Bush's choice
Until last week, most Americans probably could not have identified Alberto Gonzales as the White House Counsel. HIs profile has been raised considerably in recent days, by the disclosure of a January 25, 2002, memo he wrote to President Bush. In the memo, Gonzales described the Geneva Conventions as obsolete in the war on terror.
The memo has stirred outrage from many, but it leaves unanswered the question whether President Bush is directly responsible for the torture and abuse of prisoners at al Ghraib, Guantanamo and Afghanistan. However, President Bush has considerable indirect responsibility, through his appointment of Gonzales.
Robyn Blumner, Columnist for the St. Pete Times, writes there is "perhaps no figure who has his fingerprints on more short-sighted, backward and counterproductive Bush administration policies than does White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales." ("The man behind all the bad decisions," May 30, 2004) Gonzales was involved, off screen, in the move to keep secret Dick Cheney's energy task force records, the decision to block release of records of past presidents, and the authorization to try terrorist suspects using military tribunals.
Long before coming to the White House, Alberto Gonzales was signing his name to some outrageous documents. As a Texas Supreme Court Judge (again through appointment by President Bush), Gonzales issued a ruling hostile to whistleblowers, stirring alarm among many in the public interest sector. It was a warning President Bush apparently ignored, and one that may come back to haunt his legacy.
