Occupations
Abroad
Always Lead
To The
Erosion Of
Liberties At
Home
Guantánamo
has exposed
the Bush
regime's
disdain for
human
rights. But
there's
nothing
uniquely
American
about this
By Gary
Younge
24/06/08
"The
Guardian" --
Monday June
23, 200 --
Before his
show trial
in Hungary
in 1948,
Robert Vogeler
spent three
months in a
cell
sleeping on
a board that
hovered just
above two
inches of
water. Day
and night a
bright light
bathed his
cell, and
even then
someone
would bang
on the wall
next door
just to make
sure he
couldn't get
any sleep.
"It is just
a question
of time
before you
confess," he
said
afterwards.
"With some
it takes a
little
longer than
others, but
nobody can
resist that
treatment
indefinitely."
And so
Vogeler, who
was arrested
for spying,
buckled
under the
pressure and
played his
role in the
gruesome
farce of
Stalin's
postwar
purges in
eastern
Europe. "To
judge from
the way our
scripts were
written,"
wrote
Vogeler
shortly
after his
forced
confession,
"it was more
important to
establish
our
allegorical
identities
than to
establish
our 'guilt'.
Each of us
in his
testimony
was obliged
to 'unmask'
himself for
the benefit
of the
[Soviet-led]
press and
radio."
A similar
script, it
has long
been clear,
has been
written at
Guantánamo
Bay,
although
this time
the lines
were for the
prosecution
rather than
the defence.
The point of
these
detentions
has never
been to see
justice
done, but
rather to
provide a
teachable
moment about
the lengths
and depths
the American
state would
go to pursue
its
perceived
interests in
the war on
terror. It
was to find
a place in
which
America
could
operate
above and
beyond not
only
international
law but its
own - a
display of
unfettered
power not
merely
indifferent
to, but
openly
contemptuous
of, global
and local
norms.
It is a
brutal
allegory in
which
Guantánamo
is not the
exception
but the
rule: a
grotesque
exemplar of
the Bush
administration's
reflexive
and
opportunistic
response to
the
terrorist
attacks of
9/11, from
the bombing
of Iraq to
the
phone-tapping
of its own
citizens.
Like Abu
Ghraib and
the "black
sites" of
rendition,
the
violations
that have
taken place
there are
systemic and
systematic.
Like the
broader war
on terror,
they have
been
characterised
by
criminality
and
ineptitude.
The camp has
not hosted a
single
trial, and
only 19 of
the
remaining
270
detainees
have been
charged.
"To protest
in the name
of morality
against
'excesses'
or 'abuses'
is an error
that hints
at active
complicity,"
wrote Simone
de Beauvoir,
referring to
French
atrocities
in Algeria.
"There are
no 'abuses'
or
'excesses'
here, simply
an
all-pervasive
system."
Detain,
bomb,
invade,
torture and
spy now -
ask
questions
later. Such
have been
the impulses
of the Bush
years. But
"now"
inherits a
past and
bequeaths a
legacy.
"Later"
keeps
arriving
with answers
for which a
largely
quiescent if
not
compliant
American
public
appears to
have little
stomach. A
power grab
for the
state; a
black hole
for
legality; a
free rein
for the
military; a
vacuum for
democracy.
Such have
been the
hallmarks of
the Bush
years.
And like so
much else in
these
twilight
months of
this
administration,
the warped
logic that
underpins
Guantánamo
is
unravelling
at great
pace. The
recent
supreme
court ruling
that inmates
have the
same rights
to habeas
corpus
protection
as "enemy
combatants"
held on US
soil has
shed its
final fig
leaf.
Meanwhile,
last week's
congressional
testimony
and the
dissenting
voices of
some of the
inmate's
military
lawyers bear
witness to
how low the
administration
has stooped
and how high
the
decision-making
has gone.
"The laws
and
constitution
are designed
to survive,
and remain
in force, in
extraordinary
times,"
Justice
Anthony
Kennedy
wrote for
the supreme
court
majority.
Maybe so.
