Francis A. Boyle
Law Building
504 E. Pennsylvania Avenue
Champaign IL 61820 USA
217-333-7954 (voice)
217-244-1478 (fax)
(personal comments only)
 

________________________________

From: Boyle, Francis
Sent: Sat 9/23/2006 10:36 AM
To: * All Resident Faculty
Subject: Sanctioning Torture & War Crimes


 
 

 

Senate-White House compromise sanctions CIA torture of detainees


By Joe Kay and Barry Grey
23 September 2006


The Bush administration and Republican senators agreed Wednesday night on 
legislation that sanctions secret CIA prisons and permits abusive interrogation 
methods that violate the Geneva Conventions and other international and 
domestic anti-torture statutes.

The bill also gives congressional approval for military commissions that strip 
Guant?namo detainees of basic due process rights, while denying them the 
elementary right to seek redress from arbitrary imprisonment through the filing 
of habeas corpus suits in US courts.

With this agreement, the US Congress is preparing to give its official 
imprimatur to the use of barbaric methods historically associated with military 
and fascist dictatorships, as well as the repudiation of democratic principles 
that go back to the Magna Carta of 1215.

The Bush administration is determined to obtain passage of the measure before 
Congress adjourns next week in advance of the November midterm elections. In 
the absence of any significant opposition from the Democratic Party, the 
agreement reached between the White House and a trio of Republican senators who 
opposed the administration's initial draft represents another milestone in the 
disintegration of American democracy. It demonstrates yet again the absence of 
any serious commitment to democratic rights within any section of the political 
establishment or either of the two major parties.

Both sides in the tussle over the terms of the bill hailed the agreement. 
Arizona Senator John McCain, one of the original opponents of the Bush-backed 
proposal, declared that the agreement "gives the president the tools that he 
needs to continue to fight the war on terror," while "the integrity and spirit 
of the Geneva Conventions have been preserved." CIA Director Michael Hayden 
said that if the compromise becomes law, "Congress will have given us the 
clarity and the support that we need to move forward with a detention and 
interrogation program."

>From the beginning, the objections of the Republican senators who opposed the 
>administration's version-McCain, John Warner of Virginia and Lindsey Graham of 
>South Carolina-were not based on a principled defense of international law or 
>democratic rights. The main concern of the senators, and significant elements 
>within the military establishment for whom they spoke, was to authorize the 
>CIA program of detention and abuse without explicitly repudiating-or as Bush 
>put it, "clarifying"-the Geneva Conventions.

The senators succeeded in shifting the administration's position in this 
regard, but the changes they obtained were almost entirely cosmetic. The 
substance of the administration's bill remains essentially intact.

"We proposed a more direct approach to bringing clarification," Dan Bartlett, 
counselor to the president, said on Thursday. "This one is more of the scenic 
route, but it gets us there."

In a fairly blunt assessment of the agreement, the Washington Post 
editorialized Friday, under the headline "The Abuse Can Continue:"

"In effect, the agreement means that US violations of international human 
rights law can continue as long as Mr. Bush is president, with Congress' tacit 
assent... Mr. Bush wanted Congress to formally approve these practices and to 
declare them consistent with the Geneva Conventions. It will not. But it will 
not stop him either, if the legislation is passed in the form agreed on 
yesterday. Mr. Bush will go down in history for his embrace of torture and bear 
responsibility for the enormous damage that has caused."

Gutting the Geneva Conventions and the War Crimes Act

The administration had wanted a section that would redefine US obligations 
under Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions. This was in response to a 
Supreme Court ruling in June that declared Bush's military commissions 
unconstitutional and stated that all prisoners in US custody had to be held in 
accordance with Common Article 3, which prohibits "outrages upon personal 
dignity, in particular, humiliating and degrading treatment." The 
administration's original bill would have said, in effect, that the US 
interprets Common Article 3 to allow for the various torture methods used by 
the CIA.

The new version does not include this language. Instead, it circumvents Common 
Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions by amending the US law, called the War 
Crimes Act, which enforces the provisions of the Geneva Conventions and other 
international treaties.

The War Crimes Act currently defines as a war crime any violation of Common 
Article 3. But the new legislation will amend the War Crimes Act to allow for 
virtually any technique short of the infliction of extreme physical pain 
leading to death or permanent debilitating injury. In particular, the act will 
decriminalize methods that inflict pain which is not "extreme," allow the 
impairment of bodily members or organs which is not "protracted," and sanction 
methods that lead to cuts, abrasions or bruises.

In addition, the compromise measure states: "The president has the authority 
for the Untied States to interpret the meaning and application of the Geneva 
Conventions." This gives the president the power to authorize the techniques 
used by the CIA and declare that they are not war crimes.

