A new battle has erupted over Vice President Dick Cheney’s refusal to submit to an executive order requiring a government review of his handling of classified documents. But the dispute could also raise questions for embattled Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. For the past four years, Cheney’s office has failed to comply with an executive order requiring all federal offices—including those in the White House—to annually report to the National Archives on how they safeguard classified documents. Cheney’s hard-line chief of staff, David Addington, has made the novel argument that the veep doesn’t have to comply on the ground that, because the vice president also serves as president of the Senate, his office is not really part of the executive branch.
Cheney’s position so frustrated J. William Leonard, the chief of the Archives’ Information Security Oversight Office, which enforces the order, that he complained in January to Gonzales. In a letter, Leonard wrote that Cheney’s position was inconsistent with the "plain text reading" of the executive order and asked the attorney general for an official ruling. But Gonzales never responded, thereby permitting Cheney to continue blocking Leonard from conducting even a routine inspection of how the veep’s office was handling classified documents, according to correspondence released by House Government Reform Committee chair Rep. Henry Waxman.
Why didn’t Gonzales act on Leonard’s request? His aides assured reporters that Leonard’s letter has been "under review" for the past five months—by Justice’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC). But on June 4, an OLC lawyer denied a Freedom of Information Act request about the Cheney dispute asserting that OLC had "no documents" on the matter, according to a copy of the letter obtained by NEWSWEEK. Steve Aftergood, the Federation of American Scientists researcher who filed the request, said he found the denial letter "puzzling and inexplicable"—especially since Leonard had copied OLC chief Steve Bradbury on his original letter to Gonzales. The FOIA response has piqued the interest of congressional investigators, who note Bradbury is the same official in charge of vetting all document requests from Congress about the U.S. attorneys flap. Asked about the apparent discrepancy, Justice spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said the OLC response "was and remains accurate" because Leonard’s letter had generated no "substantive work product."
It’s almost impossible to respond to this particular bit of foolishness. "No substantive work product" is about all one can say about the DoJ. The Vice President may claim he’s not part of the Executive Branch, but whatever he is part of – it’s the same Branch as the Department of Justice – because their job these days seems to be acting as Cheney’s personal counsel [and covering their own very exposed asses].
And again I stand by my belief that because Cheney is part of the government that views classified documents (FACT) that he is included. Period. If he doesn’t want to comply then he needs to leave office immediately. Period. Either you play by the rules of our government or you leave our government. And that is exactly what our Congresspeople need to be screaming from the rafters as our representatives. Until he is gone there shouldn’t be a quiet moment in his life that isn’t asking him to resign.
I’ve written my Reps and Senators, any other suggestions Smoooochie?