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Guantanamo Bay: A
"Gulag Of Our Times" or a "Model Facility"?
A Debate on the U.S. Prison & Amnesty International
A week ago Amnesty International accused the Bush
administration of being a "leading purveyor and
practitioner" of human rights violations, debate has
intensified over the U.S. war on terror. On Tuesday, Bush
described the Amnesty report as "absurd." Today we
host a debate between Amnesty's William Schulz and attorney
David Rivkin.
Broadcast - 06/01/05
Last week, Amnesty International issued a damning report
blasting the Bush administration for ignoring international law
and mistreating detainees held at military prisons. The report
stated that human rights are in retreat worldwide and the United
States bears most of the responsibility. It called the U.S.
detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, "the gulag of
our times." Amnesty called on foreign governments to uphold
their obligations under international law by investigating all
senior U.S. officials involved in the torture scandal. And, the
group says, if those investigations support prosecution, the
governments should arrest any official who enters their
territory and begin legal proceedings against them.
This past weekend, General Richard Myers, and Secretary of
State Condoleeza Rice all dismissed Amnesty's report. And on
Monday night Larry King aired an interview with Vice President
Dick Cheney who said about the report, “Frankly, I was
offended by it. For Amnesty International to suggest that
somehow the United States is a violator of human rights, I
frankly just don”t take them seriously.” He went on to say
that "Occasionally there are allegations of mistreatment,
but if you trace those back, in nearly every case, it turns out
to come from somebody who had been inside and released to their
home country and now are peddling lies about how they were
treated."
At a press conference yesterday, President Bush dismissed the
report as well:
"I'm aware of the Amnesty International report, and it's
absurd. It's an absurd allegation. The United States is a
country that is -- promotes freedom around the world. When
there's accusations made about certain actions by our people,
they're fully investigated in a transparent way. It's just an
absurd allegation.
"In terms of the detainees, we've had thousands of
people detained. We've investigated every single complaint
against the detainees. It seemed like to me they based some of
their decisions on the word of -- and the allegations -- by
people who were held in detention, people who hate America,
people that had been trained in some instances to disassemble
-- that means not tell the truth. And so it was an absurd
report. It just is."
??Joining us on the phone from New York is the executive
director of Amnesty International USA, William Schulz. Also in
our D.C studio is David Rivkin. He is is a partner in the
Washington office of Baker & Hostetler He also served served
in a variety of legal and policy positions in the Reagan and
George H. W. Bush Administrations, including stints at the White
House Counsel's office, Office of the Vice President and the
Departments of Justice and Energy.
- David Rivkin, a partner in the Washington office of
Baker & Hostetler LLP, a Visiting Fellow at the Nixon
Center, a Contributing Editor of the National Review
magazine and a member of the UN Sub-Commission on the
Promotion and Protection of Human Rights which as an expert
body, supporting the UN Human Rights Commission.
- William Schultz, Executive Director, Amnesty
International USA
TRANSCRIPT
AMY GOODMAN: At a news conference yesterday, President
Bush dismissed the report, as well.
REPORTER: Mr. President, recently Amnesty
International said you have established, (quote), "a new
gulag of prisons around the world beyond the reach of the law
and decency." I'd like your reaction to that, and also your
assessment of how it came to this, that that is a view not just
held by extremists and anti-Americans, but by groups that have
allied themselves with the United States government in the past?
And what the strategic impact is that in many places of the
world, the United States these days under your leadership is no
longer seen as the good guy?
PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH: I'm aware of the Amnesty
International report, and it's absurd. It's absurd allegation.
The United States is a country that is -- promotes freedom
around the world. When there's accusations made about certain
actions by our people, they're fully investigated in a
transparent way. It's just an absurd allegation. In terms of,
you know, the detainees, we have had thousands of people
detained. We have investigated every single complaint against
the detainees. Seemed like to me, they base some of their
decisions on the word of -- on the allegations by people who
were held in detention, people who hate America, people that
have been trained in some instances to disassemble. That means
not tell the truth. So, it's an absurd report. Just is. And you
know -- yes, sir.
