In a Confessing State of Mind
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Karen Greenberg
by Tom Engelhardt and
Karen Greenberg
DIGG THIS
An early impulse
of Bush administration officials after the attacks of September
11, 2001 was to take off "the
gloves," or, as CIA Director George Tenet put it (so Ron Suskind
tell us in his book, The
One Percent Doctrine), "the shackles." Those were the "shackles"
that they believed had been placed on the imperial presidency after
Richard Nixon came so close to committing the constitutional coup
d'état that we have come to call Watergate, but that involved
an illegal war (in Cambodia), illegal wiretapping, illegal break-ins,
robberies, black-bag jobs and so many other crossing-the-line events.
That was the moment that Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and all the
Bush administration advocates of a "unitary
executive theory" wanted to return us to the impeachable
moment.
The neocons
and their patrons, especially our Vice President, wanted to unchain
executive power, but that wasn't all. They weren't about to waste
perfectly good shackles. Another impulse of theirs after the 9/11
attacks was to capture or kidnap,
detain, secretly
imprison, shackle, and torture their enemies, picked
up on battlefields as well as peaceful city streets around the
world. The accumulation of leaked documentation from their secret
world has long indicated that they had torture
on the brain. The urge to institute a torture regime had, perhaps,
less to do with torture itself than with the knowledge that if you
somehow gained the right to torture, you could gain the right to
do just about anything; you could, in short, unchain the presidency
in a major way.
Perhaps the
most striking thing about Bush administration officialdom was that,
before they reached for their waterboards, they reached for their
dictionaries; and so, out of their world of secret imprisonment,
humiliation, and pain emerged an unending stream of twisted definitions
of otherwise common terms in classified but quickly leaked documents.
Karen Greenberg, executive director of NYU's Center for Law and
Security and co-author of The
Torture Papers (which collected all those grim classified
memorials to these last years of excess), now considers the most
secret impulse of all revealed by this sordid collection of documents
the impulse to confess. ~ Tom
Impunity
and Immunity:
The Bush Administration Enters the Confessional
By Karen
Greenberg
Confession,
the time-honored, soul-soothing last resort for those caught in
error, may not survive the Bush administration. It has, after
all, long made a mockery of such revelations by manufacturing
an entire lexicon of coercive
techniques to elicit often non-existent "truths" that would
justify its detention policies. And yet, without being coerced
in any way, administration officials have been confessing continually
these past years in documents that may someday play a part
in their own confrontation with justice.
The Bush
administration trail of confessions can be found in the most unlikely
of places the very memos and policy statements in which
its officials were redefining reality in their search for the
perfect (and perfectly grim) extractive methods that would give
them the detainee confessions they so eagerly sought. These were
the very documents that led first to Gitmo, then to Abu Ghraib,
and finally deep into the hidden universe of pain that was their
global network of secret prisons.
Strangely
enough, the administration confessional was open for business
within weeks of the attacks of September 11th, 2001. It could
be found wrapped in persistent assertions of immunity, assertions
that none of their acts to come could ever be brought before the
bar of justice or the oversight of anyone. The first
of these documents was issued on September 25th, 2001. Deputy
Assistant Attorney General John
Yoo, writing for the Office of Legal Counsel, laid out the
reasons for the President of the United States to assume broad
executive powers in the war on terror. The last footnote of the
memo declared, "In the exercise of his plenary power to use military
force, the President's decisions are for him alone and are unreviewable."
This notion
of unreviewable behavior, then still buried in the land of footnotes,
has characterized the administration's general stance on its war
on terror policies. On January 9th, 2002, just as Guantanamo opened
for business as a detention facility supposedly beyond the review
of American courts, John Yoo and fellow Office of Legal Counsel
member Robert Delahunty explained why a breach with international
law would not constitute a crime for the Bush administration.
In their secret memo, the United States, through the Justice Department,
was to exempt itself ahead of time from the laws it was about
to break. In essence, it was to give itself the equivalent of
a hall pass for future illegal activities in the new policies
and practices of detention.
