Tortured logic
By Los Angeles Times
09/13/06 "Los
Angeles Times " - --- 'THE UNITED STATES DOES NOT
TORTURE," President Bush said last week. It can, however, make
use of what he euphemistically called "an alternative set of
procedures" for eliciting information from prisoners suspected
of being terrorists.
The difference between torture and these "alternative
procedures" seems to be who's conducting the interrogation and
where it takes place. If it's the CIA and it's overseas, they're
permissible alternative procedures. Anywhere else, they're not
allowed. This kind of legalistic legerdemain doesn't just expose
the weakness of the administration's argument, it does a real
disservice to U.S. foreign policy and all those serving
overseas.
The administration characteristically refused to provide details
about its methods. But experts on interrogation suspect that
these alternative procedures could include subjecting prisoners
to extreme temperatures and "waterboarding," in which a prisoner
is strapped to a board and put in fear of drowning if he doesn't
confess.
Such techniques seem to qualify as "humiliating and degrading
treatment" prohibited by Common Article 3 of the Geneva
Convention, which protects so-called enemy combatants, at least
according to the Supreme Court. That's also the military's view.
The new Army field manual, rooted in Article 3, prohibits
extreme interrogation tactics such as waterboarding and
conducting mock executions.
The administration, apparently untroubled by this disagreement,
is now asking Congress to declare that detainees who claim
violations of the Geneva Convention may not have their day in
court. The administration also wants to amend the 1996 War
Crimes Act, which makes violation of the Geneva Convention
illegal under U.S. law. New language would allow for prosecution
only for "torture" and "cruel and inhumane treatment," not for
"humiliating and degrading treatment." A 2005 law already allows
interrogators accused of abuse to offer the defense that they
"did not know that the practices were unlawful and [that] a
person of ordinary sense and understanding would not know the
practices were unlawful." That's protection enough.
Even the clearest legal language is subject to differing
interpretations. But the Bush administration has a record of
taking the narrowest possible view of protections for detainees
under U.S. and international law. Indeed, until the Supreme
Court forced it to change course, the administration argued that
unlawful enemy combatants in the war on terror weren't covered
by the Geneva Convention at all.
Given an inch by the law, this administration too often has
taken a mile — creating a climate in which lower-level service
members could feel that they were justified in the sort of abuse
that took place at Abu Ghraib. As Congress moves to write
legislation governing the treatment of present and future
detainees, it needs to keep that history in mind and force the
president to spell out what he means by alternative methods. And
Congress should allow detainees who claim those methods violate
their rights under the Geneva Convention to have their day in
court.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times
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