AMY GOODMAN: That was President Bush speaking at a news
conference yesterday. Joining us on the phone from New York is the
Executive Director of Amnesty International U.S.A, William
Schultz. Also in our D.C. Studio, David Rivkin, partner in the
Washington office of Baker and Hostetler, also served in a variety
of legal and policy positions in the Reagan and George H.W. Bush
administrations, including stints at the White House counsel's
office, office of the Vice President and the Departments of
Justice and Energy, was also a visiting fellow at the Nixon Center
and a contributing editor of the National Review magazine.
Let's begin with William Schultz responding to what President Bush
had to say about your report.
WILLIAM SCHULTZ: Well, it's quite interesting that the
Vice President doesn't take Amnesty seriously. The President calls
us absurd. But, you know, when Amnesty International took on
Saddam Hussein 20 years ago, when Donald Rumsfeld was courting
him, and even in the run up to the Iraq war, when Amnesty
International was regularly quoted by Mr. Rumsfeld and other
officials about Saddam Hussein's brutality, under those
circumstances, this president, this administration didn't think we
were absurd at all. When we criticize Cuba, when we criticize
North Korea, when we criticize China, as we have repeatedly, this
administration applauds Amnesty International. But when we
criticize the United States, we are suddenly absurd. I think the
administration doth protest too much.
Let me clarify one point of your introduction, though, Amy.
Amnesty International has urged that the United States undertake
these investigations with a high-level commission and the
appointment of a special prosecutor. And we have only said that if
the United States fails to do its job, then other countries who
are party to the Convention Against Torture and other
international instrumentalities, have a legal obligation to
investigate and, if appropriate, if they find evidence, then, of
course, to prosecute.
AMY GOODMAN: David Rivkin, your response.
DAVID RIVKIN: Several things. First of all, Amnesty
International indeed has a long and illustrious legacy. Amnesty
International in the past has been an equal opportunity critic, if
you will, bringing spotlight on abuses by many dictatorial and
authoritarian regimes, including Cuba, Vietnam, China, North
Korea, Iraq, etc., etc. Having said that, I think Amnesty
International has unfortunately gone astray. It is not just the
position of this administration. It's interesting that The
Washington Post, that's been quite critical of many aspects of the
administration's policies, the day after the report, issued a
pretty scathing editorial pointing out a couple of things. First
of all, rhetorically -- and, it's very important to look at the
rhetoric, because we're inundated with news, in a way, the way you
cast the context for your observations. In fact, your observations
are very important. The Washington Post said that the word
"gulag" is offensive. The gulags are outfits where
political prisoners, dissidents are holed in, worked to death,
starved to death. The gulags today are in places like North Korea,
like China, like Cuba; in the past, of course, in the Soviet
Union. Whenever you think about the administration's policy
relative to Guantanamo or Abu Ghraib, gulag is the wrong word,
number one. Now, in terms of the facts – and by the way, Amnesty
International report that goes for hundreds of --
AMY GOODMAN: Let me just let William Schultz respond to
that, then we'll take it step by step. William Schultz.
WILLIAM SCHULTZ: Well, I'm simply unwilling to get into
an argument about semantics. I can certainly understand why some
people feel that the secretary general's metaphor there was over
the top. But, I think that it is important to say that whether or
not this is a gulag in the Soviet sense, there certainly are some
similarities. After all, we have an archipelago of prisons around
the world, many of them secret, in which people are being held in
incommunicado detention and which they are being severely
mistreated in some cases. And that --
DAVID RIVKIN: Forgive me, terms --
WILLIAM SCHULTZ: --that is the fundamental point.
DAVID RIVKIN: Forgive me, terms -- we're both adults.
When you use words like "gulag" and one uses words like
"holocaust," they have special responsibility not to
cheapen those terms by promiscuous usage. You could have said
"brutal prison." I wouldn't disagree with you there. You
could have said "horrible prison conditions." To use the
word “gulag,” you have special responsibility because
everybody knows what it means. It's not even close. It's not even
in the same universe. And that is utterly irresponsible of Amnesty
International.
WILLIAM SCHULTZ: Well, it's very fine, Mr. Rivkin, if
you want to focus on that one issue at the expense of the
substance of the concerns, which is --
DAVID RIVKIN: I did not choose this moniker, you did,
sir.
