January 4, 2009 12:38 PM

Cheney: We Didn't Violate Anyone's Civil Liberties

By
Brian Montopoli
Topics
In The News
4697423On CBS' Face The Nation Sunday, Vice President Dick Cheney told host Bob Schieffer that the Bush administration did not go "too far" in its surveillance program.

"I think what we did was one of the great success stories of the intelligence business in the last century," Cheney said. "I think what the National Security Agency did under General Mike Hayden, working with the CIA, at the direction of the president, was masterfully done. I think it provided crucial intelligence for us."

"It's one of the main reasons we've been successful in defending the country against further attacks," he continued. "And I don't believe we violated anybody's civil liberties."

"This was all done in accordance with the president's constitutional authority, under Article II of the Constitution, as commander in chief, with the resolution that was passed by the Congress immediately after 9/11," the vice president said. "And subsequently, we have gotten the legislative authority, signed up to last year, when we passed and modify the FISA statute."

"Do you believe the president, in time of war, that anything he does is legal?" Schieffer asked.

"I can't say that anything he does is legal," Cheney said. "I think we do and we have historic precedent of taking action which you wouldn't take in peacetime but that you will take sometimes in wartime in order to do the basic job that you sign up to when you take the oath of office – to support and defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic."

"If you hark back in our history and look at Abraham Lincoln," Cheney continued, "who suspended the writ of Habeas Corpus in the middle of the Civil War…"

"But nobody thinks that that was legal," Schieffer interjected.

"No – well, it certainly was in the sense he wasn't impeached," Cheney said. "And it was a wartime measure that he took that I think history says today, yeah, that was probably a good thing to do."

"There have been other examples, Lyndon -- or FDR, in World War II, when he provided for internment camps for Japanese-American citizens," Cheney said. "Most people now look back and say that was wrong. But what we did was modest by those comparisons. "

"And I would also emphasize that what we did, we did with the support and involvement, for example, of the Justice Department," Cheney added.

"We worked -- stayed close to the Office of Legal Counsel," he said. "We followed the guidance we got, which is what you're supposed to do and where you're supposed to do it. There have subsequently been some controversies that -- the Supreme Court's made some decisions that didn't agree with what we did at the time. But what we did was authorized by the legal authorities that were to be the source of that kind of advice."

Add a Comment
by infojunkie1 January 5, 2009 3:24 AM EST
*** Cheney would not know the Constitution if it hit him over the head. I have always respected Bob Schieffer, but I just wish he or any of the other TV reporters would get courage and confront these thugs. Both Cheney and Bush have committed impeachable offenses and they should be held accountable for their incompetence and their war crimes. At the very least, whenever they appear on TV, there should be a caption below their faces that reads: War Criminal, Liar, or Traitor, or all of the above. The fact that none of this has happened just shows how much our democracy has been weakened since Watergate!
Reply to this comment
by sivalleyguy January 5, 2009 2:05 AM EST
I almost forgot. How many US based terorists has Mike Hayden caught with his $40 billion a year in Crystal City gadgetry? None. Their biggest score was....[wait this is big]....Eliot Spitzer hiring a call girl. Now, to you and me that''s pretty inconsequential. But you forget who is Cheney''s base - Corporate executives and financial types who had feared indictment when Spitzer was prosecuting them. Those people were VERY HAPPY with the result. Don''t you feel safer now?
Reply to this comment
by sivalleyguy January 5, 2009 2:00 AM EST
What circular logic to justify violating the constitution. "We relied up the Office of Legal Counsel and Justice Department." He doesn''t note those fallacious decisions were kept hidden because the logic was so, forgive me, tortured. Nor does he mention that these people were cherry-picked for their willingness to write decisions acceptable to Cheney and Addington. Not being impeached means it''s a free pass to violate the constitution, huh? This raises further suspicion on the logic behind the "War on Terror," a permanent state of war that gives the president open season on the constitution. Ignore the congress? Sure. Disregard the judiciary? Of course.
Reply to this comment
by lucy20081 January 4, 2009 8:06 PM EST
Chaney is a worm. He may have some admirers in his neoconservative and fanatic cabel, but for the rest of us he is a shame and a stain on our American democratic republic and it''s constitution. He is a liar and a war criminal. He is a mold that flowered in the Bush administration but no matter the look of it, he is still one of the stinkiest cheeses in a stinkey administration.
Reply to this comment
by skeezix06 January 4, 2009 5:03 PM EST
How shall I put this? I don''t believe anything Cheney says and after the last 8 years I''m not sure why you still do.
Reply to this comment
.

Follow Political Hotsheet

Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook