Easing of Laws That Led to Detainee Abuse Hatched in Secret
WASHINGTON - The framework under which detainees were imprisoned for years without charges at Guantanamo and in many cases abused in Afghanistan wasn't the product of American military policy or the fault of a few rogue soldiers.
It was largely the work of five White House, Pentagon and Justice Department lawyers who, following the orders of President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney, reinterpreted or tossed out the U.S. and international laws that govern the treatment of prisoners in wartime, according to former U.S. defense and Bush administration officials.
The Supreme Court now has struck down many of their legal interpretations. It ruled last Thursday that preventing detainees from challenging their detention in federal courts was unconstitutional.
The quintet of lawyers, who called themselves the "War Council," drafted legal opinions that circumvented the military's code of justice, the federal court system and America's international treaties in order to prevent anyone - from soldiers on the ground to the president - from being held accountable for activities that at other times have been considered war crimes.
Sen. Carl Levin, who's leading an investigation into the origins of the harsh interrogation techniques, said at a hearing Tuesday that the abuse wasn't the result of "a few bad apples" within the military, as the White House has claimed. "The truth is that senior officials in the United States government sought information on aggressive techniques, twisted the law to create the appearance of their legality and authorized their use against detainees," said Levin, a Michigan Democrat.
The international conventions that the United States helped draft, and to which it's a party, were abandoned in secret meetings among the five men in one another's offices. No one in the War Council has publicly described the group's activities in any detail, and only some of their opinions and memorandums have been made public.
Neither the White House nor the Department of Defense has taken responsibility, and the U.S. military's top uniformed leadership remained silent in public while its legal code was being discarded. It was left to lawyers in the military's legal system, the Judge Advocate General's Corps, to defend the rule of law. They never had a chance.
Only one of the five War Council lawyers remains in office: David Addington, the brilliant but abrasive longtime legal adviser and now chief of staff to Cheney. His primary motive, according to several former administration and defense officials, was to push for an expansion of presidential power that Congress or the courts couldn't check.
Alberto Gonzales, first the White House counsel and then the attorney general, resigned last August amid allegations of perjury related to congressional hearings about the firings of U.S. attorneys.
The Defense Department in February abruptly announced the resignation of William J. Haynes II, the former Pentagon general counsel, amid sharp public criticism by military lawyers that he failed to ensure a just system of detainee trials at Guantanamo.
Even some conservatives have condemned former Justice Department lawyer John Yoo for what many called sloppy legal work in drafting key memorandums about detention policy. He's now a law professor at the University of California at Berkeley.
The last and least known member of the group, Timothy E. Flanigan, a former deputy to Gonzales, withdrew his nomination to be deputy attorney general in 2005 amid mounting questions in the Senate about his role in drafting the administration's legal definition of torture and other issues.
All five refused to answer questions from McClatchy for this story. Only Flanigan gave a reason, saying that he doesn't discuss past clients, in this case the U.S. government. Yoo previously has denied any connection between his work and detainee abuse.
The quintet did more than condone harsh treatment, however. It created an environment in which it was nearly impossible to prosecute soldiers or officials for alleged crimes committed in U.S. detention facilities.
The Bush administration pursued a strategy from the beginning to exempt American soldiers and operatives from legal repercussions for their actions, said Nigel Rodley, a British lawyer and professor who was the United Nations' special rapporteur on torture from 1993 to 2001.
The U.S. said it was continuing to follow the rule of law but at the same time it sidestepped any international treaties that could create problems for soldiers or officials, said Rodley, a member of the U.N. Human Rights Committee.
The legal architecture, he said, hinged on the notion that "The treaties that were relevant to U.S. criminal law were not relevant. That was the trick."
The administration, in other words, set out to circumvent any law that might have restricted Bush's detainee and interrogation programs.
MEMOS THAT PAVED THE WAY
A handful of legal opinions opened the way to the abuses documented in McClatchy's investigation. Among them:
In a Jan. 9, 2002, memorandum for Haynes, co-author Yoo opined that basic Geneva Convention protections known as Common Article Three forbidding humiliating and degrading treatment and torture of prisoners didn't cover alleged al Qaida or Taliban detainees - the entire incoming population of detainees in Afghanistan and Guantanamo.
