CONTENTS CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER OF WITNESSES Page Leonard, George S., attorney, Washington, D.C---- Parfitt, Hon. Harold R., Governor, Panama Canal Zone___. McAuliffe, Lt. Gen. Dennis P., commander-in-chief, U.S. Southern Com- mand; accompanied by Col. James F. Thornton, legal advisor_ Gravel, Hon. Mike, a U.S. Senator from the State of Alaska---- Murphy, Hon. John M., a U.S. Representative from the State of New York_ Crowe, Hon. Guthrie F., retired judge---- Moorer, Adm. Thomas H., U.S. Navy, retired (Former Chairman of the Helms, Hon. Jesse, a U.S. Senator from the State of North Carolina___ Meeker, Leonard, Center for Law and Social Policy, Washington, D.C‒‒‒‒ Crowe, Hon. Guthrie F., retired judge_. Gravel, Hon. Mike, a U.S. Senator from the State of Alaska- Helms, Hon. Jesse, a U.S. Senator from the State of North Carolina_ Leonard, George S., attorney, Washington, D.C‒‒‒‒ McAuliffe, Lt. Gen. Dennis P., commander-in-chief, U.S. Southern Com- mand; accompanied by Col. James F. Thornton, legal advisor__. Meeker, Leonard, Center for Law and Social Policy, Washington, D.C‒‒‒‒ Moorer, Adm. Thomas H., U.S. Navy, retired (Former Chairman of the Murphy, Hon. John M., a U.S. Representative from the State of New York_ 124 44 PREPARED STATEMENTS OF WITNESSES Leonard, George S., attorney, Washington, D.C___ 33 69 117 133 MATERIAL SUBMITTED FOR THE RECORD Text of 1903 treaty (Isthmian Canal Convention. November 18, 1903) –– Table Assurances for present employees of the Panama Canal Company/Canal Letter to the President signed by four Chiefs of Naval Operations--- Joint statement by the Honorable Henery A. Kissinger, Secretary of State of the United States, and His Excellency Juan Antonio Tack, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Panama-1974_. Senator Helm's Senate floor statement excerpted from the Congressional Record, December 4, 1975, entitled "The Panama Canal Negotiations CONTENT S-Continued APPENDIX Statement of David W. Dennis, while a Member of Congress from Indiana, before the Subcommittee on the Panama Canal of the House Committee Page on Merchant Marine and Fisheries in 1971__. Letter to Senator Allen from Congressman Gene Snyder, ranking minority Statement of William R. Drummond, chairman, Canal Zone Central Labor 229 240 241 Legal brief prepared by Michael J. Brady, Redwood City, Calif., re sovereignty of United States over Panama Canal and Panama Canal Zone 244 Letter to Senator Allen from Carolyn Lowe, vice president, Panama Audubon Society, dated July 21, 1977, considering the ecological implications of the proposed Canal Treaty. 250 Letter to President Carter_ Response 252 255 PANAMA CANAL TREATY (DISPOSITION OF UNITED STATES TERRITORY) FRIDAY, JULY 22, 1977 U.S. SENATE, SUBCOMMITTEE ON SEPARATION OF POWERS, COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY, Washington, D.C. The subcommittee met, pursuant to notice, at 8:10 a.m., in room 6202, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Senator James B. Allen (chairman of the subcommittee) presiding. Also present: Senators Scott and Hatch. Staff present: Quentin Crommelin, Jr., chief counsel and staff director; James McClellan, professional staff (minority); Paul Guller, editorial director; and Melinda Campbell, chief clerk. OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR ALLEN Senator ALLEN. The subcommittee will please come to order. The Subcommittee on Separation of Powers of the Senate Committee on the Judiciary is convened today to investigate certain constitutional issues bearing on the Panama Canal negotiations. The subcommittee has jurisdiction over matters relating to the separation of power between the three branches of the Federal Government and the division of power between the Federal Government and States. In this instance, the subcommittee hopes to examine and will seek to determine the proper role of the Congress and of the executive branch in negotiating a treaty with the Republic of Panama for the transfer of certain U.S. territory and property in the Isthmus of Panama. Inasmuch as section 3, article IV of the Constitution provides that Congress, that is, both houses of Congress, shall have power "to dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory or other property belonging to the United States," the subcommittee is concerned that serious constitutional issues involving the doctrine of separation of powers are raised by the continued secret negotiations of the executive branch for the disposition of U.S. territory and property in the Canal Zone. While obviously the Executive has the power to negotiate for the acquisition of territory and property by treaty ratified by the Senate, many serious scholars of the Constitution are of the view that territory or property of the United States may be disposed of only by Congress itself and not simply by the Executive through the treaty ratification process. The subcommittee will, therefore, hear testimony from several (1) respected scholars of the Constitution and from other interested parties in the hope that the subcommittee can reach consensus and report thereon to the full committee. Additionally, members of the subcommittee are concerned that certain other agreements with the Panamanians for direct financial assistance may be concluded outside the context of the treaty negotiations with the result that any such agreement would not be subjected to the normal treaty ratification process which would be necessary otherwise. The press has mentioned a possible total of $5 billion. Direct financial assistance of that magnitude would, of course, be made subject to specific congressional action through the appropriations process, but if such assistance were, in fact, an integral part of the treaty, then as such it would also be subject to ratification by the Senate. The subcommittee will, therefore, require testimony on the intentions of the executive branch with respect to separately negotiated financial arrangements with the Panamanians so that the subcommittee can determine whether such negotiations should be addressed by the Senate as part of the proposed canal treaty. ECONOMIC AID PACKAGE Press reports during the past week have indicated that officials of the Department of the Treasury, representatives of the Agency for International Development, and representatives of the Department of Commerce have all conferred with the Minister for Economic Planning of the Republic of Panama with respect to an economic aid package for Panama designed to assist the troubled Panamanian economy. Obviously, any such negotiations would tend to bear directly on the negotiations for a new Panama Canal Treaty and could be said to be an integral part of the canal treaty talks. Accordingly, the subcommittee will seek to establish the extent of those discussions so that the subcommittee may advise the Senate whether such discussions are within the ambit of the treaty negotiations and whether any direct financial aid agreement with the Panamanians ought to be encompassed within the terms of any proposed treaty rather than be reviewed as a separate matter through the appropriations process. In that connection, certainly the subcommittee would desire that the ratification process not be circumvented by denying the Senate an opportunity to pass on the desirability of separately negotiated financial agreements which might be, in actuality, within the ambit of the treaty negotiations and properly within the scope of any proposed treaty submitted to the Senate. THIRD HEARING SCHEDULED We anticipate that these hearings will require the 2 days presently scheduled and possibly a third date soon after the Senate reconvenes following the August recess. The subcommittee has already scheduled the testimony of a very distinguished group of witnesses. I am particularly pleased that the Governor of the Panama Canal Zone, Hon. Harold Parfitt. will appear before us this morning, and that the Commander-in-Chief of the Southern Command, Lt. Gen. Dennis McAuliffe, will later in the morning give the benefit of his own |