The United States of Barbarism
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
DIGG THIS
The U.S. Senate
is cutting a deal with President Bush to make America a banana republic.
Last week, three senators reached an agreement with the White House
that will de facto permit the CIA to continue torturing people around
the world. And the deal will prevent anyone including Bush
administration officials from being held liable for the torture.
This is latest
sign that our elected representatives in Washington believe that
the federal government deserves absolute power over everyone in
the world. Former Secretary of State Colin Powell warned recently
that Bushs efforts to gut the Geneva Conventions would cause
the world to "doubt the moral basis of our fight against terrorism.
But more important,
the Senate-White House torture deal should cause Americans to doubt
the moral basis of their entire government. After 9/11, many Bush
administration officials seemed determined to use any and every
means to bludgeon people suspected of terrorism or terrorist intent.
The Justice Department delivered to the White House a memo in August
2002 explaining why Bush was not bound by the War Crimes Act or
the Anti-Torture Act.
The memo began
by largely redefining torture out of existence. It then explained
why even if someone died during torture, the torturer might not
be guilty if he felt the torture was necessary to prevent some worse
evil. The memo concluded by revealing that the president has the
right to order torture because he is above the law, at least during
wartime (even if Congress has not declared war).
The Justice
Department declared that the president may effectively exempt government
officials from federal criminal law, noting that Congress
cannot compel the President to prosecute outcomes taken pursuant
to the Presidents own constitutional authority. If Congress
could do so, it could control the Presidents authority through
the manipulation of federal criminal law.
The memos
absolutism would have brought a smile to despots everywhere: As
the Supreme Court has recognized ... the President enjoys complete
discretion in the exercise of his Commander-in-Chief authority and
in conducting operations against hostile forces.... we will not
read a criminal statute as infringing on the Presidents ultimate
authority in these areas.
Thus, the commander-in-chief
label automatically swallows up the rest of the Constitution. Yet,
as Yale Law School Dean Harold Koh observed, If the president
has commander-in-chief power to commit torture, he has the power
to commit genocide, to sanction slavery, to promote apartheid, to
license summary execution.
This is the
doctrine that the Senate-White House deal largely codifies. It will
be up to the president to declare which interrogation methods U.S.
agents can use almost regardless of the Geneva Conventions.
It will be up to the president to decree who will face rough
interrogation.
The details
of the torture deal vivify how our politicians no longer give a
darn about maintaining even a pretense of due process. The agreement
will permit the use of coerced confessions in military tribunals
turning the judicial clock back to the 1600s. The Washington
Post noted that the agreement permits defense attorneys
to challenge the use of hearsay information obtained through coercive
interrogations in distant countries only if they can prove it
is unreliable. Thus, there is a presumption of correctness
to whatever accusation is bludgeoned out of people in secret prisons
around the world.
And it will
be almost impossible to disprove an accusation when a defense lawyer
is not allowed to question or perhaps even know who
made the charge.
But that is
fair enough for the U.S. Congress.
The
New York Times noted that the agreement would impose
new legal standards that it forbids the courts to enforce.
Thus, it will be impossible for the vast majority of detainees at
Guantanamo to challenge their detention.
The unverified
accusations of U.S. government officials will still be the highest
law of the land. The habeas corpus rights that go back to the Magna
Charta of 1215 will be null and void under the agreement for many,
if not most, detainees.
The
torture scandal shows what happens when politicians and political
appointees are permitted to redefine barbarism out of existence.
If the government can effectively claim a right to torture, then
all other limits on government power are practically irrelevant.
What would it take to make the public acquiesce to the torture of
Americans? Would simply applying an odious label (such
as cult member at Waco, or Muslim with John
Walker Lindh) to the victims be sufficient?
September
26, 2006
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of the just-released Attention
Deficit Democracy, The
Bush Betrayal, and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil. He serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright
© 2006 The Future of Freedom Foundation
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