The Torturer's Apprentice
By Ray McGovern
09/07/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- Addressing the use of torture Wednesday,
President George W. Bush played to the baser instincts of
Americans as he strained to turn his violation of national and
international law into Exhibit A on how “tough” he is on
terrorists. His tour de force brought to mind the
charge the Athenians leveled at Socrates—making the worse case
appear the better. Bush’s remarks made it abundantly clear,
though, that he is not about to take the hemlock.
As the fifth anniversary of 9/11 approaches and with the
midterm elections just two months away, the
president's speechwriters succeeded in making a silk purse out
of the sow’s ear of torture. The artful offensive will succeed
if—but only if—the mainstream media is as cowed, and the
American people as dumb, as the president thinks they are.
Arguably a war criminal under international law and a
capital-crime felon under U.S. criminal law, Bush’s legal
jeopardy is even clearer than when he went AWOL during the
Vietnam War. And this time, his father will not be able to fix
it.
Bush in jeopardy? Yes. The issue is torture, which George W.
Bush authorized in a Feb.
7, 2002, memorandum in contravention both of the Geneva
Accords and 18 U.S. Code 2441—the War Crimes Act that
incorporates the Geneva provisions into the federal criminal
code which was approved by a Republican-led Congress in 1996.
Heeding the advice of Vice President Dick Cheney’s counsel,
David Addington, then-White House counsel Alberto Gonzales and
Assistant Attorney General Jay Bybee, the president officially
opened the door to torture in that memorandum. His remarks
yesterday reflect the determination of Cheney and Bush to keep
that door open and accuse those who would close it of being
"soft on terrorists."
The administration released that damning memorandum in the
spring of 2004 after the photos of torture at Abu Graib were
published. It provided the basis for talking points that the
president wanted “humane” treatment for captured al-Qaida and
Taliban individuals. And—surprise, surprise— mainstream
journalists like those of The New York Times swallowed
the bait, clinging safely to the talking points and missing
altogether Bush’s remarkable claim that “military necessity”
trumps humane treatment. That assertion, over the president’s
signature, provided the gaping loophole through which Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and then-CIA Director George Tenet
drove the Mack truck of officially-sanctioned torture.
Using the arguments adduced by the Addington/Gonzales/Bybee
team, Bush’s 2002 memo made the point that the bedrock provision
of Geneva—Common Article 3—does not apply to al-Qaida or Taliban
detainees, but that the U.S. would “continue to treat detainees
humanely and, to the extent appropriate and consistent with
military necessity , in a manner consistent with the
principles of Geneva.” (Emphasis added.)
Sounding very much like Mafia lawyers, the president’s legal
troika felt it necessary to warn him that playing fast and loose
with the U.S. War Crimes Act (Section 2441) could conceivably
come back to haunt him. The bizarre passage that follows is the
best they could offer in terms of reassurance:
It is difficult to predict the motives of prosecutors and
independent counsels who may in the future decide to pursue
unwarranted charges based on Section 2441. Your
determination would create a reasonable basis in law that
Section 2441 does not apply, which would provide a solid
defense to any future prosecution.
While the imaginative lawyering of Addington (now Cheney’s
chief of staff), Gonzales (now attorney general), and Bybee (now
a federal judge) may have qualified for a presidential
“heck-of-a-job” at the time, Bush is learning the hard way that,
while sycophants are fun to have around, they can do a president
in. Between the lines of Bush’s rhetoric yesterday lies belated
acknowledgement that his decision to condone the torture of
al-Qaida and Taliban captives is now back to haunt him—big time.
The Supreme Court decision on Hamdan v. Rumsfeld ,
announced on June 29, 2006, stripped the president of the magic
suit of clothes approved by his courtiers when it found the
“military tribunals” invented by the Cheney-Rumsfeld cabal to
try terrorists illegal. The Court rejected the artifice of
“unitary executive power” used by the Bush administration to
“justify” practices like torture, indefinite detention without
judicial process, and warrantless eavesdropping. In other words,
the Supreme Court of the United States reaffirmed that ours
should be a government of laws, not of the caprice of the vice
president or president. And in condoning torture, they are
outlaws.
