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Bush White House declares torture vital to US security policy
By Patrick Martin
7 October 2005
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In an extraordinary declaration of the brutality of American
foreign policy, the Bush administration denounced a Senate vote
to bar the use of torture against prisoners held by the US military.
Responding to the passage of an amendment to a Pentagon spending
billapproved by an overwhelming 90-9 vote Wednesday, the
White House said the proposal would restrict the presidents
authority to protect Americans effectively from terrorist attack
and bring terrorists to justice.
The statement indicated that Bush would veto the entire appropriation,
providing $440 billion to fund military operations for the next
fiscal year, rather than accept the restrictions on interrogation
techniques spelled out in the Senate amendment.
The 90-9 vote came on an amendment sponsored by Senator John
McCain of Arizona, a Republican and former prisoner of war in
Vietnam. McCain, a fervent supporter of the war in Iraq, has opposed
the use of torture in military facilities like Abu Ghraib and
Guantánamo, because it damages US foreign policy interests
and could become the pretext for subjecting captured American
military personnel to the same techniques in retaliation.
McCains amendment had the backing of two dozen former
generals and admirals, including former Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff John Shalikashvili and former Secretary of State
and JCS chairman Colin Powell. Forty-six Republicans, 43 Democrats
and one independent voted for the amendment, which was opposed
by only nine Republicans. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist voted
with McCain and against the White House position.
Frist delayed the introduction of the anti-torture language
earlier this summer, maintaining that Congress should not put
restrictions on the measures which the administration felt were
necessary to fight the war on terror. But the events
of the past three months, both in the increasingly bloody stalemate
in Iraq and the feeble response of the federal government to the
Gulf hurricane crisis, have weakened the Bush administration.
The amendment itself is extremely limited in its scope. It
simply prohibits cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
of those in the custody of the military and requires that questioning
of prisoners detained by the military follow the existing U.S.
Army Field Manual on Intelligence Interrogation. No such restrictions
would apply to those held by US intelligence agencies, such as
the prisoners in the CIA-run detention centers at Bagram Airbase
in Afghanistan, Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, and at undisclosed
locations elsewhere in the world. Those captives can still be
tortured at will.
During the final debate on the amendment, McCain read out a
letter from former secretary of state Powell endorsing the measure,
which Powell said would address the terrible public diplomacy
crisis created by Abu Ghraib. It was the first time since
his departure from office in January that Powell has publicly
opposed the foreign policy of the Bush administrationa measure
of the impact of the Iraqi debacle on the US foreign policy and
military establishment.
At a press briefing Wednesday, White House spokesman Scott
McClellan confirmed that Bush would veto the entire appropriation
bill rather than have his power to order torture restricted. McClellan
made absurdly contradictory claims, declaring the amendment unnecessary
and duplicative in view of current administration policy,
which supposedly bans torture, and at the same time saying it
would limit the Presidents ability as commander-in-chief
to effectively carry out the war on terrorism.
The McCain amendment originates in an effort by senators with
close ties to the Pentagon brassMcCain, in addition to being
a celebrated POW, is the son of an admiralto get the military
off the hook for the abuses at Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo.
In the course of the final debate, McCain cited complaints by
top military officers over conflicting signals from the White
House about what was permissible in the treatment of prisoners.
Confusion about the rules results in abuses in the field,
he said.
This was a veiled reference to the infamous memos authored
by the Bush Justice Department and the White House Legal Counsels
officethen headed by the current attorney general Alberto
Gonzalesthat claimed presidential authority to ignore the
Geneva Conventions and the International Convention Against Torture,
based on Bushs constitutional powers as commander-in-chief.
Senators supporting the amendment cited the colossal impact
of the Abu Ghraib revelations on world public opinion. Republican
Lindsey Graham of South Carolina said, The best thing we
can do is give the guidance [the troops] need to make sure we
can win the war on terror and never lose the moral high ground.
One factor in the top-heavy Senate vote was the recent testimony
by a former Army captain, Ian Fishback of the 82nd Airborne Division,
about systematic beating and mistreatment of Iraqi prisoners in
early 2004, near Fallujah, a center of resistance to the US occupation.
Fishback and two former sergeants in his unit have come forward,
confirming that Abu Ghraib was not an exception, but rather typical
of the treatment meted out to hundreds and thousands of prisoners
across the country.
Also contributing is the steady stream of revelations about
torture at the Guantánamo Bay prison camp. Last month the
US press carried reports on widespread hunger strikes among the
prisoners at Guantánamo, with as many as 200 prisoners
refusing food for as long as 45 days. At least 18 prisoners were
hospitalized and several force-fed. The prisoners were protesting
the conditions under which they are held, particularly the savage
beatings by a notorious squad of military thugs known as IRF.
They have also demanded the right to challenge their incarceration
before an independent panel, as provided for under the Geneva
Conventions, rather than appearing before the rigged military
tribunals set up by the Bush administration.
See Also:
Pentagon dismisses new report
on US military torture in Iraq
[30 September 2005]
Study documents US-inflicted
carnage on Iraqi people
[26 July 2005]
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