They can't
help themselves. They want to confess.
How else
to explain the torture memorandums that continue to flow out of
the inner sancta of this administration, the most recent of which
were evidently leaked
to the New York Times. Those two, from the Alberto Gonzales
Justice Department, were written in 2005 and recommitted the administration
to the torture techniques it had been pushing for years. As the
Times noted, the first of those memorandums, from February
of that year, was "an expansive endorsement of the harshest interrogation
techniques ever used by the Central Intelligence Agency." The
second "secret opinion" was issued as Congress moved to outlaw
"cruel, inhuman, and degrading" treatment (not that such acts
weren't already against U.S. and international law). It
brazenly "declared that none of the C.I.A. interrogation methods
violated that standard"; and, the Times assured us, "the
2005 Justice Department opinions remain in effect, and their legal
conclusions have been confirmed by several more recent memorandums."
All of these
memorandums, in turn, were written years after John
Yoo's infamous "torture
memo" of August 2002 and a host of other grim documents on
detention, torture, and interrogation had already been leaked
to the public, along with graphic FBI emailed observations of
torture and abuse at Guantanamo, those "screen savers" from Abu
Ghraib, and so much other incriminating evidence. In other words,
in early 2005 when that endorsement of "the harshest interrogation
techniques" was being written, its authors could hardly have avoided
knowing that it, too, would someday become part of the public
record.
But, it
seems, they couldn't help themselves. Torture, along with repetitious,
pretzled "legal" justifications for doing so, were bones that
administration officials from the President, Vice President,
and Secretary
of Defense on down just couldn't resist gnawing on again
and again. So, what we're dealing with is an obsession, a fantasy
of empowerment, utterly irrational in its intensity, that's gripped
this administration. None of the predictable
we're shocked! we're shocked! editorial responses to the Times
latest revelations begin to account for this.
Torture
as the Royal Road to Commander-in-Chief Power
So let's
back up a moment and consider the nature of the torture controversy
in these last years. In a sense, the Bush administration has confronted
a strange policy conundrum. Its compulsive urge to possess the
power to detain without oversight and to wield torture as a tool
of interrogation has led it, however unexpectedly, into what can
only be called a confessional stance. The result has been what
it feared most: the creation of an exhausting, if not exhaustive,
public record of the criminal inner thinking of the most secretive
administration in our history.
Let's recall
that, in the wake of the attacks of September 11, 2001, the administration's
top officials had an overpowering urge to "take
the gloves off" (instructions sent from Secretary of Defense
Rumsfeld's office directly
to the Afghan battlefield), to "unshackle" the CIA. They were
in a rush to release a commander-in-chief "unitary executive,"
untrammeled by the restrictions they associated with the fall
of President Richard Nixon and with the Watergate era. They wanted
to abrogate the Geneva Conventions (parts of which Alberto Gonzales,
then White House Council and companion-in-arms to the President,
declared "quaint"
and "obsolete" in 2002). They were eager to develop their own
categories of imprisonment that freed them from all legal constraints,
as well as their own secret, offshore prison system in which their
power would be total. All of this went to the heart of their sense
of entitlement, their belief that such powers were their political
birthright. The last thing they wanted to do was have this all
happen in secret and with full deniability. Thus, Guantanamo.
That prison
complex was to be the public face of their right to do anything.
Perched on an American base in Cuba just beyond the reach of The
Law American-leased but not court-overseen soil the new
prison was to be the proud symbol of their expansive power. It
was also to be the public face of a new, secret regime of punishment
that would quickly spread around the world into the torture
chambers of despotic regimes in places like Egypt and Syria, onto
American bases like the island fastness of Diego Garcia in the
Indian Ocean, onto U.S. Navy and other ships floating in who knew
which waters, into the former
prisons of the old Soviet Empire, and into a growing network
of American detention centers in Afghanistan
and Iraq.
So, when
those first shots of prisoners, in
orange jumpsuits, manacled and blindfolded, entering Guantanamo
were released, no one officially howled (though the grim, leaked
shots
of those prisoners being
transported to Guantanamo were another matter). After all,
they wanted the world to know just how powerful this administration
was powerful enough to redefine the terms of detention, imprisonment,
and interrogation to the point of committing acts that traditionally
were abhorred and ruled illegal by humanity and by U.S. law (even
if sometimes committed anyway).