The Defense Rests Not
The president’s performance yesterday reflects the
time-honored adage that the best defense is an aggressive
offense—and especially with a mere two months before the midterm
elections. Bush devoted fully half of his speech to
cops-and-robbers examples, none of them persuasive, of how
“tough” interrogation techniques have yielded information that
prevented all manner of catastrophe. Someone in the White House
apparently forgot to tell the Army, for the head of Army
intelligence, Lt. Gen. John Kimmons, sang from a very different
script at a
Pentagon briefing yesterday , as he explained why the new
Army manual for interrogation is in sync with Geneva. Conceding
past “transgressions and mistakes,” Kimmons said:
No good intelligence is going to come from abusive
practices. I think history tells us that. I think the
empirical evidence of the last five years, hard years, tells
us that.
Grabbing the headlines today is the fact that Bush
has admitted that the CIA has taken high-value captives to
prisons abroad for interrogation using “tough” techniques. More
telling is the fact that CIA interrogators are not bound by the
strictures of the new Army field manual, and that the president
is determined to maintain in place detention centers where CIA
interrogators can ply their trade at his bequest.
The president brags about how his government “changed its
policies,” giving intelligence personnel “the tools they need”
to fight terrorists, and makes it clear that the CIA was given
permission to use “an alternative set of procedures.” He said he
could not describe the specific methods used, “but I can say the
procedures were tough.” The alumni of this school of hard knocks
are now on their way to Guantanamo, but Bush made it clear that
he wanted to keep the schools open for incoming students.
Acknowledging that other terrorists are waiting in line to
take the place of captured leaders, the president made it clear
that he wants the “CIA program” for interrogating advanced
placement terrorists to continue. Bush conceded that, after the
Hamdan decision, “some believe” that intelligence
personnel “could now be at risk of prosecution under the War
Crimes Act—simply for doing their jobs in a thorough and
professional way.” So he is asking Congress to pass legislation
squaring the circle; that even while using “alternative”
procedures, CIA personnel can be said to be in compliance with
Common Article 3 of Geneva. (The not-so-hidden threat, of
course, is the virtual certainty that any member of Congress
opposing this kind of legerdemain will be branded soft on
terrorism in the weeks leading up to the November election.)
In a bizarre twist, the retroactive nature of this
legislation, which the president said “ought to be the top
priority” over the next several weeks, would hold Bush himself
harmless, at least under the U.S. criminal statute, as well as
intelligence practitioners of “alternative” procedures.
And so the stage is set. There is one more Bush speech to go
on this general theme. It’s a safe bet that the next one will
present an equally impassioned defense of warrantless
eavesdropping on Americans, branded unconstitutional and illegal
by Judge Anna Diggs Taylor in Detroit because it violates the
Fourth Amendment and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
Sen. Arlen Specter, R- Pa., who initially called that activity
extralegal, has now come full circle and drafted legislation
that would hold harmless the president and others involved in
that program—and, again, retroactively. It is hard to tell what
brought Specter 180 degrees around; not to be ruled out is the
kind of “alternative procedure” employed so successfully by
former FBI director J. Edgar Hoover, who was the inadvertent
catalyst for the FISA law.
Accountability
Is there no one to hold our leaders to account? The Bush
Crimes Commission, a grassroots citizens’ initiative determined
not to follow the example of the obedient, passive Germans of
the 1930s, has taken testimony on torture and other key issues
to establish whether President Bush is guilty of war crimes.
Testimony was taken in October 2005 and January 2006,
indictments have been brought and served on the White House, and
the judges will issue their verdict on Sept.
13 in Washington. (Full disclosure: I am proud to have taken
part in the proceedings of the Bush Crimes Commission.) Join us
next week.
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Ray McGovern works with Tell the
Word, the publishing arm of the
ecumenical Church of the Saviour. He
was an Army infantry/intelligence
officer, then a CIA analyst for 27
years, and is now on the Steering
Group of Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity.
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First published at TomPaine.com
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