The memo
contorted the Geneva Conventions into a pretzel of excuses for
America's impunity on the matter of war crimes; it offered tortured
reasoning about the inapplicability of Common
Article Three of the Conventions guaranteeing humane
treatment during armed conflict to those individuals who are not
engaged in battle (non-combatants, prisoners-of-war, those who
have lain down their arms, etc.) to the conflicts then
at hand. Thus, the Taliban was redefined not as a state but as
a failed state; Al Qaeda became a non-state actor; the Conventions,
they now claimed, were created largely for civil wars, not for
"other types of internal armed conflict." As the memo asserted
over and over again, "As a constitutional matter, the President
has the power to consider performance of some or all of the obligations
of the United States under the Conventions suspended."
In this
way, any captives from our Afghan War were redefined as possible
subjects for utterly lawless behavior, while the President was
given the right not to follow international law. They put the
matter this way: "The President could justifiably exercise his
constitutional authority over treaties by regarding the Geneva
Conventions as suspended in relation to Afghanistan."
Foreshadowing
the infamous "torture
memo" of 2002 in which the same group of advisors redefined
torture, nearly casting it out of legal existence, this early
opinion stated that American officials could only be held accountable
in the following circumstances: "causing great suffering or serious
bodily injury to POWs, killing or torturing them, depriving them
of access to a fair trial, or forcing them to serve in the Armed
Forces." The memo concluded with what would become the legal mantra
of the Bush administration the assertion of immunity, stating
that "customary international law has no binding legal effect
on either the President or the military because it is not federal
law."
As Guantanamo
received its first planeloads of prisoners, Alberto Gonzales,
then counsel to the President, and William J. Haynes, counsel
to the Department of Defense, took the idea of administration
immunity for war crimes to a new level. They used their high offices
to clear the way for the substandard treatment of detainees. Trusted
with the justice and safety of the nation, they both concurred
with their colleagues at the Office of Legal Counsel: "We conclude
that customary international law does not bind the President or
the US Armed Forces in their decisions concerning the detention
conditions of al Qaeda and Taliban prisoners."
Though confidently
proposing ways that any future prosecution for war crimes could
be avoided, these memo-style declarations of immunity proved insufficiently
comforting to an administration that had, by its own implicit
admission, chosen to take a giant step into realms outside anyone's
previous definition of the law.
They soon
grasped a simple point: Declaring themselves immune was one thing;
ensuring immunity, quite another. To fully protect their clients
the President of the United States as well as high Pentagon
and CIA officials administration lawyers confronted the
potential problem of domestic legal constraints on the mistreatment
of detainees.
Gonzales
tried to strengthen
the assurances of Bush's legal team by concluding that declaring
exemption from the Geneva Conventions in turn "substantially reduces
the threat of domestic criminal prosecution." Attorney General
John Ashcroft concluded that the President's determination in
detention matters "was fully discretionary and will not be reviewed
by the federal courts." Ashcroft made the stakes clear:
If the prisoners in U.S. hands were considered prisoners of war,
American law would "not accord American officials the same protection
from legal consequences." Thus it became doubly crucial to redefine
them not as POWs but as "enemy combatants."
To the Bush
administration, words, it seemed, were everything. And if the
laws, domestic and international, depended upon definitions, then
the definitions of words would simply have to change across the
board. So it was unavoidable that the first casualty in the President's
Global War on Terror, which also became his global war for immunity,
would be language itself. The captives who arrived at Gitmo were
not to be called prisoners, nor was the facility itself to be
referred to as a prison; it was a "detention facility" and the
inmates were "detainees" and "enemy combatants." If other words
were used prison, prisoner, prisoner-of-war then
high officials and members of the Armed Forces would not, as Ashcroft
explained, be immune from the law.
In the same
vein, torture was to be banned from the premises (but only as
a word); instead coercive techniques that for centuries plainly
came under the rubric of torture were relabeled "counter-resistant
coercive interrogation techniques." The infamous "torture memo"
of August, 2002 drew narrow parameters around the definition of
torture, which was now to be limited to "serious physical injury
such as death." Repeatedly, the memo asserted that other methods
"do not amount to torture." And it essentially turned the very
definition of torture over to the torturer. Abetted here as elsewhere
by the media, the Bush administration also successfully de-legitimized
the statements of the detainees themselves, consigning them to
the trash heap of history all of them were the accounts
of well-drilled liars, false accusations inspired by Al Qaeda
training manuals.
And yet,
even reclassifying words and redrawing the lines of the law did
not sufficiently assuage their fears and here's where the
hidden confessional element of all this crept into play. They
were clearly hounded by what can only be called a kind of lurking
institutional conscience, a sense that the acts already being
committed in their name (or future ones) might someday be declared
illegal under laws and agreements they were trying unilaterally
to abrogate, resulting in prosecutions.
