Becoming what we despise?
By Robert Scheer
12/06/06 "San
Francisco Chronicle" -- -- JOSE PADILLA, a
U.S. citizen, has been tortured by his own government
for the better part of three-and-one-half years,
suffering years of systematic sensory deprivation
documented in his attorneys' filings and supported by
photos of the prisoner published this week by the New
York Times.
In that time, Padilla, who has been judged by
professionals as mentally ill as a consequence of his
brutal treatment, has been denied his constitutional
right to a fair and speedy trial and allowed no legal
representation for 21 months. The Bush administration's
excuse for this betrayal of our legal system was that
Padilla was a dangerous al Qaeda agent, a big fish
caught in the administration's successful pursuit of its
much ballyhooed war on terror. In the words of then-U.S.
Attorney General John Ashcroft, Padilla was "a known
terrorist who was exploring a plan to build and explode
a radiological dispersion device, or 'dirty bomb,' in
the United States." Those lurid claims were abandoned
when the government, faced with a belated U.S. Supreme
Court censure, finally charged Padilla with vague and
lesser crimes carrying a maximum 15-year sentence.
Were this some isolated case of officially condoned
sadism, say in a rural county jail, it could be
minimized as an aberration. Instead, it is an
all-too-accurate reflection of a presidential policy of
dehumanizing anyone even suspected of being an enemy.
The Times photos, taken from a government video, give
evidence of a heavily manacled prisoner with masked eyes
and muffled ears being walked down a corridor within a
Navy brig, lending physical evidence to Padilla's
lawyer's claims of a pattern of disorienting isolation.
"There is nothing comparable in terms of severity of
confinement, in terms of how Padilla was held,
especially considering that this was pretrial
confinement," Philip D. Cave, a former Navy judge
advocate general, told the Times.
Obviously, a prisoner, who has been deliberately
disorientated for so long, is no longer in a position to
exercise his right to confront his accusers. An
examining psychiatrist wrote that "as the result of his
experience during his detention and interrogation, Mr.
Padilla does not appreciate the nature and consequences
of the proceedings against him, is unable to render
assistance to counsel and has impairments in reasoning
as the result of a mental illness ... complicated by the
neuropsychiatric effects of prolonged isolation."
The excuse for this heinous treatment of a U.S. citizen
is the same as that given for an entire orgy of
despicable treatment of prisoners held in Iraq,
Afghanistan, Guantanamo and a gulag archipelago of
secret military facilities around the world: Our
enemies, all linked through sophistry to the 9/11
terrorist attacks, are so vile and dangerous that the
limitations on government power enshrined in our guiding
documents and political culture no longer apply. Once
the World Trace Center twin towers were knocked down,
supposedly, we could no longer afford to be "nice guys"
-- as if the rule of law is an indulgence of only the
most secure nations.
By that standard, any tyrant can justify the cruelest of
actions by citing enemies, real or imagined, be it King
George III blockading Boston Harbor to teach the
rebellious colonists a lesson or Saddam Hussein killing
Kurdish villagers after an assassination attempt on his
life. The very uniqueness of our national experiment was
the checks and balances put upon the government to
prevent such convenient rationalizations for abuse of
the individual. The Founding Fathers won a war, but
their true contribution to human history was to tackle
head-on the reality that humans and their institutions
can so easily become that which they despise.
Even when an American is suspected of a "capital or
infamous crime," as was Padilla, the Fifth Amendment to
the U.S. Constitution specifically says he still cannot
"be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due
process of law." That is why the Supreme Court finally
forced the Bush administration to give Padilla his day
in court.
In the end, the administration has retreated from its
hoary claims; Padilla's trial, set to begin on Jan. 22,
does not include any reference to dirty bombs, al Qaeda,
or any specific plans to attack America. Instead, he
faces lesser charges claiming he was the recruit of a
"North American support cell," whose interest was in
jihad in Bosnia and Chechnya. The Bush administration's
lawyers have argued in motions that his treatment as a
prisoner should not be presented before the jury as if
it has no bearing on the disorientated state of mind of
the defendant before them.
The more important question now, however, is when will
those who, like Ashcroft, used this case to shamelessly
exploit our fears for political purposes face their own
day of accountability in a court of law?
E-mail Robert Scheer at rscheer@truthdig.com
Copyright: 2006 San Francisco Chronicle
Comment Guidelines
Be succinct, constructive and relevant to the story. We encourage engaging, diverse and meaningful commentary. Do not include personal information such as names, addresses, phone numbers and emails. Comments falling outside our guidelines – those including personal attacks and profanity – are not permitted.
See our complete Comment Policy and use this link to notify us if you have concerns about a comment. We’ll promptly review and remove any inappropriate postings.