WILLIAM SCHULTZ: You are welcome to do that, but I'd
like to discuss the substance of the concerns here.
DAVID RIVKIN: Okay, but the --
AMY GOODMAN: Why don't we talk about the substance of
the concerns, William Schultz. A term like that was based on
reports that Amnesty International has done. Can you talk about
what you see as the most egregious violations at Guantanamo?
WILLIAM SCHULTZ: Well, I think what is important to say
here is that Amnesty has been pointing out the systematic nature
of what has been going on here, both in terms of denial of certain
internationally recognized rights, but also in terms of
mistreatment. Now, in a recent National Review online article, Mr.
Rivkin claimed that the President had said, (quote), "clearly
and unequivocally that prisoners should be treated humanely."
But, that's not what the President said. The President said in his
February 7, 2002, Executive Order that they should be treated in
accordance with the conventions, (quote), "to the extent
appropriate and consistent with military necessity,"
(unquote). That opened the green light to a whole series of
mistreatments, of misbehaviors that were ratified by 27 rules
issued by Secretary Rumsfeld. Those included such things as the
use of dogs. They allowed up to four hours of stress positions.
These were implemented for a period of time, but at the advice of
military lawyers, Rumsfeld then withdrew the authority for
commanders at Guantanamo to do this kind of thing. And we know
from reports that have been unearthed by the ACLU and others that
it was not just groups like Amnesty or the ACLU that was concerned
about this. We know that F.B.I. agents raised concern about this.
We know that some people in the military community itself raised
concerns about the treatment of these prisoners at Guantanamo and
elsewhere.
Let me make the final point and then, of course, Mr. Rivkin can
respond. If indeed all of the prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, some
670 originally, were enemy combatants and not prisoners of war, as
Mr. Rivkin and his hard-right allies claim, then what about the
more than 100 of them that have been released since they were
taken into custody? If they were released, then one presumes that
they were either wrongly detained in the first place or that the
war against terror is over and that all should be released. Of
course, that is not the administration's position. And that is the
fundamental problem with holding people in incommunicado detention
and failing to give them an opportunity to answer the charges
against them. Because we simply don't know how many of those 670
now remaining -- a little more than 500 -- are in fact in the same
category as the more than 100 that have been released.
AMY GOODMAN: David Rivkin.
DAVID RIVKIN: Let me take the last point first. It's
ironic, to put it mildly, that the administration's policy of
releasing people not because they are innocent, but the vast
majority of people who have been released, indeed, are individuals
who are enemy combatants, but basically been released because of
the sense that they no longer pose danger, which inherently
difficult and subjective determination. I wonder if Mr. Schultz
would like to remind our listeners that at least two-and-a-half
dozen of individuals who have been released have gone back to
combat, including a senior Taliban commander in Afghanistan. How
would you like to be a person to tell a family of an American
soldier who has been killed by an individual who was released, or
civilians whom they have killed because of this revolving door
policy? So, bottom line is we are releasing people because we're
humanitarian, we're compassionate, and, frankly, we have been
pushed to do so for the rest of the world -- by the rest of the
world. I wouldn't deduce anything from it. But let me give you the
bottom line: I would not deny, and I don't think any reasonable
person would deny, that some problems have occurred. But the
facts, the statistics are very simple. We have close to 70,000
detainees. 70,000 detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan. No more than
320 or 330 have alleged problems ranging from serious ones --
there have been some murders, there have been some beatings-- to
more minor ones. About 120 have been investigated and found to
have merits, and people are being prosecuted. These are better
stats than the situation in any civilian penitentiary, Federal or
State, anywhere in human history. The problem is that any time you
detain people, any time you put them in captivity, there are going
to be some mistakes. There are going to be some problems. There
are going to be abuses. It's human nature. But the facts simply do
not support the proposition that the wide-scale abuses attributed
to government policy.
AMY GOODMAN: William Schultz.
DAVID RIVKIN: The final point. No, no. Let me --
AMY GOODMAN: Let him respond to that.
DAVID RIVKIN: The final point.
AMY GOODMAN: Ok, go ahead.
DAVID RIVKIN: Okay, just one sec -- Amnesty
International and others have said many times, "Charges being
brought." There's a fundamental problem here. Amnesty
International and others did not understand, but this is war.
