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Bush sanctions CIA torture program
By Jerry White
23 July 2007
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President Bush signed an executive order Friday clearing the
way for the Central Intelligence Agency to resume the use of enhanced
interrogation measures against alleged terror suspects held
in US facilities around the world.
The order, which was issued in conjunction with a classified
list of approved interrogation techniques, is designed to provide
a legal sanction for physical and psychological torture, and protect
CIA operatives from being charged with war crimes for violating
US and international laws against inhumane treatment.
The CIA reportedly suspended its program last year as the Bush
administrations legal justifications for abusing detainees
was dealt a blow by the US Supreme Court ruling in the case of
Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, which stated that all prisoners in
US custodyof any nationality, being held in any countrywere
granted minimal protections by the Geneva Conventions.
Last fall, in order to deflect growing international and domestic
criticism, Congress passed, with substantial bipartisan support,
the Military Commissions Act of 2006. The Act instructed the administration
to issue an executive order stating that any further interrogations
would comply with US and international law. The Act also established,
in law, a procedure of drumhead military commissions, after Hamdan
invalidated the Bush administrations previous procedure.
The order publicly prohibits cruel, inhuman, or degrading
treatment as well as acts of sexual humiliation and those
intended to denigrate religious beliefstwo widely used methods
whose exposure provoked an international outcry. However, the
order places no restrictions on such notorious techniques as the
use of stress positions, sleep deprivation, extreme temperatures
and so-called water boarding, which simulates the sensation of
drowning. These techniques are expressly prohibited by the US
military. Moreover, administration officials admit there are no
provisions for allowing the Red Cross to visit CIA facilities
or for prisoners to be in contact with their families.
While the list of approved methods remains secret, the Bush
administration has not ruled out any technique. Administration
officials have said that the new order will allow the CIA to continue
with the same program that was in place before.
Noting that the written policies governing the CIA interrogation
program remained classified and independent organizations such
as the Red Cross were barred from monitoring the CIAs compliance
with its guidelines, Tom Malinowski of Human Rights Watch told
the Washington Post, All the order really does is
to have the president say, Everything in that other document
that Im not going showing you is legaltrust me.
Moreover, as Human Rights Watch notes, the order seeks to sanction
what is an explicitly illegal operation: the CIAs detention
and interrogation program, which included the kidnapping and disappearing
of dozens of terror suspects and their imprisonment for years
inside secret facilities. Some prisoners, including those renditioned
to third countries where they are tortured under CIA supervision,
remain disappeared. In June, Human Rights Watch and
five other human rights groups listed 39 people who remain missing,
including one detainee, Muhammad Naeem Noor Khan, who recently
reappeared in Pakistan.
The new order, the Human Rights Watch says, claims that the
program fully complies with US obligations under the
Geneva Conventions as long as the CIA follows a series of requirements
in carrying out the program. But enforced disappearancethe
hallmark of the CIA program, involving secret, incommunicado detentionis
itself inconsistent with the requirement under [Geneva Conventions]
Common Article 3 that detainees be treated humanely, the
organization said in a statement on the new order.
By international human rights and humanitarian law standards,
the CIA program is illegal to its core, said, Joanne Mariner,
terrorism and counter-terrorism director at Human Rights Watch.
Although the new executive order bars torture and other
abuse, the order still cant purport to legalize a program
that violates basic rights.
With the new order in hand, Bush administration officials have
told the Washington Post that suspects in US custody could
be moved immediately into the enhanced interrogation
program and subjected to techniques that go beyond those allowed
by the US military. CIA detainees have alleged that they were
left naked in cells for prolonged periods, subjected to sensory
and sleep deprivation, extreme temperatures and sexually taunted.
In a briefing with reporters senior administration officials said
that any future use of extremes of hot and cold would
be subject to a reasonable interpretation ... were
not talking about forcibly induced hypothermia.
According to the Post the secret list of CIA techniques
has been the subject of intense debate within the highest levels
of the US government over the last several months, with the State
Department seeking to deflect criticism of US torture and the
Defense Department concerned that CIA methods could subject captured
US soldiers to similar abuses. At the same time, Bush and Vice
President Cheney, along with CIA Director Michael Hayden have
defended the brutal methods, saying the CIA program was one of
the most effective tools in the so-called war on terror.
Referring to the secret list of approved torture techniques
one intelligence official told the Post that, while Hayden
did not get everything [he] might have wanted in the
guidelines, they contained everything the CIA needed and more
than was asked for.
The Bush administration is doing an end-run around the Supreme
Court decision upholding the application of the Geneva Conventions
to CIA prisoners, as well as widespread public and international
opposition to torture. In doing so, the administration is counting
on the acquiescence and complicity of the Democratic Party, which
played a key role in the passage of the Military Commissions Act
that sanctioned military tribunals and the indefinite detentions
of prisoners, while giving the president explicit authority to
interpret the Geneva Conventions.
The Democrats response to Bushs executive order was predictable
cowardice, with their central concern being that the continued
torture program be given an adequate legal and political fig leaf.
Democratic Senator John D. Rockefeller, chairman of the Senate
Intelligence Committee, said it was difficult to determine
what the Executive Order really means and how it will translate
into actual conduct by the CIA. The CIA, he said, had to
come before the Intelligence Committee to explain in detail
how it intends to apply the Executive Order and the Department
of Justice had to provide a full legal analysis of
the interrogation guidelines.
The stakes are too high and the issue too important to
provide any comment until the Committee has been given the opportunity
to fully evaluate the Presidents action, Rockefeller
claimed about an administration that has consistently defended
the use of torture methods. This careful review, the
senator concluded, will be part of the Committees
continuing effort to determine whether the CIA detention and interrogation
program is necessary, lawful and in the best interests of the
United States.
See Also:
Guantánamo military
tribunals exposed by military officer
[27 June 2007]
As Bush administration prepares
to issue new guidelines for CIA interrogation: New admissions
of widespread prisoner abuse
[5 June 2007]
Bush signs Military
Commissions Act authorizing police-state tribunals, torture
[18 October 2006]
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