Torture Memo Gave White House Broad Powers
Declassified Memo Outlined Justification for Interrogation Tactics, Presidential Authority
The Justice Department's newly declassified torture memo outlined the broad legal authority its lawyers gave to the Bush White House on matters of torture and presidential authority during times of war.
The March 14, 2003 memorandum, which has been replaced by later memos, provided legal guidance for military interrogations of alien unlawful combatants, and concluded that the president's authority during wartime took precedence over the individual rights of enemies captured in the field.
The memo, released Tuesday, determined that amendments to the U.S. Constitution, which in part protect rights of individuals charged with crimes, do not apply equally to enemy combatants.
"The Fifth Amendment due process clause does not apply to the president's conduct of a war," the memo noted. It also asserted, "The detention of enemy combatants can in no sense be deemed 'punishment' for purposes of the Eighth Amendment," which prohibits "cruel and unusual" forms of punishment.
"Unlike imprisonment pursuant to a criminal sanction, the detention of enemy combatants involves no sentence judicially imposed or legislatively required," the memo said. "Accordingly the Eighth Amendment has no application here."
The memo was drafted by John Yoo, who was at the time the deputy assistant attorney general for the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel. It was sent to William J. Haynes, then the general counsel at the Pentagon.
Former aides to John Ashcroft say the then-attorney general privately dubbed Yoo "Dr. Yes" for being so closely aligned with lawyers at the White House.
The memo also provided an argument in defense of government interrogators who used harsh tactics in their line of work.
Towards its conclusion, the document noted, "Finally, even if the criminal prohibitions outlined above applied, and an interrogation method might violate those prohibitions, necessity or self-defense could provide justifications for any criminal liability."
Citing related opinions, the memo said the United States had a right to defend itself after the Sept. 11 attacks.
"If a government defendant were to harm an enemy combatant during an interrogation in a manner that might arguably violate a criminal prohibition, he would be doing so in order to prevent further attacks on the United States by the al Qaeda terrorist network. In that case, we believe that he could argue that the executive branch's constitutional authority to protect the nation from attack justified his actions."
"This national and international version of the right to self-defense could supplement and bolster the government defendant's individual right."
The memo also laid out a defense against the authority of the U.N. Convention Against Torture, or CAT. The 81-page memorandum noted, "Even if any nation had properly objected, that would mean only that there would be no provision prohibiting torture in effect between the United States and the objecting nation -- effectively mooting the question whether an interrogation method violates the Torture Convention."
"We conclude that the Bush administration's understanding created a valid and effective reservation to CAT."
The Justice Department still has not disclosed an additional February 2005 legal opinion, which was drafted after Attorney General Alberto Gonzales took office. But previous interrogation memos, which have been released, include an Aug. 1, 2002 memorandum, which laid out standards and legal guidance for interrogation, including possible justification for torture.
The memo is known as the Bybee memo after Jay Bybee, who was at the time the head of the Office of Legal Counsel, though Yoo drafted much of the document.
Jack Goldsmith who headed OLC from October 2003 to July 2004, and worked at the Pentagon before coming to the department, has described many of the legal opinions, including the Bybee memo, as "flawed."
In a 2007 interview with the PBS program "Frontline," Goldsmith described the problems he had reviewing and standing by Yoo's work.
"After I read these opinions I had a whole flurry of emotions," he said. "My first one was disbelief that programs of this importance could be supported by legal opinions that were this flawed. My second was the realization that I would have a very, very hard time standing by these opinions if pressed. My third was the sinking feeling, what was I going to do if I was pressed about reaffirming these opinions or something required my decision related to these programs?"
"At that point I wasn't sure," Goldsmith said.
A Dec. 30, 2004 memorandum by former head of the Office of Legal Counsel Dan Levin replaced both memos.
Levin's memo noted, "Torture is abhorrent both to American law and values and to international norms."
Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., weighed in on the memo Tuesday. He said in a statement that the memo's release is a "small step forward" in his quest for documents from the Bush administration, though he said there are still many documents the White House "continues to shield& even from members of Congress."