These people are not criminal suspects who are entitled to speedy
trial and adjudication. Even if they were P.O.W.s, which they are
not, they would be entitled to be held for a duration of
hostilities. They're not entitled to get charges brought against
them. They are using the criminal law paradigm, which is the
paradigm which came on September 11.
WILLIAM SCHULTZ: Well, let me – of course, Mr. Rivkin
is completely wrong about Amnesty's position on that. But let me
just say that there's no way in the world that Mr. Rivkin or
anyone else can know whether there are only 300 complaints,
because, in fact, many of the thousands of people who are being
detained are being detained in secret facilities. They are being
detained incommunicado. There is simply no way for any of us to
know exactly how much abuse is going on, because, I assure you,
that unlike in the U.S. prison system where there is usually at
least some kind of an appeal process or independent authority to
whom a prisoner can appeal, including the court system, if they
feel that they have been abused in prison, there is no such
authority within this archipelago of prisons. So, there's no way
that he can make his claim. Now, with regard to the Guantanamo
prisoners who have been released, Amnesty International's position
is not that they should just be treated as criminals, though, of
course, if they are guilty of crimes, they should be prosecuted.
Our position is that we don't know whether they are prisoners of
war or whether they are enemy combatants, but under the Geneva
Conventions, a competent tribunal is supposed to determine that.
And at that tribunal, those who are charged with being enemy
combatants are to be given the opportunity to answer their
charges. That is what the U.S. government has denied them. And if,
in fact, Mr. Rivkin's position on why those 100 or so have been
released is correct, then the U.S. is acting irresponsibly. If, in
fact, those are people who are liable to go back and commit crimes
against the United States, then either they should be charged or
they can be considered prisoners of war and held until a judgment
is made by an independent authority as to whether the, (quote)
"war" (unquote), is resolved or not. That is Amnesty's
position. It is a subtle position. It is not as black and white as
Mr. Rivkin is making it. I'm not surprised that Bush and Cheney
don't see these subtleties, but Mr. Rivkin is a lawyer, and he
ought to understand.
AMY GOODMAN: William Schultz, when you released the
report, you said that Washington has become a leading purveyor and
practitioner of torture and ill treatment, and that senior
officials should face prosecution. Among the officials you named:
Bush, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Undersecretary of Defense
for Policy Douglas Feith, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales,
Former C.I.A Director George Tenet, and other senior officials at
U.S. detention facilities at Guantanamo. Are you saying that
President Bush should be tried for war crimes?
WILLIAM SCHULTZ: No. And let me make it clear, Amy.
Amnesty never assumes the guilt of anyone. And we did not call for
their prosecution. We called for the appointment of a special
prosecutor by the Attorney General to investigate whether
President Bush or any of these other officials, including Attorney
General Gonzales, should be prosecuted. That is Amnesty's
position, again, perhaps a subtle position, but a very important
one. We are saying that there is reason to believe that the
President gave a green light here, and that a high-level, truly
independent commission, not just a military commission, a
commission like the 9/11 Commission, independent, blue-ribbon
commission, should be appointed by the Congress to investigate all
of these questions. But we have not called for the prosecution
until that investigation takes place. That's a simple -- you know,
an elementary principle of due process.
AMY GOODMAN: David Rivkin, why not have this special
prosecutor, and then if your arguments prove to be correct, it'll
show that there's no reason to move forward with prosecutions?
DAVID RIVKIN: Amy, we have to be careful about
terminology. A commission is one thing, a special prosecutor is
another thing.
WILLIAM SCHULTZ: We are calling for both.
DAVID RIVKIN: I understand that, but let me say this,
there have been more investigations --
AMY GOODMAN: We have ten seconds.
DAVID RIVKIN: --and prosecutions then, again, in any war
in human history. We are going to go forward. A number of people
have already been indicted. To the extent senior officers are
involved, they will be prosecuted. The facts simply do not support
the proposition. There's been a wide-scale failure to comply with
the laws of war.
AMY GOODMAN: We have to leave it there. David Rivkin,
William Schultz, head of Amnesty International U.S.A., I want to
thank you both for being with us.
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