Bush's Torture Deceit: Depends on What "Is" Is
Bush's Torture Deceit: Depends on What "Is" Is
By Bernard Weiner
The Crisis Papers
You know the drill: Bush&Co. are so secretive that they will not, repeat NOT, release internal decision-making documents to the public. Never, ever.
Oh, yes, there is a teeny exception: When the Bush Administration is taking unbearable heat on one scandal or another, suddenly stacks of secret documents are delivered to the press.
That's what happened, you remember, with Bush's AWOL scandal -- after years of denying any reports existed, a sheaf of documents materialized, although conveniently missing key medical and pay records, thus proving nothing. And now they're using the same technique -- what the Nixon crew during the Watergate scandal called a "modified, limited hangout" -- with regard to the Bush Administration's torture-scandal.
A number of documents deemed helpful to the Administration were handed out to the press last week, including a Bush letter dated February 7, 2002 that supposedly "rescinded" earlier memos on torture by Administration attorneys, and supposedly ordered "humane" treatment for prisoners.
ANYTHING TO STOP THE BLEEDING
The political fallout from the various Administration torture-memos -- those prepared for Rumsfeld, Ashcroft and the White House, that earlier had been leaked to the press -- was simply too damaging. Something had to be done.
White House Counsel Alberto Gonzales said the latest documents, and the Bush letter, were being released because the Administration "felt it was harmful to this country in terms of the notion that we may be engaged in torture." In other words, Bush's 2002 letter on torture was being made public not because torture is illegal and immoral (and usually counter-productive to boot), and thus must be rooted out, but because of the public-relations damage this whole scandal was bringing to the United States. And, left unsaid, "to our election chances in November."
The political bleeding somehow had to be stopped.
Those Administratioin torture memos -- which we now know were not solely the work of Justice and Defense attorneys but which also were vetted by the White House Counsel, lawyers at the National Security Council and staffers at Cheney's office -- were designed to provide Bush legal cover for state-approved torture. More importantly, they asserted that Bush, as Commander-in-Chief, was above the reach of the law.
After the release of the secret papers to the press last week, Bush unequivocably said: "I have never ordered torture. I will never order torture. The values of this country are such that torture is not a part of our soul and our being."
That statement -- including Bush&Co.'s definition of the word "torture" -- can use some careful scrutiny.
Behind the headlines -- designed to take Bush off the defensive and put him on offense, making him look like a force for morality and decency -- was the fact that even though he claimed the Administration had "rescinded" the torture memos for reworking, he did not renounce the ignore-the-Geneva-Convention philosophy behind them; Gonzales said: "The analyses underpinning the president's decisions stand and are not being reviewed."
In addition, in the February 2002 "humane-treatment" letter, Bush gave himself a number of "outs" that keep in place many of the controversial torture techniques.
LOOPHOLES TO PERMIT TORTURE
For example, Bush continues to assert the right to place himself above the law -- out of reach of Congress and the courts -- whenever he feels the need to do so. Bush said in the Feb. 2002 letter: "I accept the legal conclusion of the Attorney General and the Department of Justice that I have the authority to suspend Geneva (conventions) as between the United States and Afghanistan. I reserve the right to exercise this authority in this or future conflicts."
In addition, Bush's written command in that 2002 letter -- ordering U.S. forces to obey all the laws of humane treatment of prisoners -- contains a huge, glaring caveat: “As a matter of policy, the United States Armed Forces shall continue to treat detainees humanely and, to the extent appropriate and consistent with military necessity,<-i> in a manner consistent with the principles of Geneva.” (emphasis supplied)
In other words, if the head jailer at one of the many U.S. prison camps around the world determines that "military necessity" requires violations of U.S. anti-torture laws or international anti-torture conventions, he would be justified in carrying out what is euphemistically called "harsh interrogation techniques," to wit: torture. It has been so ordered (and not rescinded) by a written command of the President of the United States.
Attorney Michael Froomkin notes of the Bush order:
"It’s also important to keep the confusing timeline
straight. The OLC [Ashcroft's Office of Legal Counsel]
torture memo was delivered in August 2002, i.e. several
months >i IGNORING BUSH'S "COMMANDS" So, one can
reasonably view Bush's 2002 letter as little more than a
cover-my-ass document, designed so that Bush later could
assert: See, I told them what to do, and somehow by the time
the "humane" order went down the chain of command, there
were distortions and beyond-the-pale behavior by a few "bad
apple" officers and troops. I'm in the clear. But it also
seems clear that none of the Bush Administration lawyers --
in the White House or in Ashcroft's Justice Department or in
Rumsfeld's Defense Department -- paid the slightest
attention to the Bush commands, because they were aware that
Bush's letter was not to be taken seriously as policy. After
all, three departments of the Bush Administration had been
ordered to work for more than a year and a half, well past
the time when Bush's letter was written, to devise
justifications precisely for harsh interrogation techniques.