"The memo they have declassified today reflects the expansive view of executive power that has been the hallmark of this administration," Leahy said. "It is no wonder that this memo, like the now-infamous 'Bybee memo,' could not withstand scrutiny and had to be withdrawn. Like the 'Bybee memo,' this memo seeks to find ways to avoid legal restrictions and accountability on torture and threatens our country's status as a beacon of human rights around the world."
Copyright © 2008 ABC News Internet Ventures
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35 Comments so far
Show AllWe are still in the dark regarding these so called terrorists who remain at Gauntanamo. Just how guilty are they or are they guilty, of what? So maybe they want to overthrow the U.S. or were they just in the wrong place at the wrong time. We, the American public, should be allowed to see just who these terrorists are and to listen to their stories and to become acquainted with their history of torture arising from our military. There is no excuse for torture and the logic of these criminals that the Executive branch has free rein during times of "war?' What war? we are in an occupation and we should be able to know the details of all who are imprisoned. Bush is a President, not a King.
Posted the above before I saw your comment, Robinea. Dershowitz is another one that has no business of any kind influencing impressionable minds. Monsters dressed up as teachers.
I understand John Yoo advocates the crushing of a child's testicles-as an iterrogation technique.
We need a "Shame Campaign" against John Yoo. Kind of thing that puts his own testicles in a vise-grip; metaphorically speaking of course!
People wonder why the United States fell so far in international ranking?
We have Alan Dershowitz on one coastline supporting apartheid and genocide; and we have John Yoo on the other coastline-advocating torture.
Could the bar be set any lower?
These two men need to be protested and their classes need to be boycotted.
People like this don't need teaching positions at major universities and colleges; they need jail cells.
"Finally, even if the criminal prohibitions outlined above applied, and an interrogation method might violate those prohibitions, necessity or self-defense could provide justifications for any criminal liability."
Does this mean that Professor Yoo can be called on to submit an amicus brief on the necessity defense for non-violent protesters arrested while trying to stop the war machine or trying to shut down nuke plants?
John Yoo is what's known as a "useful idiot" - someone with no involvement with what he advocates. That may be the characteristic of a "good" lawyer too.
We protested John Yoo when he was awarded by the Chancellor of the University of California at Irvine. Yoo gave a speech at the award ceremony and we protested outside the building. At one point, Yoo looked out the window and waved hello to the protesters. Very strange.
Someone among the protesters started yelling, "Fuck Yoo!" It was childish, but I began yelling it too.
I think I read somewhere that the students periodically protest Yoo at UC Berkeley. The whole Berkeley area is kind of gentrified now compared with its free speech movement heyday, I believe.
Thank you, Demonstorm. If enough people protest this sociopath, it WILL have an impact on his future at Berkeley, no matter how conservative the faculty is there.
If we are worried only about US citizens being tortured we can be certain our turn will come. It already has.
Why has this nation refused to recognize the World Court? Maybe the poker is being heated up as we speak.
Thanks, Dorothy Reik, for the contact info. I just called and spoke with Mr. Edley's assistant, and told her to pass a little message on to him: fire John Yoo; he gives Berkeley the same image by his presence there as he has helped give America - a rogue who believes in torture and sinking lower than the "evil" in the world we once used to stand against. Thanks to him, we have become the very thing we supposedly fight against.
She hung up on me.
Little Brother, you took the words out of my mouth. Fuck Yoo! If I were a Berkeley student, I'd be protesting outside his classroom door. Please, would somebody waterboard this guy, so he can have a taste of his own medicine? Lawless, corrupt, torturer apologist. This is a very dangerous man.
What happened to the law suit against John Yooo?
Better yet why not have Yoo testify to the full Congress and invite DOJ Mukasey to be part of it?
Of course Leahy and Conyers committees will be present too.
We need the public to see for themelves what our leaders are up to about using torture, spying on Americans without warrants and other ways to go beyond the law on Bush's say so.
The reason the students and faculty at UC Berkeley, Boalt Hall are not protesting the continued presence of the Grand Inquisitor 'Professor' John 'Torquemada' Yoo is that they have been threatened with midnight arrest by hooded agents, water torture, having electric shocks applied to their privates, being hung by their arms for days, subjected to hot and cold temperatures, sleep deprivation, loud noises, screams and music and the threat of physical and degrading sexual violence against their loved ones and family members. Professor Yoo is a tough guy with powerful and creative friends!
