March 5, 2010 5:14 PM

Liz Cheney Accused of McCarthyism

By
Brian Montopoli
Topics
National Security
Liz Cheney, daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney and co-founder of the advocacy group Keep America Safe, is being criticized on the right for going too far in an ad deeming Justice Department lawyers who represented Guantanamo Bay detainees the "al-Qeada seven" and calling for their identities to be revealed.

After Paul Mirengoff posted on the conservative Power Line blog that "it is entirely inappropriate to suggest that these lawyers share the values of terrorists or to dub the seven DOJ lawyers 'The al Qaeda Seven,'" the Huffington Post reached out to him for further comment.

"It could be worse than some of the assertions made by McCarthy, depending on some of the validity of those assertions," Mirengoff said. "It is just baseless to suggest that [these DoJ officials] share al Qaeda values... they didn't actually say it but I think it was a fair implication of what they were saying."

(Mirengoff wrote after his comments were posted that "the quotes themselves are accurate, but I think the characterization of what I said is somewhat misleading," writing "I don't think I said or implied that the video is comparable to or worse than the totality of what goes by the name of McCarthyism or to the 'crusades' launched by Sen. McCarthy.")

It was not the first time McCarthy had been raised in reference to the video. Ken Gude of the liberal Center for American Progress said the following, according to the Washington Monthly: "This is exactly what Joe McCarthy did. Not kind of like McCarthyism; this is exactly McCarthyism."

"Joseph McCarthy himself couldn't have done a better job of using fear and insinuations to smear his political enemies," added People For the American Way President Michael Keegan. "Most Americans understand that McCarthyism was a shameful chapter in American history, but the Cheney wing of the Republican Party seems to have embraced Senator McCarthy's utter lack of sham."

Asked to comment on the criticism, Keep America Safe Executive Director Aaron Harison said via email "we're asking for transparency."

"The American people have a right to know whether lawyers who used to represent terrorists, including advocating for their immediate release, are now working on detainee issues inside the Department of Justice," he said. "There was no ethical obligation on the part of these lawyers to come to the defense of the terrorists. Attorneys who chose to spend their pro bono hours defending terrorists, many of whom killed Americans, did so voluntarily and that decision rightly raises questions about their judgment. In our system of democracy, the American people have a right to hold a President accountable for the people he hires."

Mirengoff was not the only critic of the video from the right. John Bellinger III, former legal adviser to Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, told the American Prospect that "it's unfortunate that these individuals are being criticized for their past representation. It reflects the politicization and the polarization of terrorism issues."

"We've had a long-standing tradition in our country for lawyers to represent unpopular causes, and they shouldn't be attacked for doing so," said Bellinger.

Retired Air Force Col. Morris Davis, former chief prosecutor of military commissions under President Bush (who emerged as a critic of the tribunals), said, "This is the typically regressive fear tactic that you expect from anybody named Cheney."

The Keep America Safe spot was prompted by a letter Attorney General Eric Holder sent to Congress saying that nine political appointees in the Obama administration had either provided legal representation for detainees in the prison at Guantanamo Bay or had been involved in some kind of advocacy for them, such as contributing to amicus briefs in detainee-related cases. Holder gave the names of two of those lawyers whose work for the detainees had already been reported but did not release the other names.

A pair of Bush administration officials rallied to the lawyers' defense after the spot was released, with Peter D. Keisler saying "there is a longstanding and very honorable tradition of lawyers representing unpopular or controversial clients."

"The fact that someone has acted within that tradition, as many lawyers, civilian and military, have done with respect to people who are accused of terrorism -- that should never be a basis for suggesting that they are unfit in any way to serve in the Department of Justice," he added.

The Department of Justice released the names of the seven attorneys on Wednesday. Keep America Safe's Harrison responded with a statement saying that "the American people have a right to know whether lawyers who voluntarily flocked to Guantanamo to take up the cause of the terrorists are currently working on detainee issues in President Obama's Justice Department."

"Attorney General Holder's assertion that hiring former terrorist lawyers is just like hiring lawyers who used to defend white collar criminals demonstrates once again that, despite the President's rhetoric, the Obama Administration does not understand the dangers of treating terrorism like a law enforcement matter," he said.

Add a Comment See all 28 Comments
by biglarry276 March 8, 2010 7:07 PM EST
McCarthyism has always been alive and well in the Republican ranks. The problem is, deep down, they consider those charges a compliment, not disparagement. I remeber Bill Buckley defending the fascistic senator on his PBS show in the 80's and bringing along McCarthy's waterboy, Roy Cohn, to help him whitewash the ogre.