Though certain
administration officials undoubtedly believed that "harsh interrogation
techniques" would produce reliable information, this can't account
for the absolute fascination with torture that gripped them, as
well as assorted pundits and talking heads (and then, through
"24"
and other TV shows and movies, Americans in general). In search
of a world where they could do anything, they reached instinctively
for torture as a symbol. After all, was there any more striking
way to remove those "gloves" or "unshackle" a presidency? If you
could stake a claim to the right to torture, then you could stake
a claim to do just about anything.
Think of
it this way: If Freud believed that dreams were the royal road
to the individual unconscious, then the top officials of the Bush
administration believed torture to be the royal road to their
ultimate dream of unconstrained power, what John Yoo in his "torture
memo" referred to as "the Commander-in-Chief Power."
It was via
Guantanamo that they meant to announce the arrival of this power
on planet Earth. They were proud of it. And that prison complex
was to function as their bragging rights. Their message was clear
enough: In this world of ours, democracy would indeed run rampant
and a vote of one would, in every case, be considered a majority.
The Crimes
Are in the Definitions
This, then,
was one form of confession a much desired one. George W. Bush,
Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and their subordinates (with few
exceptions) wished to affirm their position as directors of the
planet's "sole superpower," intent as they were on creating a
Pentagon-led Pax Americana abroad and a Rovian Pax Republicana
at home. But there was another, seldom noted form of confession
at work.
As if to
fit their expansive sense of their own potential powers, it seems
that these officials, and the corps of lawyers that accompanied
them, had expansive, gnawing fears. Given this cast of characters,
you can't talk about a collective "guilty conscience," but there
was certainly an ongoing awareness that what they were doing contravened
normal American and global standards of legality; that their acts,
when it came to detention and torture, might be judged illegal;
and that those who committed or ordered such acts might
someday, somehow, actually be brought before a court of law to
account for them. These fears, by the way, were usually pinned
on
low-level operatives and interrogators, who were indeed fearful
of the obvious: that they had no legal leg to stand on when it
came to kidnapping terror suspects, disappearing them, and subjecting
them to a remarkably wide range of acts of torture and abuse,
often in deadly combination over long periods of time.
Perhaps
Bush's men (and women) feared that even a triumphantly successful
commander-in-chief presidency might à la the Pinochet regime
in Chile have its limits in time. Perhaps they simply sensed
an essential contradiction that lay at the very heart of their
position: The urge to take pride in their "accomplishments," to
assert their powers, and to claim bragging rights for redefining
what was legal could also be seen as the urge to confess (if matters
took a wrong turn as, in the case of the Bush administration,
they always have). And so, along with the pride, along with the
kidnappings, the new-style imprisonment, the acts of torture (and,
in some cases, murder),
the pretzled documents began to pour out of the administration
each a tortured extremity of bizarre legalisms (as with Yoo's
August 2002 document, which essentially managed to reposition
torture as something that existed mainly in the mind of, and could
only be defined by, the torturer himself); each was but another
example of legalisms following upon and directed by desire. (Yoo
himself was reportedly
known by Attorney General John Ashcroft as Dr. Yes, "for his seeming
eagerness to give the White House whatever legal justifications
it desired.") Each, in the end, might also be read as a confession
of wrongdoing.
What made
all this so strange was not just the "tortured" nature of the
"torture memo" (just rejected by the
new attorney general nominee as "worse than a sin, it was
a mistake"), but the repetitious nature of these dismantling documents
which, with the help of an army of leakers inside the government,
have been making their way into public view for years. Or how
about the strange situation of an American president, who has,
in so many backhanded ways, admitted to being deeply involved
in the issues of detainment and torture as, for instance, in
a February 7, 2002 memorandum to his top officials in which he
signed off on his power to "suspend [the] Geneva [Conventions]
as between the United States and Afghanistan" (which he then declined
to do "at this time") and his right to wipe out the Convention
on the Treatment of Prisoners of War when it came to al-Qaeda
and the Taliban. That document began with the following: "Our
recent extensive discussions regarding the status of al Qaeda
and Taliban detainees confirm…"
"Our recent
extensive discussions…" You won't find that often in previous
presidential documents about the abrogation of international and
domestic law. It wasn't, of course, that the U.S. had never imprisoned
anyone abroad and certainly not that the U.S. had never used torture
abroad. Water-boarding, for instance, was first employed by U.S.
soldiers in the Philippine Insurrection at the dawn of the previous
century; torture was widely used and taught by CIA and other American
operatives in
Vietnam in the 1960s and 1970s, as well as in
Latin America in the 1970s and 1980s, and elsewhere. But American
presidents didn't then see the bragging rights in such acts, any
more than a previous American president would have sent his vice
president to Capitol Hill to lobby
openly for torture (however labeled). Past presidents held on
to the considerable benefits of deniability (and perhaps the psychological
benefits of not knowing too much themselves). They didn't regularly
and repeatedly commit to paper their "extensive discussions" on
distasteful and illegal subjects.
