America’s
Leaders
Violated One
of the
Commandments
By Andrew
Greeley
31/07/08
"Chicago
Sun-Times"
-- -
30/07/08 -- T.S.
Elliot
summarized
the issue,
“When good
does evil in
its struggle
against
evil, it
becomes
indistinguishable
from its
enemy.”
A current
example is
the sick
morality
that sees
America’s
program of
torture
during the
war that
“they” had
done it to
us and would
do so again.
Therefore we
were not
evil. The
Sept. 11
attack
persuaded
the leaders
of the
country that
murder,
kidnapping
and torture
were
appropriate
in the war
on terror.
June Mayer’s
carefully
documented
book The
Dark Side
demonstrates
beyond doubt
that the
president,
the vice
president,
the director
of the CIA
and their
closest
aides are
war
criminals.
They
violated
international
law, they
violated
American
law, and
they
violated
natural law.
Their excuse
was that the
president
has the
power to
dispense
from all
laws in
virtue of
his role as
commander in
chief when
the country
is in grave
danger. They
have argued
in their
defense that
the
“enhanced
interrogation”
of prisoners
has saved
American
lives. But
they refuse
to cite any
cases or
brutal,
presidential-approved
torture that
saved
anyone’s
lives.
The
president,
someone
argues in
The Dark
Side, had
the right,
on the
grounds of
national
security, to
order the
assassination
of anyone
who might
seem to be a
terrorist in
Lafayette
Park across
from the
White House.
Many
Americans —
solid,
patriotic
Americans —
seem to
enjoy the
prospect of
treating
prisoners
the way the
Nazis did
just to show
how tough we
can be when
we have to
be tough. In
fact, it
shows how
stupid we
are. All the
research on
the subject
shows that
torture does
not in fact
work and
that the
enemy
understands
that our
“tough”
interrogators
will believe
any wild
story that
prisoners
will tell to
protect
themselves
and deceive
the dumb
“cowboys.”
As the next
president
tries to
restore the
reputation
of America
around the
world, will
he not have
to authorize
war crimes
trials for
torturers,
especially
the men and
women who
are
responsible
for
snatching
suspects off
the streets
of European
cities by
mistake?
They
tortured
their
victims,
refused to
release
them, and
then let
them die by
simply
denying
their
existence.
What
difference
does it make
if you kill
one more
Arab? To
paraphrase
the
inestimable
Kit Carson:
The only
good Arab is
a dead one.
There will
certainly be
blanket
pardons for
all the
guilty
cowboys
before the
president
leaves
office. A
few minor
figures will
be left
unpardoned —
like all
such
sacrificial
lambs, they
will be
low-level
operatives.
What would
happen,
however, if,
let us say,
Spain or the
Netherlands
or Italy or
Costa Rica
should
indict the
vice
president?
Would a
Democratic
president
turn him
over to some
such foreign
tribunal?
Especially
if the
president
were a man
who was
trying to
draw the
country
together?
Under the
principle of
our country,
our heroes,
right or
wrong, would
we tell
these
foreigners
that they
had no
jurisdiction
to accuse a
vice
president
who had been
pardoned in
advance?
After all,
the
president’s
power in
time of war
is without
limit of
space or
time. He had
the right to
pardon
someone
before he
began his
“enhanced
interrogations.”
That is a
challenge to
international
law
unacceptable
to a country
that tells
the world
that it is
“The Light”
of freedom.
A new
president or
judicial
prosecutor
in another
country
could easily
find a list
of suspects
in The Dark
Side.
The CIA kept
a collection
of video
disks of
American
torturers at
work. They
were ordered
not to
release
those
records.
With no
one’s
permission
but the
president’s,
they were
all secretly
destroyed
for
“national
security
reasons.”
We learn
from The
Dark Side to
understand
that these
words mean
the
government
is once
again
preparing to
violate one
of the Ten
Commandments.
Andrew
Greeley is a
priest in
good
standing of
the
Archdiocese
of Chicago
for more
than 50
years, a
columnist
for 40
years, a
sociologist
for 45
years, a
novelist for
28 years,
distinguished
lecturer at
the
University
of Arizona
for 28 ,
research
associate at
National
Opinion
Research
Center at
the
University
of Chicago
for 46
years.
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