In a memorandum to Bush dated Jan. 25, 2002, Gonzales said that rescinding detainees' Geneva protections "substantially reduces the threat of domestic criminal prosecution under the War Crimes Act." Doing so, Gonzales wrote, also would create a solid defense against prosecutors or independent counsels who may in the future "decide to pursue unwarranted charges based on Section 2441," the U.S. War Crimes Act, which prohibits violations of the Geneva Conventions. Gonzales added that by withholding Geneva protections and prisoner-of-war status, Bush could avoid case-by-case reviews of detainees' status.
On Feb. 7, 2002, Bush issued a memorandum declaring that alleged al Qaida or Taliban members wouldn't be considered prisoners of war and, further, that they wouldn't be granted protection under Common Article Three. Most nations accept Article Three, common to all four Geneva Conventions, as customary law setting the minimum standard for conduct in any conflict, whether internal or international.
An Aug. 1, 2002, memorandum that Gonzales requested from the Justice Department defined torture as "injury such as death, organ failure or serious impairment of body functions," a high bar for ruling interrogation techniques or detainee treatment illegal. U.S. law, according to the memorandum's analysis, "prohibits only extreme acts."
A March 14, 2003, memorandum that Yoo prepared at Haynes' request concluded that even if an interrogation method violated U.S. criminal statutes - such as the one against war crimes - the interrogators involved most likely couldn't be prosecuted because they were operating within the scope of Bush's constitutional authority to wage war against al Qaida and other militant groups.
"In wartime, it is for the president alone to decide what methods to use to best prevail against the enemy," Yoo wrote.
Now it appears that reinterpreting the law to lift legal protections for detainees could backfire. On May 13, the Pentagon announced that it was dropping all charges against Mohammed al Qahtani, a Saudi man held in Guantanamo who's accused of planning to take part in the 9-11 attacks as the "20th hijacker."
The official overseeing the case, Susan J. Crawford, gave no reason for the move, which followed the leak of an interrogation log that detailed harsh attempts at Guantanamo to break Qahtani mentally. Among the methods used were forcing him to act like a dog, putting women's underwear on his head, keeping him in stress positions and accusing him of homosexuality.
In its decision last week, the Supreme Court restored the right of habeas corpus, that is, the detainees' right to challenge the cause of their detention.
The five lawyers on the War Council met every few weeks behind closed doors in Gonzales' or Haynes' office to plot legal strategy, according to Jack Goldsmith, a former senior Justice Department lawyer.
Several other former U.S. officials confirmed that the group was the driving force for White House policy on detainees.
Fears of future prosecution motivated many officials in the administration, Goldsmith said in his book "The Terror Presidency," published last year. The five lawyers saw legal opinions drafted by Yoo and others in the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel as a shield, Goldsmith wrote, that would make it hard to convict someone of acting on legal advice from the premier legal office in the administration.
"In my two years in the government, I witnessed top officials and bureaucrats in the White House and throughout the administration openly worrying that investigators acting with the benefit of hindsight in a different political environment would impose criminal penalties on heat-of-battle judgment calls," wrote Goldsmith, who declined interview requests.
As the head of the Office of Legal Council from the fall of 2003 to the summer of 2004, Goldsmith reversed the August 2002 and March 2003 opinions.
MILITARY LAWYERS CONCERNED
The military's lawyers were among those who were most concerned about what the new policies would mean for soldiers in the field.
Though not well known to the public, the Judge Advocate General's corps prides itself on defending the Uniform Code of Military Justice, the military's law book, which demands strict discipline and moral behavior in wartime. The legal officers are fond of saying that military commanders can depend on two people for honest advice: their chaplains and their JAG lawyers.
The military legal community complained, to little avail, that the policies hatched with the consent of Bush, Cheney and then-Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld were replacing decades of U.S. military policy on handling detainees.
When they protested, the War Council shut them out.
"We were absolutely marginalized," said Donald J. Guter, a rear admiral who served as the Navy's judge advocate general from 2000 to 2002. "I think it was intentional, because so many military JAGs spoke up about the rule of law."
Thomas Romig, a major general who was the Army's judge advocate general from 2001 to 2005, agreed that the JAGs were pushed to the side: "It was a disaster," he said.
Trust between the uniformed military lawyers and the Bush administration collapsed in the months after 9-11.
Guter said he began to think that Haynes "was playing games" in late 2001, when the two met regularly to figure out how to handle detainees in Afghanistan.
Haynes, then the Pentagon's head lawyer, had asked whether hundreds of the prisoners could be detained on Navy warships. The security and logistics involved in operating a ship while maintaining a maximum-security prison onboard would have been impossible. Guter thought that Haynes was raising such ideas to push him toward establishing a prison at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base.