Its so much easier to protest Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Nepalese repression against Tibetans, the Sudanese mis-treatment of the Darfur armed separatists and the poor house-arrested lady in Burma - and it looks better on one's CV.
Christopher Edley, Jr., an advisor to Barack Obama on legal matters, is the Dean of Boalt Hall Law School in Berkeley. The phone # is 510-642-6483. The address is Dean's Office,UC Berkely School of Law, 215 Boalt Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720-7200. Perhaps a few phone calls and letters would wake them up. Yoo must go. The students have tried, but anyone who has ever taught knows that students come last. We all need to weigh in - especially the Obama supporters among us.
The first sentence of this article is a good example of what utter idiots the faux-journalists in the MSM are:
"The Justice Department's newly declassified torture memo outlined the broad legal authority its lawyers gave to the Bush White House on matters of torture and presidential authority during times of war."
Jason, my boy, you can't give what you ain't got. The Bush DOJ lawyers can't "give" the White House authority to do anything. Whatever authority the White House has comes from the Constitution and statutes passed by Congress, not a bunch of right-wing hack lawyers in the Justice Department. These hacks might have *told* the White House that it has this authority, in which case they were either (a) mistaken or (b) engaging in conspiracy to violate the laws of war, which is itself--as is well-established in the law--a war crime.
Congress should have wiped their ass with the memo and sent it back with an impeachment. They didn't, the courts didn't, and we the people didn't either.
Just trying to get across that not only does Harper kiss up to the Bush administration, but expects all his members to do so also. The House of Commons have just passed a motion to lower the Canadian Flag on the Peace tower every time a Canadian soldier dies. The Conservatives voted against this motion, but the NDP, Bloc and Liberals voted for it.
RE Memo
John Yoo was trying to come up with a creative way of interpreting laws so that the US government could claim that they were not breaking said laws and/or were told by a legal expert that they were not breaking said laws. First the interpretation has to be struck down. Then Yoo will be charged with willfully misleading government and will later plead guilty to "legal incompetence" and later have his law license revoked and take a high place position in business. However, this will take a few years - probably more than Cheney has left on this earth. Bush will plead ignorance and say that he trusted Yoo and Cheney and only knew either to do the right thing.
As a back up plan, Bush and Cheney are working to get rid of all the "activist judges" who may actually uphold the letter of the law.
"A Few Bad Apples" talks in length of John Yoo's memos - here is a transcript of the Yoo interview:
http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/badapples/interviews_yoo.html
Seems as if Hero Romeo Dallaire (famous for trying to stop the genocide in Rwanda) has an opinion on the Khadr case:
Dallaire accuses Canada of hypocrisy on Khadr case
Dallaire, a UN peacekeeper in Rwanda in the 1990s, says Canada is trying to help rehabilitate and reintegrate child soldiers around the world, but has done nothing to help one of its own citizens.
"In the case of (Khadr), a Canadian child soldier in an American illegal prison ... we've backed off from taking that role and responsibility," the retired general told CTV's Canada AM on Tuesday. ...
Khadr, the Toronto-born son of an alleged al Qaeda financier, was captured by U.S. soldiers in July 2002 following a firefight in Afghanistan.
The teen was eventually transferred to Guantanamo Bay following allegations he threw a grenade during the firefight, killing a U.S. soldier.
Dallaire says the fact that Canada has not stepped in to help one of its own citizens may be due to the fact that Khadr's late father had alleged terrorist ties.
"(But) that is totally irrelevant of the situation. If your father is a criminal, that does not implicate you of being necessarily part of the crime. On the contrary, if you are a child who has been brought into that process, then we treat you as a juvenile and act accordingly," Dallaire said. ...
"They are watching us because they don't know where Canada is going in the whole realm of human rights ... generally, this government is making it appear that human rights is not within its parameters," Dallaire said.
http://www.ctv.ca/servlet/ArticleNews/story/CTVNews/20080401/romeo_dallaire_080401/20080401/
Scroll down to The Current: Part 2 and click to listen to the story of Omar Khadr who was "lent" to Libby (sp?):
http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/2008/200804/20080401.html
I agree with the person who wrote that a lawyer cannot convey authority. This basically is the problem of the entire administration--they feel that whatever they write or say is LSW and it isn't.