As Caroline Frederickson, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's 
Washington office noted, "The proposal would make the core protections of 
Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions irrelevant and unenforceable. It 
deliberately provides a 'get-out-of-jail-free card' to the administration's top 
torture officials..."

The compromise also states that "no foreign or international sources of law 
shall supply a basis for a rule or decision in the courts of the United States 
in interpreting the prohibitions enumerated" in the War Crimes Act-thus placing 
the US outside the authority of any international body that might determine 
that the US interpretation is a violation of the Geneva Conventions.

A central aim of these sections-which are retroactive to 1997-is to provide 
immunity to US officials, from Bush on down, who have ordered torture and will 
continue to do so in the future. The Geneva Conventions require signatories to 
prosecute those who order violations to be carried out, as well as those who 
commit them.

Francis Boyle, professor of international law and human rights at the 
University of Illinois, told the World Socialist Web Site that whatever 
language the bill might contain, it cannot override international law. "Any 
member of the United States Congress who votes for this act will be authorizing 
war crimes in violation of the Geneva Conventions of 1949, the Hague 
regulations of 1907, and the US War Crimes Act of 1996," he said. "They will 
therefore become war criminals themselves."

Boyle noted that the Nuremberg trials of Nazi leaders rejected the argument 
that domestic law can be used as an excuse for violating international criminal 
law. "To find a piece of legislation as bad as this one," he added, "you would 
have to go back to the laws passed under Nazi Germany."

Evidence obtained through torture

Along with the authorization of torture, the compromise bill would allow 
evidence obtained through coercion to be introduced in the military commissions 
that the legislation establishes. While the bill nominally bans evidence 
obtained by torture, this is purely a formality since torture is defined so 
narrowly.

Thus, prisoners deemed to be "enemy combatants" can be tortured and "evidence" 
thus obtained can be used in kangaroo military courts to convict and execute 
them, or prosecute other "enemy combatants."

The compromise measure states explicitly that the Geneva Conventions will not 
create any enforceable rights for the individuals under US control. It also 
states that no court will be allowed to hear a habeas corpus or other lawsuit 
that is brought by any "enemy combatant" under US custody. This provision would 
apply retroactively to 2001, and would therefore throw out the hundreds of 
cases brought by Guant?namo Bay detainees that are currently in the courts.

The measure codifies the category of "enemy combatant"-a category that the Bush 
administration has used to justify the holding of prisoners indefinitely and 
without charge.

The denial of due process rights guaranteed by the Constitution is one of the 
most significant aspects of the compromise, since it creates a class of 
prisoners who have no legal rights. Professor Boyle noted that this is one of 
the principal foundations of a totalitarian state. He quoted Hannah Arendt's 
comment in her book, The Origins of Totalitarianism, that "The first essential 
step on the road to total domination is to kill the juridical person in man."

Finally, the bill establishes various procedures for the military commissions. 
The administration conceded some points on the question of secret evidence. The 
administration's version would have allowed such evidence with virtually no 
constraints. The compromise allows for classified information to be withheld, 
but states that "to the extent practicable" the judge must provide an 
unclassified, summarized version of that which is withheld. This provision 
remains in dispute, however, with Republicans in the House of Representatives 
pushing for language that would give freer reign for secret evidence.

The agreement also allows the use of hearsay evidence beyond what is admissible 
in normal military courts-martial hearings.

The secret evidence compromise was modified under the pressure of the 
Republican senators, particularly Lindsey Graham, who argued that the 
administration's version would have great difficulty getting past the Supreme 
Court. The Court ruled in June that aspects of the military commissions 
established by Bush were unconstitutional, including the use of secret evidence.

The largely cosmetic changes to Bush's torture bill contained in the compromise 
measure will do nothing to repair the shattered moral and political credibility 
of the United States around the world. The flouting of international law and 
evisceration of constitutional guarantees flows organically from the nature of 
the imperialist policy of the US government, a policy that is supported by the 
entire political establishment. A policy of war and aggression is inextricably 
bound up with the use of brutal methods and the destruction of democratic 
rights.

It can be stated with certainty that the Democrats will provide whatever votes 
are necessary to get this legislation passed, provided that the Republican 
agreement holds. Throughout the debate, the Democrats have played an utterly 
cowardly and complicit role, sitting on the sidelines while the disagreements 
between the Republicans were worked out.

The Democratic Party leadership has made clear that it will not oppose any of 
the measures implemented by the administration under the pretext of the "war on 
terror" and "national security." Democratic Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid 
signaled his support for the compromise measure worked out between the White 
House and the Senate Republicans, saying, "Five years after September 11, it is 
time to make the tough and smart decisions to give the American people the real 
security they deserve."

 
Francis A. Boyle
Law Building
504 E. Pennsylvania Avenue
Champaign IL 61820 USA
217-333-7954 (voice)
217-244-1478 (fax)
(personal comments only)
 
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