Bush
Regime Declares Itself Above the Law
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
DIGG THIS
The US government
does not have a monopoly on hypocrisy, but no other government can
match the hypocrisy of the US government.
It is now well
documented and known all over the world that the US government tortured
detainees at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo and that the US government
has had people kidnaped and "rendentioned," that is, transported
to third-world countries, such as Egypt, to be tortured.
Also documented
and well known is the fact that the US Department of Justice provided
written memos justifying the torture of detainees. One torture advocate
who wrote the DOJ memos that gave the green light to the Bush regime’s
use of torture is John Yoo, a Vietnamese immigrant who somehow secured
a US Justice Department appointment and a tenured professorship
at the University of California, Berkeley, Boalt Hall School of
Law.
Members of
Berkeley’s city council believe that Yoo should be charged with
war crimes. The US government has charged lesser offenders than
Yoo with war crimes. Yoo helped the DOJ achieve the Bush regime’s
goal of finding a way around the torture prohibitions of both US
statutory law and the Geneva Conventions.
The way around
the law that Yoo provided for the sadistic Bush regime was closed
down by the US Supreme Court, which voided Yoo’s arguments, and
Yoo’s torture memo was rescinded by the Department of Justice. Nevertheless,
Yoo’s obvious constitutional incompetence, which in Yoo’s case is
total, has not affected his position as professor of constitutional
law at Berkeley. Can you imagine the harm Yoo is doing by teaching
future cadres of lawyers and government officials that torture is
consistent with the Constitution and the law of the land? How many
of us will suffer from this ignorant man’s teachings?
But I digress.
Even as the US government was torturing people, the US government
was prosecuting the son of Charles Taylor, the former ruler of Liberia,
for torturing political opponents of his father’s government. The
US government did not employ the Yoo torture memo to justify Liberia’s
use of torture against those who wished to overthrow the Liberian
government or commit terror against it. The US government’s position
is that Liberia’s government had no right to use torture to defend
itself. Only an "indispensable nation" such as the US
has the right to torture people who are imagined to threaten it.
I use the word
"imagined" because approximately 99 percent of the detainees
tortured by America were totally innocent people picked up at random
or sold to the stupid Americans by warlords as "terrorists."
(The US government offered rewards for terrorists, like the bounty
offered for outlaws in the "wild west." The result was
that warlords in Afghanistan and Pakistan grabbed whoever was not
one of them and sold their captives to Americans as "terrorists.")
According to
Carrie Johnson, a Washington Post staff writer, on October 30, 2008,
a federal jury in Miami convicted Charles Taylor’s son, Chuckie,
of torture. Chuckie will be sentenced by the indispensable Americans
in January for torture, conspiracy and firearms violations. He may
spend the rest of his life in an American prison.
While Chuckie’s
trial was underway, the Bush regime was torturing people.
The Washington
Post writes that Chuckie’s conviction is "the first test of
an American law that gives prosecutors the power to bring charges
for acts of torture committed in foreign lands." In other words,
US law against torture applies to the entire world, to every other
country except the United States. The hubris is unimaginable
– no country can torture except the US.
Anyone else
who tortures gets life, or in the case of Saddam Hussein gets hung
by the neck until dead.
Isn’t
it great to be an American. Our laws don’t apply to us, only to
every other nation. This is what it means to be the moral light
of the world, the unipower, the salt of the earth.
Neither poor
Carrie Johnson nor her editors at the Washington Post see
the irony or the paradox. Johnson writes in the Washington Post
that the US prosecutors "accused Taylor of taking part in atrocities
and directing subordinates to torture victims using . . . electrical
devices from 1999 to 2002." That charge practically overlaps
in time with Bush’s, or Cheney’s, or Yoo’s, or the DOJ’s, or Rumfeld’s,
or whoever’s direction to subordinates to torture people detained
by Americans at Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo, and in various CIA rendition
sites. By now everyone in the world has seen the photograph of the
hooded Iraqi with electrical wires attached standing on that box
in Abu Ghraib.
If
only American laws applied to the American government. Then the
criminals who have been in charge for 8 years could be prosecuted
for their extreme violation of United States laws. But, of course,
the great moral American government is far above the law. American
law only applies to dispensable nations. America is not answerable
to law, not to its own law and not to international law. US attorney
general Michael Mukasey affirmed that the US government is above
all law when he told the Senate Judiciary Committee that there would
be no investigation or prosecution of those Bush regime officials
who authorized torture and those who carried out the sadistic acts.
The American
government, the government of the great indispensable nation, has
a free pass. The strong do what they will. The weak suffer what
they must.
December
8, 2008
Paul
Craig Roberts [send
him mail] a
former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate
editor of the Wall Street Journal, has been reporting shocking cases
of prosecutorial abuse for two decades. A new edition of his book,
The
Tyranny of Good Intentions,
co-authored with Lawrence Stratton, a documented account of how
Americans lost the protection of law, has just been released by
Random House.
Copyright
© 2008 Creators Syndicate
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