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Have
People Learned To Accept Torture?
Comment by Larry Ross, March 12, 2005
The following article and its many references
establishes that Bush and his administration is engaged in a vast torture
campaign, that has not lessened with exposure. Seymour Hersh broke the
story in the New Yorker. It underlines that the Neocons are an evil bunch
of men that seem willing to trample on international law, the UN, and
commit any crime. They certainly merit Dr Helen Caldicotts comment
that they are much worse than the Reagan team and that they have greatly
increased the nuclear risks.
Unfortunately it looks like people are dodging
and denying the issue. They are becoming accustomed and conditioned to
accept such practices. Bush is changing and hardening the American psyche
to accept any crime. People have known about Bushs torture practices
for some time, yet returned him to office as their President. That he
had to use fraud to get re-elected, does not excuse the fact
that millions of Americans support him, his lies, his wars and his methods.
Bush believes he is inspired by God, talks
to God, and that whatever he does is blessed by God. This supposedly includes
any torture and murder that Bush chooses to do. Of course Bush admits
nothing and denies everything, so manages to fool enough Americans to
continue to get public support... As the Red Cross points out, most of
the victims are innocent and have no links with the so-called terrorists.
Also they say the bulk of so-called intelligence obtained by torture, is worthless.
That is because most victims being innocent,
have nothing to tell. Secondly, while under extreme torture, people will
admit or invent anything they think might stop the torture. Thirdly as
Bush is waging illegal war, his tortures are additional major war crimes.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The
Rendering
By Chris Floyd, Moscow
Times, March 10, 2005
In the heady months after the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the chickenhawks of the Bush Regime were eager
to flash their tough-guy cojones to the world. Led by the former prep-school
cheerleader in the Oval Office, swaggering Bushists openly bragged of
"kicking ass" with macho tactics like torture and "extraordinary rendition."
"We don't kick the [expletive] out of them," one top Bush official told
The Washington Post on Dec. 26, 2002. "We send them to other countries
so they can kick the [expletive] out of them." In that same article, other
Bush honchos boasted about withholding medical treatment from wounded
prisoners; knowingly sending prisoners to be tortured in Saudi Arabia,
Egypt, Morocco and Jordan ("I do it with my eyes open," said one top agent);
and breaking international law as a routine part of interrogations by
U.S. operatives. "If you're not violating someone's human rights," said
an interrogation supervisor, "you're probably not doing your job." These
freely admitted violations included beatings, hooding, exposure, sexual
humiliation and the medieval barbarism of strappado: chaining a prisoner
with his arms twisted behind his back and suspending him from the ceiling,
where the weight of his own body tears at his sockets and sinews.
The invasion of Iraq, itself a war crime of staggering dimensions, simply
extended this long-established and officially sanctioned system of brutality
to a new arena. And to thousands of new victims, the overwhelming majority
of whom were innocent of any crime, as the Red Cross reported. While the
investigative work of Seymour Hersh and others in exposing the horrors
of Abu Ghraib is indeed laudable, it should not have come as any surprise.
The atrocities detailed in the revelations were identical to those the
Bush Regime had openly acknowledged as standard practice just months before.
The only difference, of course, was the fact that pictures of the Abu
Ghraib atrocities were also published and broadcast. Public sensibilities
-- untroubled by previous verbal admissions buried deep in slabs of newsprint
-- were suddenly shocked by the lurid visuals. A Republican-led Senate
investigation declared that it had uncovered "even worse" pictures of
torture: stomach-curdling photos and videos of bloody abuse that could
stain America's name for generations. The Bush Regime braced for an election-year
firestorm of scandal. Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld offered the president
his resignation.
Then -- nothing happened. The outraged Republican senators never released
their damning pictures. Rumsfeld kept his job. A "few bad apples" in the
lower ranks were put on trial; the top figures involved in the torture
system were promoted. And even though Pentagon and CIA investigators continue
to document hundreds -- hundreds -- of cases of torture, abuse and outright
murder in Bush's gulag, the storm has passed. Indeed, Bushists like John
Yoo, one of the primary authors of the "torture memos" undergirding the
gulag, see the 2004 election as a public affirmation of blood and brutality.
The vote is "proof that the debate is over," Yoo told The New Yorker.
