Compact With Evil
by Chris Floyd
by Chris Floyd
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After
George Bush's Rose Garden hissy fit, in which he declared that he
would simply stop interrogating suspected terrorists unless he could
torture them, John "I Only Flip-Flop On Matters of Deep Principle"
McCain and the other so-called "Senate rebels" have capitulated
to the unpopular president's petulant demands.
In the universe
of moral perversion in which we now live, White House National Security
(sic) Adviser Stephen Hadley called the pro-torture, anti-due process
agreement between these deeply cynical power-gamesters "a good
day for the American people." Here's how the Gamester-in-Chief
described it (from
the NYT):
Im
pleased to say this agreement preserves the most single, the most
potent tool we have in protecting America and foiling terrorist
attacks, he said, adding, The agreement clears the
way to do what the American people expect us to do to capture
terrorists, to detain terrorists, to question terrorists, and
then to try them.
In other words,
not until this very day was the American government able to capture,
detain, question and try terrorists. I'll bet you didn't know that.
I'll bet the men who were captured, detained, questioned, tried
and convicted for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing didn't know
that either. Really, that's what Bush said; the agreement "clears
the way" for the government to actually detain and interrogate
terrorists as if they weren't able to do that before. What he
means, of course, is that the ability to torture alleged terrorists
snatched arbitrarily, anywhere in the world, simply on the say-so
of the Leader or his designated minions will be preserved. Bush
obviously has a deep psychological need to feel that someone is
being tormented at his orders at all times.
But the demented
psychology of this sad little shriveled-up nothing of a man is of
slight import. What matters are the actions and policies that are
being carried out by the junta operating in his name and the
countenancing of this gang's crimes by the United States Congress.
And that is what we have seen today: the countenancing of torture
and kangaroo courts by some sad sacks of shinola lauded by the media
as "men of principle." This is what we've come to, this
is where are today: sick bastards and cynical bastards openly and
eagerly gutting the very core of American law.
Let's have
Bill Frist surely one of the most pathetic creatures ever inflicted
on the U.S. Senate and the long-suffering people of Tennessee
explain exactly what this great "agreement" means:
Senator Bill
Frist of Tennessee, the majority leader, said the agreement had
two key points. Classified information will not be shared
with the terrorists tried before the tribunals, he said.
And the very important program of interrogation continues.
There you have
it. People snatched off the street or sold to spies by snitches
and scamsters can be tried, in military tribunals, without seeing
the evidence against them; and Bush's "program of interrogation
continues."
Let's be very
clear on the latter point. What Bush has been talking about and
protesting against were efforts to ensure that CIA interrogators
could not torture suspects. Because of course they could continue
to use ordinary methods of interrogation which experts uniformly
agree produce better intelligence just as they have always been
able to. When Bush and Tennessee cat-torturer talk about the "program
of interrogation" continuing, they mean allowing the CIA to
torture captives by various methods without being charged with war
crimes and felony violations of American law. That is precisely
what they are talking about, and nothing else. But you won't see
it put that way on the pages of our most august journalist institutions
nor on the broadcasts of our world-renowned network news shows.
And let us
make one other point and in a most impolitic way, for the truth
is often an impolitic commodity: John McCain is a goddamned liar.
Yes, he himself suffered torture, yes he came through it, yes, we
all admire his fortitude during that ordeal in his youth: but his
record in later life, in politics, is that of a moral coward with
good PR skills. (Not that it takes much skill to wow the poltroons
who squat on the commanding heights of the corporate media world
today.) And today, he has opened his mouth and emitted a damnable
lie, to wit: "the integrity and letter and spirit of the Geneva
Conventions have been preserved.
This is an
untrue statement, analogous to saying the moon is located in his
rectum or that he can bite through pig iron with his bare teeth.
Every step the Bush gang has taken in this pro-torture, don't-prosecute-us
campaign is designed to weaken the integrity and letter and spirit
of the Geneva Conventions. The Conventions, which have been adopted
into American law by Congress in bills sponsored and championed
by Republicans are crystal clear on torture. There is no need
to "preserve" their integrity with new legislation; there
is nothing wrong with the Conventions that need to be "fixed"
unless, of course, you wish to use interrogation techniques that
any sentient human being would recognize as torture. In that case,
of course you have to "fix" the Conventions by gutting
their integrity, letter and spirit.
John McCain
might be a moral coward in his old age, but he's not stupid. He
knows all this. He knows that the Bush Administration has been trying
to wriggle out of the Conventions since the earliest days of the
"War of Terror." He knows that gutting the Conventions
is at the heart of Bush's "interrogation program" which
McCain and his "rebels" have just saved with their grand
"compromise."
Therefore,
we will say it again clearly, so that even the nabobs on the Washington
Post editorial page can hear it: John McCain is a goddamned
liar, and his "agreement" today serves some of the most
evil principles ever supported openly by the United States government
since slavery.
And let's put
this other point plainly one more time: the American government
has always been able to capture, detain, question and try terrorists.
Always. The American government has for 28 years had the power to
eavesdrop on anyone in the world or in the country whom they suspected
even slightly of terrorism or terrorist connections. And they could
and can do that instantly, without waiting for a court order or
jumping through any bureaucratic hoops, under the long-existing
law. Everything that Bush says his clearly illegal surveillance
programs do can already be done within the law. Therefore, it is
clear that the whole raison d'être behind the illegal programs is
to establish the principle that the president is beyond the law.
(And also, almost certainly, to perform illegal surveillance that
has nothing to do with terrorism.)
What we have
seen today is no "grand compromise," no "great debate,"
no "act of principle" and certainly no "preservation"
of the Geneva Conventions. What we have seen instead is a small
group of rich, cynical, power-hungry old bastards belch forth lies
in the service of torture and tyranny. And if you're not angry about
that, if you're not "shrill" about that, then by God you
are one piss-poor American citizen. You shame every man and woman
who have fought and died and marched and worked and dreamed for
our freedoms.
September
23, 2006
Chris
Floyd [send him mail]
is the author of Empire
Burlesque: The Secret History of the Bush Regime.
Copyright
© 2006 Chris Floyd
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