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Gonzales confirmed: war criminal to head US Justice Department
By Joseph Kay
5 February 2005
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On February 3, the United States Senate confirmed former White
House Counsel Alberto Gonzales to be the new attorney general.
With the vote, an individual closely associated with the most
criminal actions and decisions of the Bush administration will
fill the chief law office in the land.
A total of 36 Democratic Senators opposed the nomination, but
the vote against Gonzales was largely for show. The Democratic
leadership had already declared before the vote that the party
would not attempt to filibuster the nomination, thus ensuring
that Gonzales would be confirmed. A filibuster would require the
support of only 41 of the Senates 44 Democrats and would
have prevented Gonzales from receiving an up-or-down vote.
Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid said February 1, nearly a
week after the Senate Judiciary Committee approved the Gonzales
nomination, I think there was a general feeling going into
the meeting [of Congressional Democrats] that this wasnt
the time to filibuster.
In the full Senate vote, six Democrats supported confirming
Gonzales, while two were not present. All Republicans voted for
the nomination.
The 36 Democratic no votes came as something of
a surprise. Before his confirmation hearings, Gonzales was expected
to breeze through the Senate. It was only after he repeatedly
stonewalled questions on his role in the production of the torture
memos and systematically evaded questions on whether torture
is legal under certain conditions that Democrats felt obliged
to vote against his nomination.
Gonzales was at the center of discussions within the administration
on the treatment of prisoners captured after the September 11,
2001, attacks. In internal administration memos, he argued that
the Geneva Conventions should not be applied to either Al Qaeda
prisoners or those captured during the war in Afghanistan.
Gonzales requested the writing of the now-infamous memo signed
by then Assistant Attorney General Jay Bybee, which argued for
a very narrow definition of torture under federal law to allow
the broadest range of techniques. The memo also argued that the
president has the constitutional authority as commander-in-hhief
to authorize the torture of prisoners as part of the war
on terrorism.
Throughout his tenure as White House counsel, Gonzales consistently
advocated using the terrorist attacks as a pretext for granting
the most far-reaching powers to the president. He argued that
the president has the authority as the leader of the war
on terror to declare unilateral war against any country
without providing evidence of a threat to the United States, to
detain prisoners for indefinite periods of time, and to order
the torture of prisoners as well as their trial by military tribunals
capable of imposing the death penalty.
In his testimony at Senate hearings in early January, as well
as in subsequent answers he submitted to written questions, Gonzales
failed to repudiate any of the positions he advocated as White
House counsel.
Shortly before the Senate hearings, the Justice Department
had issued a revised memo on torture that rescinded the very narrow
interpretations of the Bybee memo. However, the new memo ignored
the question of the constitutional authority of the president
to authorize torture.
In his testimony, Gonzales refused to repudiate the conclusions
of the previous memo. When asked whether American soldiers or
intelligence agencies ever had the legal authority to engage
in torture under any circumstances, Gonzales replied that
he didnt believe so, but had to give his answer
in writing to avoid providing a misleading answer.
In his written answers to questions, Gonzales indicated that
there were situations when torture is legal. In particular, he
said that the international Convention Against Torture (CAT) and
associated US legislation on inhuman treatment has a limited
reach, and does not apply to some aliens overseas.
Regarding a presidential directive issued in February 2002 requiring
that detainees be treated humanely and, to the extent appropriate
and consistent with military necessity, in a manner consistent
with the principles of [the] Geneva [Conventions], Gonzales
noted that even the highly conditional language of the directive
did not apply to the CIA.
Gonzales has repeatedly equivocated on whether the CIA has
the legal right to torture prisoners, saying only that the CIA
is bound by the CAT, federal law and the presidents public
position that the US does not engage in torture. However, the
Justice Departments legal interpretations of this legislation,
including its newly released memo, leave open the question of
whether the CIA enjoys the legal authority to engage in torture.
Regarding the presidents right to order torture, and
in general his right to ignore laws passed by Congress, Gonzaless
position has been consistent: If the President determines that
a particular law abridges his rights as commander-in-chief, he
is not bound by them.
In a written response to Patrick Leahy, the Democratic minority
leader of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Gonzales stated that
he would be reticent to conclude that a particular
statute was unconstitutional, and would make every reasonable
effort if I am confirmed as attorney general to uphold and defend
those statutes. Whether extraordinary circumstances
might unduly interfere with the presidents constitutional
authorities is a question that should only be approached with
the greatest care and caution.
Thus, the Senate has just confirmed as attorney general an
individual who will make every reasonable effort to
uphold the laws passed by Congress! But if a particular law is
determined to infringe on presidential powers, then there is no
guarantee that the law will be followed.
In response to a long series of written questions submitted
by Democratic Senator Edward Kennedy, Gonzales refused to provide
any information about his role in drafting the Bybee memo and
other legal decisions during the first term of the Bush administration.
He stated repeatedly that to provide any information about internal
deliberations would entail discussing classified information,
which I am not at liberty to do.
The New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights recently
added Gonzaless name to a war crimes complaint filed against
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld in Germany. In a letter to
the German prosecutor, the chair of the International Law Committee
of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York, Scott Horton,
wrote, Any serious criminal investigation and prosecution
[of torture crimes] would certainly involve Gonzales. CCR
Vice President Peter Weiss has noted that Gonzaless testimony
before the Senate demonstrates his involvement in setting
policy where torture and inhumane treatment was authorized at
the highest levels of the Bush Administration.
With the confirmation of Gonzales, the Bush administration
has ensured that the office of attorney general will be safely
in the hands of someone who has proven his loyalty to the White
House and will defend every anti-democratic measure it plans to
carry out over the next four years.
An ever-growing body of evidence demonstrates that the torture
of prisoners has become routine in Guantanamo Bay, in Iraq and
at the various detention facilities run by the CIA around the
world. While a handful of guards at Abu Ghraib prison have been
prosecuted, the arch criminals, those who set the policy, have
not been punished. Instead, they have been elevated or retained
within the Bush administration.
Rumsfeld remains as secretary of defense. Former National Security
Advisor Condoleezza Rice, who was also involved in the discussions
on torture policy, has been elevated to secretary of state. Now,
one of the principal figures involved in formulating this policy
is to become the chief legal official in the administration. Nothing
could more clearly demonstrate the advanced degeneration of democratic
forms of rule in the United States.
See Also:
Gonzales nomination hearing:
US Senate welcomes a war criminal
[8 January 2005]
Gonzales hearings: Senate
to confirm defender of torture as US attorney general
[7 January 2005]
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