Backing Gonzales Is Backing
Torture
LA Times.com
ROBERT SCHEER
January 4, 2005
Is there bipartisan congressional support for torture?
That is the central question the Senate Judiciary Committee
faces Thursday as it begins hearings on the confirmation of White
House Counsel Alberto Gonzales as the next attorney general of
the United States. At stake is whether Congress wants to
conveniently absolve Gonzales of his clear attempt to have the
president subvert U.S. law in order to whitewash barbaric
practices performed by U.S. interrogators in the name of national
security.
Gonzales ignored the objections of State Department and
military lawyers to strongly endorse the determination of Justice
Department lawyers that neither the Geneva Convention nor
corresponding U.S. laws on prisoner protections should be applied
in the "war on terror."
"In my judgment, this new paradigm renders obsolete Geneva's
strict limitations on questioning of enemy prisoners and renders
quaint some of its provisions," Gonzales wrote in a legal memo to
President Bush on Jan. 25, 2002. Declaring the war-on-terror
prisoners exempt from the Geneva Convention, he argued,
"substantially reduces the threat of domestic criminal
prosecution under the War Crimes Act."
Acting like a sleazy attorney advising a client on how not to
be convicted of an ongoing crime, Gonzales was apparently not
worried about irrational foreign courts or high-minded jurists in
The Hague, but rather U.S. prosecutors who might enforce federal
laws that ban torture of foreign prisoners of war. Indeed,
Gonzales made the case for a legal end run around the 1996 War
Crimes Act, which mandates criminal penalties, including the
death sentence, for any U.S. military or other personnel who
engage in crimes of torture.
"It is difficult to predict the motives of [U.S.] prosecutors
and [U.S.] independent counsels who may in the future decide to
pursue unwarranted charges based on Section 2441" of the act,
Gonzales wrote. "Your determination [that Geneva protections are
not applicable] would create a reasonable basis in law that
Section 2441 does not apply, which would provide a solid defense
to any future prosecution."
In light of what we have learned since about the
rationalization and use of torture by U.S. interrogators over the
last three years, it is difficult to ignore the possibility that
Gonzales already had knowledge that such violations had occurred
and expected more.
In fact, Gonzales in his memo singles out language from the
Geneva Convention (and incorporated into U.S. law) that
explicitly brands as a war crime "outrages against personal
dignity" — a perfect description of the pattern of mental,
sexual and physical degradation of U.S. detainees that has been
reported by prisoners, military whistle-blowers and even FBI
agents in recent months. Many of those rounded up in Muslim
countries by U.S. military and intelligence personnel have
reportedly been subjected to dog attacks, being chained in fetal
positions in their own excrement or placed in degrading sexual
postures.
On Monday, a group of military legal experts, including Rear
Adm. John Hutson, who was recently the Navy's judge advocate
general, released a letter to the Judiciary Committee noting that
Gonzales' recommendations "fostered greater animosity toward the
United States, undermined our intelligence gathering efforts, and
added to the risks facing our troops serving around the
world."
Gonzales based his case for doing away with the Geneva
protections on memos produced by a small group of Justice
Department lawyers that, along with making other controversial
claims, infamously argued that physical abuse of prisoners was
torture only if it was "of an intensity akin to … serious
physical injury such as death or organ failure," and mental abuse
was torture only if it caused "lasting psychological harm."
Presumably these pain and damage levels are to be determined by
the interrogator.
Such language was so onerous that, perhaps to help Gonzales
get through the hearings, the Justice Department only last week
quietly slipped new guidelines onto its website redressing this
stain on the country's reputation. Although still vague in many
parts, the new doctrine belatedly reasserts the primacy of
international and federal law in the treatment of prisoners, even
those captured in relation to the war on terror.
Another positive step would be the withdrawal or rejection of
the Gonzales nomination. To make a man with so little respect for
both the spirit and the letter of the law the nation's top law
enforcement official would be a terrible advertisement for
American democracy.
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