"The issue is dying out."
Yet the Regime was shaken a bit by the brief tempest. Instead of macho
swagger about "kicking ass" and "taking off the gloves," there are now
prim assurances of legality. PR fig leaves are being artfully draped over
once-bulging displays of butchness. This week, The New York Times was
chosen for a high-profile leak, "revealing" that while Bush himself gave
the order to "render" U.S. captives to nations that practice torture --
supposedly as a cost-saving measure -- the CIA is scrupulously ensuring
that no prisoners are ever actually tortured by foreign torturers in the
torture chambers where Bush has consigned them. Such prissy hand-wringing
is a far cry from the old braggadocio ("I did it with my eyes open") and
cynical shoulder-shrugging of December 2002, when one rendition op dismissed
the very notion of CIA supervision of its foreign torture partners: "If
we're not there in the room with them," he smirked, "who is to say" what
goes on in the outsourced interrogations?
But Bush is facing something far more dangerous than the occasional hiccup
of bad PR or toothless probes by his Senate bagmen. There are now several
lawsuits afoot filed by innocent survivors of the "rendition" system set
up at Bush's direct order. These cases could not only expose the ugly
guts of his gulag, but also produce direct evidence of criminal culpability
on the part of Bush and his minions under U.S. and international law.
The Regime has responded with draconian ruthlessness to this genuine threat.
In the main rendition case -- and in an unrelated lawsuit concerning officially
confirmed evidence of terrorist infiltration at the FBI before 9/11 --
Bush is invoking the rarely-used, extra-constitutional "state secrets
privilege." This nebulous maneuver, unanchored in law or legislation,
allows the government to suppress any evidence against it merely by asserting,
without proof, that disclosure of the truth might "harm national security."
Evidence "protected" in this way cannot even be heard by a judge in secret
-- a well-established practice used successfully in numerous other national
security cases over the years. It is simply buried forever, and the case
collapses.
It is almost certain that Bush's invocation of this "night-and-fog" measure
will be upheld. So let us be clear about the consequences. It will mean
that any crime committed by a government official -- torture, rendition,
murder, state terrorism, even treason -- can be sealed in permanent darkness.
The justice system itself will be "rendered" into a black hole. The victims
of state crime -- American citizens as well as foreign captives -- will
be left without rights, without redress, without a voice. Bush's kingdom
of strappado will reign supreme.
Annotations
U.S. Decries Abuse But Defends Interrogations
Washington Post, Dec. 26, 2002
[Bush Order] Lets CIA Freely Send
Suspects to Foreign Jails
New York Times, March 6, 2005
Bush Wielding Secrecy Privilege to
End Lawsuits
Chicago Tribune, March 3, 2005
State Secrets Assertion: Maher Arar
vs. John Ashcroft, et al
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York,
Jan. 17, 2005
Rumsfeld Says He Twice Offered His
Resignation
Seattle Times, Feb. 4, 2005
Review:
Torture and Truth and The Torture Papers
The New Statesman, March 7, 2005
The Torture Papers: Full Faith and
Credit of the U.S. Government
San Diego Union-Tribune, Feb. 27, 2005
Is the U.S. Losing Moral Authority
on Human Rights?
Christian Science Monitor, March 7, 2005
New Interrogation Rules Set for Detainees
in Iraq
New York Times, March 10, 2005
Pentagon Report Set Framework For
Use of Torture
Wall Street Journal, June 7, 2004
Senators See Abu Ghraib Abuse Photos
Held by Defense Department
Washington Post, May 12, 2004
GOP Leaders Oppose Release of More
Abuse Photos
CNN.com, May 12, 2004
A Temporary Coup: Torture, War and
the Corruption of Intelligence
Salon.com, June 14, 2004
President Authorized Interrogation
Washington Times, Dec. 20, 2004
Time for An Accounting
International Herald Tribune, Feb. 20, 2005
In Torture We Trust?
The Nation, March 31, 2003
Statement of FBI Whistleblower Sibel
Edmonds
U.S. House of Representatives, March 5, 2005
Copyright: The Moscow Times
(In accordance with Title
17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to
those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information
for research and educational purposes. We have no affiliation whatsoever
with the originator of this article nor do we endorsed or sponsored by
the originator.)
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