegal stuff, I don't. But to answer the
- question, is that a crime?
- That's what the special prosecutor was to find out.
- >
- > -andy
- >
- Jonathan
-