The torture president
Washington Times
By Nat Hentoff
March 24, 2008

When lawyers in the Justice Department convinced the president soon after September 11 that he had the inherent constitutional authority — in the war on terrorism — to disregard the Geneva Conventions on the treatment of terrorism suspects, then-Secretary of State Colin Powell sounded a warning that this would "undermine public support from critical allies, making military cooperation more difficult to sustain." Mr. Powell had previously emphasized the terrorists are engaged in a "war against civilization."

Increasingly, as Mr. Powell predicted, while the president strongly insists that the CIA be allowed to continue practicing what President Bush calls "its specialized interrogations" in its secret prisons, and "renditions" (kidnapping Europeans to be tortured elsewhere), we have lost the trust and respect of many our allies' citizens.

Significant, moreover, is the refusal of FBI Director Robert Mueller to permit his agents to engage in such "coercive" CIA-style interrogations that often involve torture. Also opposing the tortured use of language by high officials of the administration to disguise this lawless treatment of prisoners, which would make any such "evidence" thrown out of our federal courts, are Gen. David Petraeus and Lt. Gen. Michael Maples, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency.

Nonetheless, on March 8, Mr. Bush vetoed a bill that includes a mandate that there be a single standard of interrogation by all of our forces, very intentionally including the CIA. As a result of Mr. Bush's veto, the United States, by validating torture as a tool of interrogation, has become a less civilized nation. The bill the president disdained (thereby staining his legacy) would have made the Army Field Manual the standard for all interrogations. Among the practices it prohibits are: placing hoods or sacks over prisoners' heads (as in CIA "renditions"); exposing them to extreme heat or cold (as often reported); and waterboarding (as disclosed about CIA prisoners at "black sites"), a procedure that makes the prisoner believe he is about to drown — and he will drown if it's not stopped.

The CIA has finally admitted it has used waterboarding, and though it claims it no longer does, the White House says that this "specialized interrogation" remains potentially permissible in future interrogations.

John McCain has called waterboarding an "exquisitely" painful torture, but he voted against making the Army Field Manual the standard for interrogations, thereby giving cover to some of the members of Congress who joined him to support the president. Why criticize them when the Republican presidential nominee has been the icon of those, in and out of our military, who oppose torture? This human-rights status for Mr. McCain has now been tarnished badly.

In contrast to Mr. McCain's current stance, there has been continuing strong support for including the Army Field Manual in the CIA techniques by 31 retired Army, Navy and Marine Corps generals. They insist, as Human Rights First reports, that "the United States not sanction the use of interrogation methods it would find unacceptable if inflicted by the enemy against captured Americans." Documented reports of CIA interrogation methods by human-rights organizations (and by both American and overseas reporters) include accounts of barbarous assaults on prisoners that if practiced on American captives in other countries would enrage us and trigger demands for swift and harsh punishment of the perpetrators.

Original Text