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http://www.wsws.org/articles/2004/jun2004/tort-j17.shtml
Washington Post publishes memo implicating White House in torture of
prisoners
By Joseph Kay
17 June 2004

A Justice Department memo from August of 2002 leaked to the Washington Post
and published by that newspaper on June 13 constitutes prima facie evidence
that the US government adopted a policy of torture in connection with its
so-called "war on terrorism" and its operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The memo gives the lie to the official claim that responsibility for the use
of torture against Iraqi prisoners held by the US at Abu Ghraib prison rests
with a few "bad apples" among rank-and-file military guards. The torture of
prisoners has been carried out with the knowledge and approval of officials
at the highest levels of the Bush administration.

White House officials decided to employ torture with full knowledge that
they were violating longstanding and specific prohibitions against such
methods under both international and US law.

The memo was written for Alberto Gonzales, the counsel for the president,
and prepared by officials in the Justice Department. On Sunday night the
Washington Post posted on its web site a draft version dated August 1, 2002
and entitled "Re: Standards of Conduct for Interrogation under 18 USC
Sections 2340-2340A." It is signed by Assistant Attorney General Jay Bybee.
According to the Post, it was commissioned by the CIA. But the fact that it
is addressed to Gonzales links it directly to President George W. Bush.

The memo specifically addresses legislation (Sections 2340 and 2340A of
Title 18 of the United States Code) adopted by the US government in 1994 in
accordance with the Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman and
Degrading Treatment or Punishment (CAT). CAT is an international treaty
negotiated under the Reagan administration that calls for all signatories to
implement laws banning torture.

The purpose of the memo is to concoct a legal pretext for circumventing the
anti-torture laws and provide the administration with a degree of legal
cover for actions that are defined under international law as war crimes.
The August 1, 2002 memo was accompanied by another Justice Department memo
advancing the specious argument that individuals alleged by the US to be
members of Al Qaeda or other terrorist groups are not covered by the Geneva
Conventions.

When news of the August, 2002 memo first emerged last week, Attorney General
John Ashcroft, in testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, flatly
refused to provide committee members with copies. The fact that the memo was
leaked to the Washington Post and the newspaper decided to publish it is an
indication of the enormous divisions that have emerged within the state
apparatus and the Bush administration itself over the government's foreign
policy in general, and the occupation of Iraq in particular.


An assertion of presidential dictatorship

The authors of the memo set out to accomplish two goals. First, they seek to
define torture in the most restricted manner possible, thereby allowing a
wide variety of actions traditionally held to be violations of international
laws against torture. Second, they seek to provide a blanket rationale for
employing any and all methods deemed useful for extracting information from
alleged terrorist detainees. In this connection, the Justice Department
lawyers assert that US laws banning torture may be unconstitutional. They
make this assertion by claiming that the US president, as
commander-in-chief, wields unlimited powers in time of war.

The implications of this pseudo-legal and pseudo-constitutional claim cannot
be overstated. It implies not only unlimited powers of the executive branch
to wage war abroad, but also the right of the president to assume
dictatorial powers at home-in utter disregard of constitutional safeguards
for civil liberties and constitutional provisions for legislative and
judicial oversight of the executive branch.

Given that the government, with the support of both the Democratic and
Republican parties, has declared the US to be engaged in a global "war on
terror" of indeterminate duration, the assertion of untrammeled war-time
presidential powers is tantamount to the assertion of a permanent
presidential dictatorship.


A tortured defense of torture

According to the memo, even the most inhumane forms of mental and physical
abuse do not rise to the level of "torture." One wonders whether the authors
of the memo would be so pettifogging in their legalistic arguments if they
were subjected to the methods that they seek to whitewash.

They write: "Physical pain amounting to torture must be equivalent in
intensity to the pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as organ
failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death. For purely mental
pain or suffering to amount to torture under Section 2340, it must result in
significant psychological harm of significant duration, e.g., lasting for
months or even years."

According to the memo, this conclusion comes from an analysis of the word
"severe" in the language of Section 2340A, which defines torture as "an act
committed by a person acting under the color of law specifically intended to
inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering."

Since the statute does not define "severe," the authors turn to legislative
context, citing a use of the word from legislation governing...health
benefits! Here we find that severe implies "(1) serious jeopardy, (2)
serious impairment of bodily functions, or (3) serious dysfunction of any
bodily organ or part."

The memo states, "Although these statutes address a substantially different
subject from Section 2340, they are nonetheless helpful for understanding
what constitutes severe physical pain...Such damage must rise to the level
of death, organ failure, or the permanent impairment of a significant bodily
function."

According to the memo, even the infliction of severe physical pain does not
constitute a violation of the law, which, the authors claim, requires that
the infliction of such pain be the "specific intent" of the individual
engaging in the act. "If the defendant acted knowing that severe pain or
suffering was reasonably likely to result from his action, but no more, he
would have acted only with general intent...As a theoretical matter,
therefore, knowledge alone that a particular result is certain to occur does
not constitute specific intent."