I thought John Koo was teaching at Pepperdine. For a time, he was a PBS darling and sounded as dangerous as any Chinese Dictator form the Communist regime. HOw hew graduated from law school is a mystery.
Owen
Fuck Yoo!
"so exactly WTF is taking so long to right these wrongs?"
The answer is that people wasted their votes voting Democrat in 2006.
There's one part of this I've never gotten....
A memo from a lawyer can never grant anyone any powers. If that was the case, all I'd need to do is to go find a lawyer who could write me an opinion that says his opinion is that bank robbery is legal. Then I just go get me some money and wave that memo in anyone's face.
A lawyer can give advice. At the very best, you could later try to defend yourself saying that you'd asked for advice and were then following it. But an independent court system could easily step back in and just say 'sorry, but your lawyer was very wrong ... go to jail, go directly to jail, do not pass go, do not collect $200.' The old saying is that ignorance of the law is no excuse. A logical corrallary would be that an ignorant lawyer is no excuse.
A memo from a lawyer is never law.
The Justice Dept can never make law.
I now await the Canadian version. Coming as soon as Harper gets his majority.
Speaking of torture and torture victims - the latest on Omar Khadr (Helena Guergis and Maxime Bernier are two of Harper's MPs and are telling you George Bush's position on the issue):
Monday, March 31, 2008
Ms. Francine Lalonde (La Pointe-de-l'ÃŽle, BQ): Mr. Speaker, the Conservative government has yet to respond to our repeated requests to bring the young Canadian Omar Khadr back to Canada. The International Convention on the Rights of the Child, signed by Canada, considers child soldiers to be victims that need our protection.
What is stopping this government, which invested in rehabilitating Afghan child soldiers, from taking immediate action in favour of a child soldier who is, I would remind the House, a Canadian citizen?
Hon. Helena Guergis (Secretary of State (Foreign Affairs and International Trade) (Sport), CPC): Mr. Speaker, I have informed the House, on several occasions, that we have received assurances that Mr. Khadr is receiving consular services. His human rights are being met at this point. I can assure the member that we will continue to monitor this case.
It is important to remember that Omar Khadr is facing the very serious charge of murder.
Ms. Francine Lalonde (La Pointe-de-l'ÃŽle, BQ): Mr. Speaker, the information we have suggests more and more that this accusation could have been falsely made. The Conservative government's position on the Khadr affair is a clear violation of the United Nations convention concerning child soldiers.
Is the government aware that, by doing nothing, it is tarnishing Canada's reputation as a promoter and defender of human rights, and especially children's rights?
Hon. Helena Guergis (Secretary of State (Foreign Affairs and International Trade) (Sport), CPC): Mr. Speaker, again, I have assured the House that Mr. Khadr is being treated humanely. I will point out that many of the questions the member has raised are definitely arguments that would be heard in a courtroom.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Hon. Irwin Cotler: With regard to Canadian citizen Omar Khadr, detained at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba: (a) when was the government first made aware of his detention; (b) does the government consider that he was a child soldier at the time of his initial detention; (c) what efforts, if any, have been made to seek his return to Canada; (d) what consular services and government protections have been afforded to him; (e) does the government intend to participate or intervene in any way during his trial; (f) has the government undertaken any effort to extradite him, or have him otherwise returned to Canada; (g) will the government seek clemency if he is sentenced to death; (h) what assurances has the government received that he is being treated humanely; and (i) is the government aware of, or has it investigated, reports of abusive and ill treatment during his detention?
Hon. Maxime Bernier (Minister of Foreign Affairs, CPC): Mr. Speaker, in response to (a), the Government of Canada became aware in August 2002 that Omar Khadr, who had been captured by U.S. forces following a firefight in July 2002, was a person under control, PUC, at Bagram Airbase in Afghanistan and facing serious charges. On October 30, 2002, the government was informed by the United States, U.S., that Omar Khadr had been transferred to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
In response to (b), the Canadian government has consistently acknowledged that Mr. Khadr was a minor at the time of his alleged offences and arrest. Accordingly, Canada has continuously demanded that the U.S. government take this into account in all aspects of his detention, treatment, prosecution, and potential sentencing. Based on a motion brought by Mr. Khadr's defence team, the military commission judge is currently considering the impact Mr. Khadr's apparently unlawful recruitment by al-Qaeda should have on the proceedings.