So, to ensure
that their legal reasoning and linguistic demands would hold sway
in the policy world, Bush administration officials found they had
to go even further. They determined to find a way to control the
environment of detention as completely as possible. First, of course,
they chose an American base in Cuba to be the jewel in the crown
of the detention system they were putting in place globally because
it seemed to lie "in legal limbo" outside any international or domestic
legal system. Second, "ghost prisons," some in facilities borrowed
from allies known to employ torture themselves, were established
so that the techniques for extracting confessions, even though no
longer defined as torture, could not be seen or known about. Third,
just to be sure about things, the United States launched a campaign
to free itself from any future international prosecution for war
crimes under the auspices of the new International Criminal Court
(ICC). In return for money and services, after cases of remarkable
diplomatic arm-twisting, 102 countries agreed, one by one, to an
American demand for immunity from future ICC prosecution.
Then, the
Bush administration charged ahead, convinced that it had addressed
its legal liabilities and given itself that eternal hall pass.
In truth, however, it had been confessing all along, laying out
a remarkable record of tacit admission to criminal activity. The
administration had, for example, informed the military commanders
at Gitmo that they should consider themselves to be "guided by
the Geneva Conventions but not bound by them." At Guantanamo and
Abu Ghraib, interrogation needs took precedence over matters of
detention and it was all on the official record.
The administration's
urge to claim immunity, which is, in essence, the confession of
crimes about to be committed (or already committed), has not waned
over the years. If anything, it has gotten stronger. Only recently,
for instance, John Yoo, now a law professor at the University
of California, Berkeley, insisted
once again that extralegal measures were necessary in the war
on terror. "Is a second [9/11] attack," he wrote, "an acceptable
price to pay for rejecting coercive interrogation?" He then suggested,
among other ways of avoiding prosecution for such acts, a possibility
that may loom ever larger before George W. Bush's second term
in office is over the issuing of presidential pardons.
The President
has weighed in aggressively on the issue as well, publicly embracing
the idea of immunity. Twice, in his not-to-be-overlooked September
6th speech on the existence of the CIA "program" for "high-value
detainees," the President insisted upon immunity for those involved
in detention and interrogation. In this speech, in which he announced
his intention to submit the Military Commissions Bill to Congress,
he explained, "[S]ome believe our military and intelligence personnel
involved in capturing and questioning terrorists could now be
at risk of prosecution under the War Crimes Act simply
for doing their jobs in a thorough and professional way. This,"
he declared, "is unacceptable." Moments later he reiterated his
firm opposition to any such prosecutions. "I'm asking that Congress
make it clear that captured terrorists cannot use the Geneva Conventions
as a basis to sue our personnel in courts in U.S. courts.
The men and women who protect us should not have to fear lawsuits
filed by terrorists because they're doing their jobs."
What more
could a prosecutor want than a trail of implicit confessions,
consistent with one another, increasingly brazen over time, and
leading right into the Oval Office? For five years now, the Bush
administration has given itself an inviolable command: declare
immunity for what you have done, what you are doing, and what
you are about to do. When the President's Military Commission
Bill did pass, its many astounding "reforms" actually codified
immunity retroactively for a range of abuses against detainees.
To overlook
the trail of confessions that is part and parcel of the administration's
torture narrative is to perform an act of extraordinary rendition
not just on the truth but also on the importance of confessions
themselves. Professional interrogators, priests, psychiatrists,
and others who deal with confession regularly say that people
normally want to talk, that they want to tell you their story,
that confession is a deep and satisfying part of all our lives.
In
the case of the Bush administration, it is the documents themselves
that seem to want to confess, that are bursting with the desire
to talk, to tell the story of these last years of illegality. Americans,
and the Congress they have just elected, should take heed. The time
has come, after five years, to restore language, law, and accountability
to the American ethos by insisting that declarations of immunity
be seen for what they are: Confessions about actions that are both
reviewable and unpardonable.
December
9, 2006
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Karen
J. Greenberg is the Executive Director of the Center for Law and
Security at the NYU School of Law and is the co-editor of The
Torture Papers: The Road to Abu Ghraib. She also edited The
Torture Debate in America.
Copyright
© 2006 Karen J. Greenberg
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