And so the Ashcroft/Rumsfield working group continued
(over the objections of State Department lawyers) trying to
hammer out ways around the anti-torture laws and treaties,
and eventually came up with all sorts of horrific
justifications for torture and for turning Bush into a
dictator beyond the reach of U.S. and international
law. The word went down the chain of command and the
torturing took off big time in Cuba, Afghanistan, Iraq and
no doubt at other U.S. prisons around the world -- with more
than 37 detainees (that we know of) dying while in U.S.
custody, many of them during or after harsh interrogations.
Col. Thomas Pappas, in charge of military intelligence at
Abu Ghraib, reportedly said, after witnessing the death of a
prisoner while being interrogated, that if he is charged
with the crime, "I'm not going to go down alone for
this." TORTURED DEFINITION OF "TORTURE" Let us
now move on to a variant on what the definition of "is"
is. Bush&Co. prefer to use the term "abuse," because
they've altered the common-sense meaning of the word
"torture." Torture, according to the new Bush legal
doctrine, is pain so intense as to come close to death. The
Justice Department's August 1, 2002, legal memo concluded
that "the ban on torture is limited to only the most extreme
forms of physical and mental harm," which the document
defined as akin to "death or organ failure." Behaviors other
than that -- non-lethal beatings, threats to kill their
families, humiliations, near-drownings, etc. -- might be
"abuse," and certainly are outlawed under international
treaties on torture and prisoner-care, but they are not
"torture" under the Bush Administration definition. So
when Bush says he never ordered "torture" and never would
order "torture," he may be telling a kind of twisted truth
in his mind -- because Bush and his subordinates, torturing
the English language and perverting the meaning of morality,
changed the common-sense and dictionary definitions of
torture to refer only to brutalizing a prisoner just short
of death. RESIGNATION, IMPEACHMENT OR VOTED
OUT Bush told a BBC reporter last week that people
should feel "comforted" on the torture issue by knowing that
the American people and American troops follow "the law."
But, Bush and his morally-suspect attorneys and advisors
have made Bush the final arbiter of what "the law" is.
Hitler, let us not forget, operated within "the law" --
because he took over the judicial system and radically
changed the laws to suit his nefarious purposes -- so good
Germans could make themselves believe they were carrying out
"lawful orders." Not much is different here, even given the
Nuremburg war-crimes precedent that carrying out immoral
orders is not a legitimate defense. If it is not unlawful
to brutalize a prisoner -- who may be a totally innocent
civilian, caught up in a street sweep -- just short of the
point of near-death, what is the meaning of the word
"torture"? Words need to bear some connection to reality;
Bush and his lawyers, as a technique of immoral deception,
have distorted and strangled the meaning of words, such as
torture, to the point of absurdity. (And in doing so have
put any captured American troops at great risk of torture or
death while in captivity.) And why? To confuse the voting
public, obviously, as we get closer to November 2. But also
to demonstrate that Bush&Co. remain in control, to stay in
and consolidate their power, to keep their extremist neo-con
goals on track. And because they can. In Bush&Co.'s brash
arrogance, they are convinced that they are untouchable,
invincible -- partially because they assume God is on their
side and thus whatever they do enjoys divine blessing. It
is true: you can fool some of the people all the time, all
of the people some of the time, but you can't fool all of
the people all of the time. More and more American citizens,
looking at the crimes and lies of their government, have
decided they will not be fooled anymore. And more and more
of those Americans are good Republicans, who have come to
understand that the incompetent ideologues of Bush&Co. are
not operating in their best financial or political or
national interest. (Even the U.S. Supreme Court seems to
agree, at least partially, with that conclusion. On Monday,
the court provided some evidence that they may not agree
with this executive overreach into their judicial
prerogatives, when they ruled that even terrorist suspects
at U.S. prisons must have access to the judicial
system.) My guess is that if Bush and Cheney and Rove and
Ashcroft and Rumsfeld and the rest of them chose to resign
now, America would let them go unscathed, just to be rid of
them. But, since Bush&Co. are determined to brazen it
out, to continue their extremist, dangerous ways -- which
are getting hundreds upon hundreds of young American troops
killed, and many thousands injured, and which are doing
great damage to our beloved Constitution and the Bill of
Rights -- the only way to deal with this crew is to impeach
them and/or vote them out of office and then to indict at
least some of them for their crimes that have so disgraced
and harmed our nation. If this sounds too "harsh," just
remember the amount of lives and treasure lost, and that are
continuing to be lost daily, because of their greedy,
power-hungry policies, and their incompetent handling of
virtually everything they touch. It's time someone pays the
price for such gross misconduct and maladministration. It's
long past time. Bernard
Weiner, Ph.D., taught American government at various
universities, was a writer/editor with the San Francisco
Chronicle for nearly two decades, and co-edits The Crisis
Papers (
www.crisispapers.org). He is a contributor to the
just-released "Big Bush Lies," available at Barnes&Noble,
Amazon.com and local bookstores.