With regard to mental torture, the memo notes that according to the law it
applies only to cases involving "prolonged mental harm," which is caused by
or results from one of four specific acts listed in the statute.

The following extraordinary phrasing sums up the tenor of the memo as a
whole: "A defendant must specifically intend to cause prolonged mental harm
for the defendant to have committed torture. It could be argued that a
defendant needs to have specific intent only to commit the predicate acts
that give rise to prolonged mental harm...We believe that this approach is
contrary to the text of the statute. The statute requires that the defendant
specifically intend to inflict severe mental pain or suffering. Because the
statute requires this mental state [intention] with respect to the
infliction of severe mental pain, and because it expressly defines severe
mental pain in terms of prolonged mental harm, that mental state [intention]
must be present with respect to prolonged mental harm."

In other words, torture is not torture if the specific intent is merely to,
for example, administer mind-altering substances that destroy the individual
's personality. The torturer must actually specifically intend to inflict
prolonged mental harm. If the person committing the act has a "good faith
belief" that such harm will not result, then his actions do not constitute
torture.

The purpose of these and other sophistries-in the course of which the
authors expound on the meaning of "other," "disrupt," "profound," and
"immanent"-is obvious: to increase the arsenal of legal defenses against
charges of torture and make it difficult to prosecute the perpetrators.

The authors note that while CAT calls on signatories to implement
legislation prohibiting torture, it only urges countries to take steps to
prevent "other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment" and does not call for
a ban on these actions. Since torture is only the most "severe" form of such
treatment, the memo concludes that neither the treaty nor the statute
prohibits a wide array of possible actions. Most of the actions depicted in
the photographs taken at the Abu Ghraib prison would not be considered
torture under the definition provided in the memo.

The memo then proceeds to argue that even where the perpetrator commits
actions sufficiently heinous to qualify as "torture," there are a number of
legal arguments that can be mustered in the torturer's defense. On these
issues, the memo speaks for itself:

"Even if an interrogation method arguably were to violate Section 2340A, the
statute would be unconstitutional if it impermissibly encroached on the
President's constitutional power to conduct a military campaign...Any effort
to apply Section 2340A in a manner that interferes with the President's
direction of such core war matters as the detention and interrogation of
enemy combatants thus would be unconstitutional... Congress may no more
regulate the President's ability to detain and interrogate enemy combatants
than it may regulate his ability to direct troop movements on the
battlefield."

Further, the memo argues, "Foremost among the objectives committed to the
trust by the Constitution is the security of the nation. As Hamilton
explained in arguing for the Constitution's adoption, because 'the
circumstances which may affect the public safety' are not 'reducible within
certain determinate limits, it must be admitted, as a necessary consequence,
that there can be no limitation of that authority, which is to provide for
the defense and protection of the community, in any matter essential to its
efficacy.'"

And later: "As we have made clear in other opinions involving the war
against al Qaeda, the nation's right to self-defense has been triggered by
the events of September 11. If a government defendant were to harm an enemy
combatant during an interrogation in a manner that might arguably violate
Section 2340A, he would be doing so in order to prevent further attacks on
the Untied States by the al Qaeda network. In that case, we believe that he
could argue that his actions were justified by the executive branch's
constitutional authority to protect the nation from attack."

These are extraordinary arguments. According to the Justice Department,
Congress can enact no legislation that would limit the discretion of the
president in the prosecution of war. Since the country is supposedly at war
as a consequence of the attacks of September 11-though no declaration of war
has been enacted and there is no indication of precisely who the enemy is-no
restrictions are permitted on the way the president chooses to handle
individuals captured in the course of this war. If the torture-or, for that
matter, slaughter-of prisoners is deemed by the president to be necessary to
advance the war effort, neither the Congress nor the people have any right
to oppose him.

In fact, the qualification that the country is at war and that the prisoners
are enemy combatants is entirely meaningless, since the administration has
delegated to itself the right to determine when the country is at war and
who constitutes the enemy. There is, in principle, nothing to prevent the
president from ordering the seizure and torture or murder of American
citizens, on the grounds that they are "enemy combatants." In fact, the
government has already asserted its right to seize US citizens and imprison
them for life, without bringing charges or allowing them access to lawyers
or the courts, in the cases of Jose Padilla and Yasser Hamdi.

The publication of this memo further demolishes the attempts of the
political and media establishment to portray the war in Iraq as a struggle
to "liberate" the Iraqi people and "democratize" the Middle East. The real
character of U.S. foreign policy is summed up in the means the government is
prepared to utilize to accomplish its aims: torture and criminality.

Those engaged in the planning of these operations are fully aware of the
illegality of their actions. This is precisely why such pseudo-legal memos
are necessary. Moreover, the emergence of such memos highlights the
significance of the refusal of the US government to join international legal
bodies such as the International Criminal Court. Those who wield power know
precisely that their actions fall under the category of war crimes, for
which they can be prosecuted.

Those who are carrying out these policies are war criminals and should be
tried as such.





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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substanceâ??not soap-boxingâ??please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'â??with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright fraudsâ??is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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