In response to (c), Mr. Khadr's case is subject to multiple and complex litigation, both in Canada and the U.S. It would not be appropriate to speculate on the potential outcome of cases currently before the courts. As such, discussions about Mr. Khadr's return to Canada are premature until such time as the legal process, and the appeals process, have been exhausted.
In response to (d), Mr. Khadr's case has been raised on several occasions at the ministerial level. Canadian officials have conducted seven welfare visits to Mr. Khadr since his arrival at Guantanamo Bay and it is the government's intention to continue these visits. The goal of these visits has been to assess his condition and provide a measure of support during his ongoing incarceration. Through these visits, officials have sought to have Mr. Khadr's detention conditions improved and have made requests for medical treatment and educational support. Officials have also facilitated telephone calls with his family in Canada and access by his Canadian defence lawyers, and have requested repeatedly that Mr. Khadr be given an independent medical and psychological assessment.
In response to (e), Canadian officials have been present as observers at all proceedings against Mr. Khadr in Guantanamo Bay, as well as to the hearing at the Court of Military Commission Review in Washington.
In response to (f), there are no charges outstanding against Omar Khadr in Canada that could be a basis for an extradition request.
In response to (g), the government has received unequivocal assurances from U.S. authorities that Mr. Khadr will not be subject to the death penalty. Charges against Mr. Khadr were referred on a non-capital basis.
In response to (h) and (i), the government has sought and received assurances that Mr. Khadr is being treated humanely, and has repeatedly inquired into his well-being when allegations were made of mistreatment of detainees at Guantanamo Bay. Canadian officials have carried out regular welfare visits with Mr. Khadr, resulting in, among other things, a transfer into a minimal security, communal detention facility. Government officials will continue to conduct these visits.
http://www2.parl.gc.ca/housechamberbusiness/chambersittings.aspx?View=H&Parl=39&Ses=2&Language=E&Mode=...
Yeah where are the Berkely 'Bears?'
Woo is a Symbol of Torture and SHODDY LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP! How can he teach anywhere?
Protests? The students are afraid I suspect...
4thefuture: Why aren't there daily protests at Boalt Hall (UC Berkeley Law School) where John Yoo is a purported law professor there
California is a very liberal state, as are US ivy-league schools. Liberal institutions are open to the full spectrum of human behavior as long as the perpetrator achieved some level of power. Both conservatism and liberalism work to the benefit of elites in appropriate circumstances and the elites are very much aware of these.
To me the fact that John Yoo teaches at Berkley is a disgrace to the country. The last person anyone should want influencing young minds, is a man like John Yoo. My blood runs cold. He's a monster.
Berkley should be "up in arms" over this. The fact that they aren't, tells you have pervasive both the stench-and the reach-is regarding the bush White House.
Where is the missing media coverage,
The Biggest Traitors of all to Truth Freedom and the American way of life are
FOX<ABC<CNN<NBC<CLEARCHANNELCBS<THEY ARE ALL BOUGHT AND SOLD BY CORPORATE MEDIA, and the printed media the NEW YORK TIMES THEY ARE ALL DISGUISTING AND NO LONGER PUBLISH THE TRUTH< THEY SHOULD ALL LOOSE THEIR LICENSES BUT BECAUSE WAR AND KILLING IS BIG DOLLARS AND PROFITS ITS A SAD DAY IN AMERICA INDEED<
Thank you Common Dreams for being one of our few outlets to read the truth. You are one of the best publications in the USA
have you thanked a republican lately?
silly republicans...
wouldn't know a bad president if he stole an election and commenced taking away their rights while sending their kids to die in a foreign land and sending most of their money to friendly corporations and using the rest on corporate bail-outs.
heckuvajob.
what missing emails?
Where are those missing emails....????