All of this confirms my theory that most Republicans, if born in Germany before 1920, would have been be Adolf's staunch supporters and very effective SA, SS, or Gestapo soldiers. The same applies to another scenario, in which the American (or any other) conservative mentality individuals would've been born before 1980 in Saudi Arabia or Pashtun Pakistan/Afghaninistan. They'd be staunch supportes of Al Qaida, Taliban, or The Muslim Brotherhood right know. It's the same kind of fundamentalist, intolerant mentality that inhabits all adherents of such groups and parties.
Reply to this comment
by asamiller March 7, 2010 4:18 PM EST
More distortion and confusion being sown by Republicans. I think most of us are smart enough to figure things out for ourselves.
Reply to this comment
by jokr8790 March 7, 2010 11:16 AM EST
The spokespeople for "Keeping America Safe" has expressed an opinion regarding the ethical obligations of attorneys. Anyone from "Keeping America Safe," and particularly anyone related to Dick Cheney is simply not qualified to render an ethical opinion on anything. They have no understanding of the concept.
Reply to this comment
by gosborne0 March 7, 2010 10:44 AM EST
Isn't it interesting that the only bill of rights amendment that the radical right thinks is important is the second amendment? The fact is that this latest attack against the Obama admin really has little to do with the subject of the attack (the lawyers representing the Gitmo detainees). It is nothing more than the continuing non-stop barrage of attacks to undermine everything the Obama admin does to insure that conservatives get back in power ASAP. The more outrageous the assertion the better, as in this case. The think tanks that come up with this stuff only have to put it out there, turn it over to their propaganda machine (Fox), then sit back and watch the fireworks, rubbing their hands with glee. They are master manipulators of the news machine. They have taken "dirty tricks" to a whole new level. Truth has nothing to do with it. I don't know Liz Chaney, but I doubt that she really believes that this latest smear campaign has any truth to it. That is the really disturbing part of all this. Apparently ANY means are justified by the ends that they seek. They are willing to sacrifice truth, justice and reasonable political discourse and substitute in its place demagoguery, fear-mongering and even hatred of the worst kind. They play to the paranoia of their right wing followers and all the others who are simply scared into believing their nonsense. It gives you a sense of what anti-nazi Germans must have felt during the rise to power of tne nazis. Where are we headed? This is all very scary.
Reply to this comment
by dstanton12 March 7, 2010 10:23 AM EST
In my opinion, Dick Cheney was a liar and just as dangerous as the terrorists in Gitmo. I DO NOT back these terrorists and their ideals, but at the same time we have all witnessed the end result of our elected official's lies and deceit. There is no way I can give any credibility to Cheney's daughter or her views.
Reply to this comment
by wallybgator March 7, 2010 10:08 AM EST
Dick, I would like to congratulate you on turning your own daughter into a NUT JOB like yourself. This family has done more to ruin this country them almost any other person. This is the work of SICK people. But then again maybe we should help them like we help the handicapped. Lets find every Republican Lawyer especially anyone connected with a Political office and find out which ones represented a child molester, killer, thief, organized crime figure, drug dealer and any other dirt bag and put their names on the Internet in a list that folks can ponder and discuss if they follow the lifestyle, teachings and beliefs of their clients. I am going to get started right now. Wow, this is going to be fun.........
Reply to this comment
by rlf459 March 7, 2010 8:16 AM EST
How very sad to see that Dick Cheney has managed to corrupt a once innocent little child into a wholehearted follower of his deranged worldview. The man is deeply disturbed, and sadly, so is his daughter.
Reply to this comment
by EVIL_E1 March 7, 2010 3:41 AM EST
The apple doesn't fall far from the tree. What a loser.
Reply to this comment
by gcat83 March 7, 2010 5:21 AM EST
I didn't realize holder was Barak's son.
by jxknowles March 6, 2010 8:53 PM EST
Liz should try an occupation more suited to her talents. Say, lumberjacking, or professional wrestler.
Reply to this comment
by gcat83 March 7, 2010 5:33 AM EST
You might get your wish in 2 years when she's on the Republican ticket.
by boatdocster March 6, 2010 3:57 PM EST
Liz Cheney's view (and the other 20% of the lunatic right); once she has decided you are related to any organization they do not like or agree with, you are guilty; you do not deserve any legal protection, rights or representation. No courts, no trial, and most important, lets not get bogged down in facts!

Sounds very much like the Gestapo in WWII as they rounded up the Jewish nation; automatically guilty (regardless of the facts), no trial or legal counsel, and if Liz and Dickless had their way, because we simply do not agree with you, we now are going to shoot you.
Reply to this comment
See all 28 Comments
.

Follow Political Hotsheet

Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook