Jurists Condemn Bush
Administration's Torture Memos
OneWorld.net/Yahoo News/ Jim Lobe
OneWorld US
Fri Aug 6, 9:36 AM ET
WASHINGTON, D.C., Aug 6 (OneWorld) - Nearly 130 influential
U.S. jurists, including twelve former federal judges and a former
director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI (news - web
sites)), have signed a statement denouncing Bush administration
memoranda regarding the treatment of Iraqi and other detainees
and accusing their authors of unprofessional conduct.
The statement, in the form of an open letter sent Wednesday to
President George W. Bush (news - web sites), other top
administration officials and members of Congress, declares that
the memoranda, which were drafted by political appointees in the
Pentagon (news - web sites), the Justice Department (news - web
sites) and the White House, "seek to circumvent long established
and universally acknowledged principles of law and common
decency."
The signers, who also include eight past presidents of the
American Bar Association (ABA) and the heads of several
U.S.-based international human rights groups, also call on the
administration to release all other memoranda that relate to the
detainee treatment and for Congress to compel their production if
they are not released
The memoranda "ignore and misinterpret the U.S. Constitution
and laws, international treaties and rules of international law,"
according to the statement. "The lawyers who approved and signed
these memoranda have not met their high obligation to defend the
Constitution."
The statement was released on the eve of the annual ABA
meeting in Atlanta this weekend. The 400,000-member organization
is expected to debate several resolutions condemning the abuses
at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq (news - web sites) and call for an
independent, bipartisan commission - something which the
administration has so far rejected - to investigate how they took
place and whether the memoranda contributed to a larger pattern
of abuses in the war on terrorism.
"The use of torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
by United States personnel in the interrogation of prisoners
captured in the Afghanistan (news - web sites) and Iraq conflicts
has brought shame on the nation and undermined our standing in
the world," according to a 20-page brief that is being submitted
to the ABA's House of Delegates in support of the
resolutions.
"The American public still has not been adequately informed of
the extent to which prisoners have been abused, tortured, or
rendered to foreign governments which are known to abuse and
torture prisoners," the brief states.
"It is incumbent upon this organization, which makes the rule
of law its touchstone, to urge the U.S. government to stop the
torture and abuse of detainees, investigate violations of law and
prosecute those who committed, authorized or condoned those
violations, and assure that detention and interrogation practices
adhere faithfully to the Constitution, laws and treaties of the
United States and related customary international law."
The administration, which has blamed reported abuses,
including those depicted in the infamous photographs of sexual
abuse and humiliation at Abu Ghraib prison, on low-ranking
soldiers has insisted that the memoranda in question were never
transmitted to military commanders in the field, nor did they
reflect the government's actual policy. The administration has
consistently maintained that it does not condone torture under
any circumstances.
But human rights groups and other watchdogs have contended
that many of the abuses reported in Afghanistan, Iraq, and at the
Guantanamo Bay detention facility have been so consistent that
they appear to have been systemic.
"It's not hard to see how these abstract arguments made in
Washington," said Tom Malinowski, director of the Washington
office of Human Rights Watch, in reference to the
administration's memoranda, "led to appalling and systematic
abuses that ended up doing huge damage to U.S. interests."
One Pentagon memorandum, for example, asserted that the
president in his role as ''commander-in-chief'' might choose to
ignore laws, treaties, or even the Constitution regarding the
treatment of prisoners in wartime.
Another Justice Department memo asserts that the president has
the authority to approve the infliction of extreme physical
distress by redefining ''torture'' as ''equivalent in intensity
to the pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as organ
failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death''.
Similarly, mental pain and suffering does not amount to torture
in the memo-writers' view, unless ''it results in significant
psychological harm of significant duration, e.g., lasting for
months or even years''.
Finally, memos by Justice and Defense Department political
appointees presented a series of arguments that they said could
be used as defenses against U.S. torture statutes and the UN's
Convention Against Torture (CAT) that has been ratified by the
United States.
According to published reports, most career attorneys in the
Justice, Defense and State Departments strongly opposed the
positions taken in the memos but were overruled by senior
political appointees. Military attorneys and the State Department
were especially outspoken in arguing for applying the full range
of protections to detainees, including members of the Taliban,
under the Geneva Conventions, according to other memoranda that
have leaked to the press.
"The most senior lawyers in the Department of Justice (news -
web sites), the White House, Department of Defense (news - web
sites) and the vice president' sought to justify actions that
violate the most basic rights of all human beings," according to
the jurists' statement.
Among those who have been named in published accounts as
responsible for the memos include former Asst. Attorney General
Jay Bybee who is now a federal judge; the Pentagon's general
counsel, William Haynes II, who has been nominated for a federal
judgeship; Undersecretary of Defense for Policy, Douglas Feith;
the former head of the Justice Department's Office of Legal
Counsel (OLC), Jack Goldsmith; and John Yoo, one of his deputies
in the OLC.
Most of the attorneys involved have been associated with The
Federalist Society, an association of mainly far-right attorneys
who gained top positions in the Bush administration, particularly
in the Justice Department.
"The lawyers who prepared and approved these memoranda have
failed to meet their professional obligations," according to the
statement, which was signed by, among others, former FBI director
William Sessions, retired Chief Judge of the U.S. Third Circuit
Court of Appeals John J. Gibbons, former U.S. Attorney General
Nicholas Katzenbach, and former Circuit Judge of the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia, Abner Mikva, among
others.
"They have counseled individuals to ignore the law and offered
arguments to minimize their exposure to sanction or liability for
doing so," the statement added, noting that in several cases, the
memoranda ignored well-established precedents, including Supreme
Court decisions, that directly contradicted their positions.
Legal experts have been particularly harsh in their criticism
of the attorneys in the OLC, which is supposed to provide the
Attorney General with opinions that are firmly grounded in
accepted law. Goldsmith resigned in June to take a position at
Harvard Law School, while Yoo, who has aggressively defended the
memos in public for and in the editorial pages of the Wall Street
Journal, left the administration last year for the University of
California's Boalt Hall School of Law in Berkeley and the
American Enterprise Institute, a neo-conservative think tank in
Washington.
Among the human rights groups whose directors signed the
statement were Human Rights First (formerly Lawyers Committee for
Human Rights), Human Rights Watch, the International League for
Human Rights, Physicians for Human Rights, and the Alliance for
Justice.
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