Nor did
they get up in public, against all news, all reason (but based
on the fantastic redefinitions of torture created to fulfill a
presidential desire to use "harsh interrogation techniques") to
deny repeatedly that their administrations ever tortured. Here
is an exchange
on the subject from Bush's most recent press conference:
"Q
What's your definition of the word ‘torture'?
"THE
PRESIDENT: Of what?
"Q
The word ‘torture.' What's your definition?
"THE
PRESIDENT: That's defined in U.S. law, and we don't torture.
"Q
Can you give me your version of it, sir?
"THE
PRESIDENT: Whatever the law says."
After a
while, this, too, becomes a form of confession – that, among other
things, the President has never rejected John Yoo's definition
of torture in that 2002 memorandum. Combine that with the admission
of "extensive discussions" on detention matters and, minimally,
you have a President, who has proven himself deeply engaged in
such subjects. A President who makes such no-torture claims repeatedly
cannot also claim to be in the dark on the subject. In other words,
you're already moving from the Clintonesque
parsing of definitions ("It depends on what the meaning of the
word 'is'") into unfathomable realms of presidential definitional
darkness.
On the
Record
Of course,
plumbing the psychology of a single individual while in office
of a President or a Vice President is a nearly impossible
task. Plumbing the psychology of an administration? Who can do
it? And yet, sometimes officials may essentially do it for you.
They may leave bureaucratic clues everywhere and then, as if seized
by an impulsion, return again and again to what can only be termed
the scene of the crime. Documents they just couldn't not write.
Acts they just couldn't not take. Think of these as the Freudian
slips of officials under pressure. Think of them as small, repeated
confessions granted under the interrogation of reality and history,
under the fearful pressure of the future, and granted in the best
way possible: willingly, without opposition, and not under torture.
Sometimes,
it's just a matter of refocusing to see the documents, the statements,
the acts for what they are. Such is the case with the torture
memos that continue to emerge. Never has an administration
and hardly has a torturing regime anywhere had so many of its
secret documents aired while it was still in the act. Seldom has
a ruling group made such an open case for its own crimes.
We're talking,
of course, about the most secretive administration in American
history so secretive, in fact, that Congressional representatives
considering classified portions of an intelligence bill, have
to go to "a secret, secure room in the Capitol, turn in their
Blackberrys and cellphones, and read the document without help
from any staff members." Such briefings are given to Congressional
representatives, but under ground
rules in which "participants are prohibited from future discussions
of the information even if it is subsequently revealed in the
media…" So representatives who are briefed are also effectively
prohibited from discussing what they have learned in Congress.
And yet,
none of this mattered when it came to the administration establishing
its own record of illegality and exhibiting its own outsized
fears of future prosecution. Let's just take one labor-intensive
and exceedingly strange, if now largely forgotten
example of these fears in action. In 2002, a new tribunal, the
International Criminal Court (ICC), was established in The
Hague to prosecute individuals for genocide, crimes against humanity,
and war crimes. "[T]hen-Undersecretary of State John
R. Bolton nullified the U.S. signature on the International
Criminal Court treaty one month into President Bush's first term"
and Congress subsequently passed
the American Servicemembers' Protection Act which prohibited "certain
types of military aid to countries that have signed on to the
International Criminal Court but have not signed a separate accord
with the United States, called an Article 98 agreement." The Bush
administration, opposed to international "fora" of all sorts,
then proceeded to go individually, repeatedly, and over years,
to more than 100 countries, demanding that the representatives
of each sign such an agreement "not to surrender American citizens
to the international court without the consent of officials in
Washington."
In other
words, they put the sort of effort that might normally have gone
into establishing an international agreement into threatening
weak countries with the loss of U.S. aid in order to give themselves
and of course those lower-level soldiers and operatives on
whom so much is blamed a free pass for crimes yet to be committed
(but which they obviously felt they would commit). We're talking
here about small, impoverished lands like Cambodia,
still attempting to bring its own war criminals of the Pol Pot
era to justice.
