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bismi-lLahi-rRahmani-rRahiem
In the Name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful


=== News Update ===


High Court Has Found Bush Guilty of War Crimes

This Can't Be Happening!

Saturday, July 1, 2006



Largely missed in all the coverage of the Supreme Court's landmark ruling 
in the Hamdan v. Rumsfeld case was the establishment by the court majority 
that all Bush administration claims to the contrary, the Geneva Convention 
rules regarding captured prisoners apply to the captives taken not only in 
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, but in the so-called War on Terror.

What has been largely missed is the clear point that the Supreme Court has 
thus now declared that for the past five years, Bush and his gang of 
war-mongers, including Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense 
Donald Rumsfeld, Secretary of State and former National Security Adviser 
Condoleezza Rice, former Attorney General Donald Rumsfeld and current 
Attorney General and former White House Chief Counsel Alberto Gonzales, and 
many others in the administration, have been guilty of violating the Third 
Convention on treatment of prisoners of war. They are also, therefore, in 
violation of federal law, which back in 1996 adopted that convention as 
part of the U.S. criminal code.

In other words, the whole top administration, from Commander in Chief 
George W. Bush on down, is guilty of war crimes. The punishment for 
committing war crimes ranges from a lengthy jail sentence to, in the event 
the crimes in question caused the death of any prisoners being held, to 
death. And there have been many deaths among those who have been held and 
tortured on orders of the administration--most recently the three suicides 
at Guantanamo, which included on man who had only three days earlier been 
targeted for release (but who never learned this because government's 
secrecy and tight security prevented his attorneys at the Center for 
Constitutional Rights from getting the news to him).

Interestingly, Gonzales actually cautioned Bush about this possibility. In 
a memo to the president, written on January 25, 2002 when he was still 
White House counsel, Gonzales warned prophetically that the U.S. adoption 
of the Third Geneva Convention as a part of the U.S. criminal code in 1996 
made violation of the convention a "war crime" under U.S. law, which he 
said was defined as "any grave breach" of the Third Convention such as 
"outrages against personal dignity." He noted that this law applied whether 
or not a detained person qualified for POW status, and added that 
punishment for violation of the law "include the death penalty." But then 
he went on to say Bush could "substantially reduce" his risk of domestic 
criminal prosecution under the War Crimes Act by making a presidential 
determination that the Third Geneva Convention "does not apply to al Qaeda 
and the Taliban."

Clearly, Gonzales here was behaving like a mob lawyer, not like an honest 
counselor. He was telling the president not what was right and legal, but 
how to dodge prosecution.

In Bush's case, this crime calls for his impeachment, and for his 
subsequent prosecution as a war criminal. In the case of his subordinates 
and abettors, it calls for criminal indictments.

Naturally, we cannot expect to see indictments issue from the Attorney 
General's Office, particularly given Gonzales' own complicity and personal 
culpability on the war crimes charge. Conceivably, I suppose, some career 
prosecutor like Patrick Fitzgerald, who has been given wide authority in 
his special counsel role, could bring charges, though this seems highly 
unlikely. Charges could also be brought by another country whose laws 
permit such extraterritoriality: Germany or Spain for example.

Meanwhile, we who value America's once elevated standing in the world as a 
supporter and author of the Geneva Conventions, should begin a campaign to 
press the Congress to consider a bill of impeachment against Bush for war 
crimes.

There are, as Barbara Olshansky and I explain in our new book The Case for 
Impeachment (which includes a copy of the above Gonzales memo in an 
appendix), many important reasons to impeach the president. Surely, 
however, the deliberate policy of involving the military in the commission 
of war crimes--torture, kidnapping, denial of access to some process of 
challenge the justice of their detention--is among the worst of all of 
those crimes against the Constitution.

The blood of war crime victims is on Bush's hands, and the hands of his 
henchmen, but unless we the people act, and unless the Congress acts, to 
call them to account, it will ultimately be on all of our hands.

source:
http://www.uruknet.info/?p=m24326&hd=0&size=1&l=e

===


-muslim voice-
______________________________________
BECAUSE YOU HAVE THE RIGHT TO KNOW  

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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