Gen. Taguba:
Accountability for torture does not stop at White House dooor

Andrew Kalloch

http://media.www.hlrecord.org/media/storage/paper609/news/2009/04/16/News/Gen-Taguba.Accountability.For.Torture.Does.Not.Stop.At.White.House.Dooor-3712773.shtml


Major General Antonio Taguba called for an 
independent commission to investigate war crimes 
committed by senior members of the Bush 
Administration in remarks in Ames Courtroom on 
Tuesday, April 14. The event was sponsored by 
Physicians for Human Rights and the Human Rights 
Program at Harvard Law School.

Taguba, who was pressured to resign by the Bush 
Administration in 2007 following the 2004 leak of 
his report detailing abuses by U.S. armed forces 
in Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, declared in the 
preface of the 2008 Physicians for Human Rights 
publication "Broken Laws, Broken Lives," that, 
"there is no longer any doubt as to whether the 
[Bush] administration has committed war crimes. 
The only question that remains to be answered is 
whether those who ordered the use of torture will 
be held to account."

While the Obama Administration has "reaffirmed 
its commitment to valuing human rights and 
international law" by officially closing CIA 
black sites and the detention center at 
Guantanamo Bay, Taguba insisted that "there are a 
lot of stories that have yet to be told."

In an effort to make those stories known, Taguba 
has been travelling the country seeking to foster 
dialogue between human rights advocates and the 
nation's armed forces. According to Taguba, the 
two groups "share a common denominator based on 
ethical considerations of democratic principles." 
Human rights advocates seek to ensure the 
preservation of democratic ideals and U.S. armed 
forces are trained to "provide services in a 
manner that exemplifies America's ideals" and to 
protect America's value system and its' way of 
life, not simply to secure its borders at all 
costs.

Taguba explained that the Army's core 
values-honor, integrity, courage, and selfless 
service-are but one part of a broader set of 
moral foundations upon which the Army operates. 
For example, Taguba declared that the Army is 
required to adhere to international laws, 
including all four Geneva conventions, as well as 
the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and to 
demonstrate "responsibility, accountability, and 
discipline."

Even when soldiers are not in combat, and are 
instead serving the American public and the many 
peoples of the world abroad via merchant shipping 
protection and humanitarian aid, they are 
obliged, Taguba stated, to abide by this strict 
moral code, since their very presence has a 
profound effect on the American image. Despite 
the horrors of combat, Taguba stated 
unequivocally that troops "are not immune or 
exempt from criminal acts, bad behavior, or 
tragedy in their operations."

Just as troops are not immune from 
prosecution-indeed, they must be held accountable 
for their actions-so must senior civilian 
officials be held accountable for policies that 
systematized and legitimized torture and other 
abuses of power by U.S. troops in the War on 
Terror, Taguba stated. If the "torture memos" 
penned by John Yoo, Alberto Gonzales, and David 
Addington, among others, were catalysts for the 
soldiers to engage in criminal acts, as Taguba 
surmised, these officials need to be held 
accountable.

"Abu Ghraib emerged from a structure developed by 
senior officials in the Bush White House and by 
those who thought it was necessary to blindly 
advance the Bush administration's goals," the 
General declared. "Abu Ghraib was not just 
happenstance. It was a morbid consequence of a 
policy that emanated from the Office of Legal 
Counsel and the Justice Department."

According to Taguba, these failures not only 
constitute war crimes, but also have emboldened 
America's enemies abroad, leading to greater 
numbers of American deaths in Iraq.

However, far from being held accountable, senior 
administration officials have quietly ridden off 
into the sunset. Indeed, after seventeen high 
level investigations, army soldiers were signaled 
out for punishment despite presence of evidence 
regarding upper level officials' awareness and 
support. "Over 200 soldiers and officers were 
punished�unfortunately no civilian officials or 
contractors have been punished for their 
involvement," Taguba stated.

Taguba singled out John Yoo, who, as a member of 
the Office of Legal Counsel, co-authored legal 
memoranda that produced, in Taguba's words, 
"despicable torture and abuse." Yoo has not 
expressed remorse for the memos,"

Taguba insisted. Rather, Yoo has only stated that 
he would have spent more time had he known the 
memos would become public.

Responding to those who oppose investigation and 
prosecution of senior officials in the Bush 
Administration whose "actions were supposedly 
made in good conscience in effort to secure 
national security," Taguba answered, "What about 
those soldiers punished, court-martialed, and 
reduced in rank?"

Ultimately, Taguba concluded, investigation of 
the Bush Administration is needed if 
"accountability is not to be just a hollow term." 
"In my opinion accountability is a condition of 
employment. Government leaders who chose to 
accept high level positions of influence ought to 
hold firm and be accountable."
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