In the process
of twisting
arms, the administration suspended over $47 million in military
aid "to 35 countries that ha[d] not signed deals to grant American
soldiers immunity from prosecution for war crimes." In this attempt
to get every country on the planet aboard the American no-war-crimes-prosecution
train before it left the station, you can sense once again the
administration's obsessional intensity on this subject (especially
since experts agreed that the realistic possibility of the ICC
bringing Americans up on war crimes was essentially nil).
The Bush
administration regularly reached for its dictionaries to redefine
reality, even before it reached for its guns. It not only wrote
its own rules and its own "law," but when problems nonetheless
emerged from its secret world of detention and pain and wouldn't
go away at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, and elsewhere it proceeded
to investigate itself with the expectable results. For Bush's
officials, this should have seemed like a perfect way to maintain
a no-fault system that would never reach up any chain of command.
Indeed, as Mark Danner has commented, such practices plunged us
into an age of "frozen scandals" in which, as with the latest
torture memos, the shocked-shocked effect repeats itself but nothing
follows. As he has
written: "One of the most painful principles of our age is
that scandals are doomed to be revealed and to remain stinking
there before us, unexcised, unpunished, unfinished."
How true.
And yet, looked at another way, the administration with outsized
help from outraged government officials who knew crimes when they
saw them and were willing to take chances to reveal them has
already created a remarkable record of its own criminal activity,
which can now be purchased in any bookstore in the land.
Back in
the early fall of 2004, when the first collection of such documents
arrived in the bookstores, Mark Danner's Torture
and Truth, America, Abu Ghraib, and the War on Terror,
it was already more than 600 pages long. In early 2005, when Karen
J. Greenberg, executive director of the Center on Law and Security
at the NYU School of Law, and Josh Dratel, the civilian defense
attorney for Guantanamo detainee David Hicks, released their monumental
The
Torture Papers, The Road to Abu Ghraib, another collection
of secret memoranda, official investigations of Abu Ghraib, and
the like, it was already an oversized book of more than 1,200
pages a doorstopper large enough to keep a massive prison
gate open. And, of course, even it couldn't hold all the documents.
A later Greenberg book, The
Torture Debate in America, for instance, has military
documents not included in the first volume.
Then, there
were the two-years worth of FBI memos and emails about Guantanamo
that the ACLU pried loose from the government and released
on line, also in 2005. This material was damning indeed, including
direct reports from FBI agents witnessing and protesting as
well as pointing fingers at military interrogators at the prison,
as in an August
2, 2004 report that said: "On a couple of occasions, I entered
interview rooms to find a detainee chained hand and foot in a
fetal position to the floor, with no chair, food or water…Most
times they had urinated or defecated on themselves, and had been
left there for 18, 24 hours or more." Or a Jan.
21, 2004 email in which an FBI agent complained that the technique
of a military interrogator impersonating an FBI agent "and
all of those used in these scenarios, was approved by the DepSecDef,"
a reference to Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul D. Wolfowitz.
Other paperback
volumes have also been published that include selections from
these and other documents like Crimes
of War: Iraq by Richard Falk, Irene Gendzier, and Robert
Jay Lifton and In
the Name of Democracy: American War Crimes in Iraq and Beyond
by Jeremy Brecher, Jill Cutler, and Brendan Smith. If all of these
documents, including the latest ones evidently in the hands of
the New York Times, were collected, you would have a little
library of volumes all functionally confessional
for a future prosecutor. (And there are undoubtedly scads more
documents where these came from, including perhaps a John Yoo
"torture memo," rumored to exist, that preceded the August 2002
one.)
What an
archive, then, is already available in our world. It's as if,
to offer a Vietnam comparison, the contents of The Pentagon
Papers had simply slipped out into the light of day, one by
one, without a Daniel Ellsberg in sight, without anyone quite
realizing it had happened.
The
urge of any criminal regime to ditch, burn, or destroy
incriminating documents, or erase
emails has, in a sense, already been obviated. So much
of the Bush/Cheney "record" is on the record. As Karen J. Greenberg
wrote,
back in December 2006, "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?"
Looking
back on these last years, it turns out that the President, Vice
President, their aides, and the other top officials of this administration
were always in the confessional booth. There's no exit now.