Guter said "it became apparent pretty quickly" that Haynes wanted a place "outside of the courts," where no judge could consider whether detainees were being held lawfully or under appropriate conditions.
"What they were looking for was the minimum due process that we could get away with," said Guter, who's now the dean of Duquesne University's law school. "I felt like they knew the answer they wanted to hear."
Romig recalled tense discussions with Yoo in November and December 2001 about setting up military commissions to try detainees.
"John Yoo wanted to use military commissions in the manner they were used in the Indian wars," Romig said. "I looked at him and said, 'You know, that was 100-and-something years ago. You're out of your mind; we're talking about the law.' "
The military commissions that the U.S. used against Native Americans during the mid-19th century were often ad hoc and frequently resulted in natives being hanged or shot.
"As they viewed it, due process is legal mumbo jumbo," said Romig, who's now the dean of Washburn University's law school. "They wanted to get them, get the facts and convict them. ... If you're caught as a terrorist, you're presumed guilty and you have to prove you're innocent. It was crazy."
When Romig objected to pushing the boundaries of interrogation procedures during meetings in late 2002 or early 2003, he recalled that civilian defense officials replied that the time for law had passed.
"Guys, it's time to wake up and smell the coffee. It's time to take the gloves off," Romig said he was told by Marshall Billingslea, a deputy to Douglas Feith - who was then the undersecretary of defense for policy, the Pentagon's third-ranking official.
Romig said that he and other military officers asked, "Do you realize the implications of what you're saying?"
Like many in the military, Romig doubted the quality of intelligence gathered by physical coercion.
Haynes, who also was present, had no objections to what Billingslea had said, according to Romig. Billingslea and Haynes declined requests for comment.
In June 2006, over the objections of the White House, the Supreme Court ruled that Common Article Three of the Geneva Conventions was applicable to detainees at Guantanamo Bay.
Four months later, Bush signed the Military Commissions Act, which said that no foreign unlawful combatant subject to trial by military commission could invoke the Geneva Conventions as a source of rights, and that no U.S. court or judge has jurisdiction to hear cases in which such detainees contest their incarceration.
The bill also rewrote part of the U.S. legal code on war crimes, changing the definition of a war crime from conduct that "constitutes a violation of Common Article 3" to the much higher standard of "a grave breach of Common Article 3."
Within that new definition, it excluded "pain or suffering incidental to lawful sanctions," meaning harsh treatment that's allowed by the Bush administration's legal interpretations.
Among those whom Bush thanked at a bill-signing ceremony were Cheney - Addington's main backer in the White House - and Gonzales.
Two years later, the Supreme Court ruled that detainees have the right to challenge their detention before federal judges, striking down that section of the Military Commissions Act. The 5-4 decision said the law applied to everyone: "From an early date it was understood that the king, too, was subject to the law."
The policies hatched in the offices of Gonzales, Addington and Haynes muddied decades of U.S. military policy on handling detainees.
Changes to detainee law such as rescinding Common Article Three give a "dehumanizing message about the people (detainees) we're dealing with," said Lt. Col. Bryan Broyles, a defense attorney in the Office of Military Commissions, which was set up to try detainees at Guantanamo.
"The people who pursue that sort of academic, intellectual pursuit," said Broyles, who represents Qahtani, "don't understand the effect it has on the people (soldiers) who only see the end result."
© 2008 McClatchy Newspapers
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27 Comments so far
Show AllJACK telling YOO
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re Curtis 6/18 3:08pm
BIA (bureau of iraqi affairs)---brilliant!
"It's been a long, long time comin' but I know change gonna come. Oh, yes it will."
These low-rent shysters should be disbarred and indicted. It wasn't legal incompetence and well-intentioned misunderstanding, but blatant advocacy of war crimes. Justice needs to be done, and be seen to have been done, to restore the rule of law and the respect of civilized people, as well as to deter future governments from such violations. Impunity will only breed more atrocities.
That photo shows the same smirk that Rove, Rumsfeld, and Cheney exhibit. That look says it all: "So?" "Fuck all you little people. Maybe you don't like it but what can you do about it?" "Shut up and keep paying your taxes or we will work you twice as hard for half the money." "Your job is creating wealth; how we choose to waste it is none of your business." "Don't complain or we might really get mad."
I can't believe we accept this situation. Hell, half of us run around waving flags and bragging about how free we are.