Why aren't there daily protests at Boalt Hall (UC Berkeley Law School) where John Yoo is a purported law professor there. I have to wonder what kind of students go to Berkeley now as opposed to past years when Berkeley was home to the Free Speech Movement. Mario Savio, where are you??
wow !
" threatens our country's status as a beacon of human rights around the world. "
Is the "journalist" who wrote this spin delusional or just heavily medicated ?
and: "interrogators who used harsh tactics in their line of work."
This makes torturing people to death sound like a typical day at the office !
so exactly WTF is taking so long to right these wrongs?
clinton was impeached over an affair. a private matter.
and in doing so, the republicans set the LOW-BAR for impeachable offenses. not the HIGH-BAR.
SO... should we not continue to play by those rules and send these criminals to their deaths for their crimes?
the world would thank you, congress.
(unlike your continued investigation of baseball players using drugs)
I am with those who see the Declaration of independence as a "founding" document when it says that ALL men are endowed... with certain inalienable rights, so while Yoo's argument that the fifth and eight amendments don't apply may seem convenient to Neocons, it doesn't square with the higher ideals some tried to strive for, and which we have been sometimes, when at our best, fumbling toward.
We can't say that ALL have inalienable rights in breaking from England, and then claim that in war, foreign enemy combatants don't have rights, or can be tortured. People who perform those kinds of intellectual cartwheels are usually either in denial, or the kind of lawyers who have some other interest they're serving (empire, military-industrial-security-complex, etc.).
I agree that Bush-Cheney-Rumsfeld et al have committed impeachable offenses, and like many here, I'm frustrated that he has not been impeached. I've signed many petitions for impeachment and written to my legislators in support of it. Yet....
Why no impeachment yet? Some possibilities:
1. Some Democrats were caught up in the post-9/11 fervor and WANTED harsh interrogation metods, and the Dems may have enough other things to hide. A small percent of the population may know about this, but if there were impeachment hearings, this awareness would be dragged in very public view.
2. Read the piece by Ray McGovern and VIPS regarding a psychological profile of Bush, and how he might react if cornered: "Dangers of a Cornered Bush":
http://www.consortiumnews.com/2007/072707a.html
Maybe some would rather have him drift from office, if possible, than implode.
This seems a very real danger. Gary Trudeau (of comic strip fame) attended Yale with Dubya, and has commented on Dubya as seeming to lack a sense of conscience. The Ray McGovern piece also confirms: Other presidents, during war, agonized over the casualties, they lost sleep, and it aged them. Not Dubya, who seems a disconnected sociopath. Little sense of moral backbone, little sense of reflectivity or introspection required for a minimally functioning conscience. Yet he doesn't want to be publically shamed; he gets angry when confronted. Watch "9/11: Press for Truth" and the footage of Bush fumbling through press conference questions about why he would not agree to meet individually, under oath, with the 9/11 commission. Ray McGovern, with VIPS and the author of "Bush on the Couch," speculate about how Dubya might react if cornered. If there's any chance of avoiding a bombing of Iran, perhaps cornering and impeaching Bush is, some believe, not the way to ease the sociopath (and the Machiavellian Cheney) out of office.
We need an amendment to the constitution for such circumstances, so that if articles of impeachment are brought forward, there should be some other, trustworthy (wishful thinking?) person (speaker of the house, president pro tem of the senate?) who would temporarily, take over certain duties of commander-in-chief, or when orders were given to bomb or go to war, they would need the assent and confirmation of another elected official who was not in the process of being impeached.
Great Bear -
'Professor' Dershowitz openly advocates torture, including the torture or threats of torture of a 'suspect's' family members. He cites the Israel's 'successes' in employing these tactics...in 'stopping the ticking human time bombs'. The funny thing is that the Israeli military only uses the 'ticking time bomb' excuse for torture as a hypothetical, never actually having stopped a single attack through torture. They have admitted this - while Dershowitz continues to misrepresent their record in his lectures and books for his own vicarious pleasure. Great guy! 'Professor' Yoo is a wuss next to the 'Dersh'. But then...protesting the 'Dersh' at Harvard University would be 'anti-Semitic'. Yoo is an ethnically easier target in a less prestigious law school.