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History
Will Not Absolve Us
By Nat Hentoff
08/30/07 "Village
Voice" -- -- If
and when there's the equivalent of an international Nuremberg
trial for the American perpetrators of crimes against humanity
in Guantánamo, Iraq, Afghanistan, and the CIA's secret prisons,
there will be mounds of evidence available from documented
international reports by human-rights organizations, including
an arm of the European parliament—as well as such deeply
footnoted books as Stephen Grey's Ghost Plane: The True Story
of the CIA Torture Program (St. Martin's Press) and Charlie
Savage's just-published Takeover: The Return of the Imperial
Presidency and the Subversion of American Democracy (Little,
Brown).
While the Democratic Congress
has yet to begin a serious investigation into what many European
legislators already know about American war crimes, a
particularly telling report by the International Committee of
the Red Cross has been leaked that would surely figure
prominently in such a potential Nuremberg trial. The Red Cross
itself is bound to public silence concerning the results of its
human-rights probes of prisons around the world—or else
governments wouldn't let them in.
But The New Yorker's Jane
Mayer has sources who have seen accounts of the Red Cross
interviews with inmates formerly held in CIA secret prisons. In
"The Black Sites" (August 13, The New Yorker), Mayer also
reveals the effect on our torturers of what they do—on the
orders of the president—to "protect American values."
She quotes a former CIA officer:
"When you cross over that line of darkness, it's hard to come
back. You lose your soul. You can do your best to justify it,
but . . . you can't go back to that dark a place without it
changing you."
Few average Americans have been
changed, however, by what the CIA does in our name. Blame that
on the tight official secrecy that continues over how the CIA
extracts information. On July 20, the Bush administration issued
a new executive order authorizing the CIA to continue using
these techniques—without disclosing anything about them.
If we, the people, are
ultimately condemned by a world court for our complicity and
silence in these war crimes, we can always try to echo those
Germans who claimed not to know what Hitler and his enforcers
were doing. But in Nazi Germany, people had no way of insisting
on finding out what happened to their disappeared neighbors.
We, however, have the right and
the power to insist that Congress discover and reveal the
details of the torture and other brutalities that the CIA has
been inflicting in our name on terrorism suspects.
Only one congressman, Oregon's
Democratic senator Ron Wyden, has insisted on probing the
legality of the CIA's techniques—so much so that Wyden has
blocked the appointment of Bush's nominee, John Rizzo, from
becoming the CIA's top lawyer. Rizzo, a CIA official since 2002,
has said publicly that he didn't object to the Justice
Department's 2002 "torture" memos, which allowed the infliction
of pain unless it caused such injuries as "organ failure . . .
or even death." (Any infliction of pain up to that point was
deemed not un-American.) Mr. Rizzo would make a key witness in
any future Nuremberg trial.
As Jane Mayer told National
Public Radio on August 6, what she found in the leaked Red Cross
report, and through her own extensive research on our
interrogators (who are cheered on by the commander in chief), is
"a top-down-controlled, mechanistic, regimented program of abuse
that was signed off on—at the White House, really—and then
implemented at the CIA from the top levels all the way down. . .
. They would put people naked for up to 40 days in cells where
they were deprived of any kind of light. They would cut them off
from any sense of what time it was or . . . anything that would
give them a sense of where they were."
She also told of the CIA
interrogation of Abu Zubaydah, who was not only waterboarded (a
technique in which he was made to feel that he was about to be
drowned) but also "kept in . . . a small cage, about one meter
[39.7 inches] by one meter, in which he couldn't stand up for a
long period of time. [The CIA] called it the dog box."
Whether or not there is another
Nuremberg trial—and Congress continues to stay asleep—future
historians of the Bush administration will surely also refer to
Leave No Marks: Enhanced Interrogation Techniques and the
Risk of Criminality, the July report by Human Rights First
and Physicians for Social Responsibility.
The report emphasizes that the
president's July executive order on CIA interrogations—which,
though it is classified, was widely hailed as banning "torture
and cruel and inhuman treatment"—"fails explicitly to rule
out the use of the 'enhanced' techniques that the CIA authorized
in March, 2002, "with the president's approval (emphasis
added).
In 2002, then–Secretary of State
Colin Powell denounced the "torture" memos and other
interrogation techniques in internal reports that reached the
White House. It's a pity he didn't also tell us. But
Powell's objections should keep him out of the defendants' dock
in any future international trial.
From the Leave No Marks
report, here are some of the American statutes that the
CIA, the Defense Department, and the Justice Department have
utterly violated:
In the 1994 Torture Convention
Implementation Act, we put into U.S. law what we had signed in
Article 5 of the UN Convention Against Torture, which is defined
as "an act 'committed by an [officially authorized] person' . .
. specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental
pain or suffering . . . upon another person within his custody
or physical control."
The 1997 U.S. War Crimes Act
"criminalizes . . . specifically enumerated war crimes that the
legislation refers to as 'grave breaches' of Common Article 3
[of the Geneva Conventions], including the war crimes of torture
and 'cruel or inhuman treatment.'"
The Leave No Marks report
very valuably brings the Supreme Court— before Chief Justice
John Roberts took over—into the war-crimes record of this
administration. I strongly suggest that Human Rights First and
Physicians for Social Responsibility send their report—with the
following section underlined—to every current member of the
Supreme Court and Congress:
"The Supreme Court has long
considered prisoner treatment to violate substantive due process
if the treatment 'shocks the conscience,' is bound to offend
even hardened sensibilities, or offends 'a principle of justice
so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to
be ranked as fundamental.'"
Among those fundamental rights
cited by past Supreme Courts, the report continues, are "the
rights to bodily integrity [and] the right to have [one's] basic
needs met; and the right to basic human dignity"
(emphasis added).
If the conscience of a majority
on the Roberts Court isn't shocked by what we've done to our
prisoners, then it will be up to the next president and the next
Congress—and, therefore, up to us—to alter, in some respects,
how history will judge us. But do you see any considerable
signs, among average Americans, of the conscience being shocked?
How about the presidential candidates of both parties?
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