But
political
cultures are
not. They
are feathers
for every
wind that
blows,
vulnerable
to demagogue
and democrat
alike.
"To hold
that the
political
branches may
switch the
constitution
on or off at
will would
lead to a
regime in
which they,
not this
court, 'say
what the law
is',"
Kennedy
continued.
But that is
precisely
what has
been
happening
these past
seven years.
Documents
released by
congressional
investigators
last week
show
interrogators
have not so
much pushed
the
envelope, as
shredded and
torched it.
Mark Fallon,
the deputy
commander of
the defence
department's
criminal
investigation
taskforce,
warned
Pentagon
colleagues
in an email
in October
2002 that
the
interrogation
techniques
they were
discussing,
and later
implemented,
would "shock
the
conscience
of any legal
body". "This
looks like
the kind of
stuff
congressional
hearings are
made of," he
said.
"Someone
needs to be
considering
how history
will look
back at
this."
In the same
month
Jonathan
Friedman, a
CIA
counter-terrorism
lawyer, told
military and
intelligence
officials
that
"torture is
basically
subject to
perception".
"If the
detainee
dies,"
continued
Friedman,
"you're
doing it
wrong."
Throughout,
innocence,
guilt, facts
and evidence
have been
little more
than
technicalities.
Indeed, the
enterprise
has been a
huge
faith-based
initiative -
guided by
the notion
that if you
believe you
are doing
the right
thing, it
doesn't
matter what
you actually
do.
Colonel
Morris
Davis, the
former chief
prosecutor
for
Guantánamo's
military
commissions,
recalled a
meeting he
had with
Pentagon
general
counsel
William
Haynes, who
oversees
Guantánamo's
tribunal
process,
about the
forthcoming
trials of
the
detainees.
"[Haynes]
said these
trials will
be the
Nuremberg of
our time,"
said Davis.
Davis then
pointed out
that the
handful of
acquittals
at Nuremberg
had given
the
proceedings
a sense of
legitimacy
and
credibility
that
across-the-board
convictions
never would
have.
'I said to
him that if
we come up
short and
there are
some
acquittals
in our
cases, it
will at
least
validate the
process,"
Davis told
the Nation.
"At which
point,
[Haynes's]
eyes got
wide and he
said, 'Wait
a minute, we
can't have
acquittals.
If we've
been holding
these guys
for so long,
how can we
explain
letting them
get off? We
can't have
acquittals.
We've got to
have
convictions.'"
Over the
past four
years at
least five
military
prosecutors
have
resigned
from their
jobs or from
their cases
at
Guantánamo
because they
felt their
integrity
would
otherwise be
compromised,
citing
tainted
evidence
obtained
under
torture and
political
interference.
As De
Beauvoir's
quote
indicates,
there is
nothing
uniquely
American
about any of
this. The US
programme
was modelled
on Soviet
techniques
and has been
made
possible by
the
cooperation
of other
nations,
including
Britain,
that have
colluded
with
rendition.
According to
the New York
Times, the
former
director of
the CIA's
clandestine
service
described
Poland,
where a
large amount
of the
torturing
took place,
as "the 51st
state".
Put the
British in
Ireland or
the Belgians
in the Congo
and you get
the same
result.
Gordon
Brown's bid
for 42-day
detention
without
charge fits
the mould
perfectly.
Occupations
abroad
ineluctably
dovetail
with the
erosion of
liberties at
home. The
only
difference
seems to be
that, on
paper at
least, the
US has set
itself
higher
standards -
a fact that
exhausts its
one truly
renewable
resource:
innocence.
"How on
earth did we
get to the
point where
a US
government
lawyer would
say that ...
torture is
subject to
perception?"
asked Carl
Levin, the
chairman of
the Senate
armed
services
committee,
last week.
How indeed?
As one
inmate
warned a US
diplomat
after he was
finally
released
from prison
following
torture and
a show
trial.
"Every
individual
American
should
realise that
what
happened to
me could
happen to
anybody."
His name?
Robert
Vogeler.
g.younge@guardian.co.uk