Jesus, John Q., can't you see what is going on? I guess not; when we do it may be too late.
Phillipe Sands wrote a great article in the May issue of Vanity Fair: http://www.vanityfair.com/politics/features/2008/05/guantanamo200805
He's an international lawyer and professor at UCL in London. He's been on Democracy Now! and has hinted at other countries filing war crime charges against those involved. Ironic isn't it? The supposedly 'beacon of freedom' might be in the dock.
Once again, McClatchy comes through with excellent investigative reporting. They never disappoint.
I wonder if Yoo's grandparents went to Manzanar. Maybe that's where he get's it from.
I don't know how intellectual he is... when I look at him I sorta get the empty headed 'few noodles short of a combo meal' vibe.
I believe the five lawyers took an oath to uphold the Constitution of the US when they took office. They also took such an oath when admitted to the Federal bar. They obviously perjured themselves by their actions in office. If Bill Clinton lost his law license because of a far lesser perjury, it is only fitting that all five face disbarment for moral turpitude and perjury.
oregoncharles asked: "Why aren't students and others dogging his steps and making his life a misery?"
Well I would suspect that these slimy lawyers-in-training look up to Yoo for his fancy footwork in gutting international law. He's probably a hero to them.
John Yoo: Traitor to mankind. Another immoral, disgusting snake of a lawyer.
With respect to the way Yoo wanted to treat Iraq natives the way the American Indians were treated 100 years ago, our native people were on top of this in 2003. See "Bureau of Iraqi Affairs"
BUREAU OF IRAQI AFFAIRS (BIA) march 26, 2003
Dear People of Iraq,
Now that you have been liberated from your tyrannical oppressors, we at the BIA look forward to our relationship with you. Below you will find a list of what to expect from the services of our good offices.
1. Henceforth, English will be the spoken language of all government and associated offices. If you do not speak English, a translator fluent in German will be provided.
2. All Iraqi people will apply for a spot on a citizen roll. Citizenship will be open to those people who can prove that they are Iraqi back four generations with documents issued by the United States. Christian church records may also be given in support.
3. All hospitals will be issued with a standard emergency aid kit. The kit contains gauze, Band-Aids, burn cream, iodine, tweezers, and duct tape.
4. Your oil is to be held in trust for you. We will appoint your new American approved government a lawyer with a background in the oil industry. Never mind that he works for the company that he will eventually cut a deal with. This close relationship will guarantee you more money for your oil.
5. Each Citizen will be allotted one hundred acres of prime Iraqi desert. They will be issued plows, hoes, seed corn and the King James Bible. All leftover land will be open to settlement by Israelis.
6. Each Citizen is entitled to draw a ration of milk, sugar, flour and lard. If you can not use the rations for health or religious reasons you may file a complaint with your BIA appointed liaisons, Crisco. Those Iraqis showing signs of diabetes, heart disease, or glaucoma will be issued with double rations in place of adequate health care.
7. We will mismanage your trust monies, allowing any five year old with minimal computer skills to hack into the system and set up their own account. Records of your accounts will be kept, but you must receive express written permission from the head of the BIA to examine them.
8. In keeping with the separation of Church and State supported by the US constitution, Christian missionaries will be sponsored through government funding. Only Iraqis who convert to Christianity will be allowed to hold jobs within the government.
9. For the purposes of treaty making, any single Iraqi will be found
competent to sign on behalf of all other Iraqis.
10. Welcome to the Free World and have a nice day!
--
Elizabeth Winter * Taos, New Mexico * ewinter@newmex.com
"I'm the person who gets to decide, not you."
George W. Bush - Crawford, TX - 12/31/02
(from CNN.com, dated 1/1/03)
To baruch: You ask "Can't Yoo be held responsible legally for distorting the law in order to cover up human rights abuses and war crimes?"
I ask: "Can't Bush, Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld be held responsible legally for distorting the law in order to cover up human rights abuses and war crimes?"
In the meantime, several "bad apples" who served at abu G have criminal records. Lynndie England is still on parole, and Charles Grainer is still in the slam.
Its simple then, the next President should declare Bush, Cheny, Gonzales and the "War Council" as terrorists, and serve them a heaping helping of their own bullshit.
"Sen. Carl Levin, who's leading an investigation into the origins of the harsh interrogation techniques..."
Even in a great article like this we still see Harsh Interrogation Techniques (HIT) instead of Torture. How do we kill this damned meme?
As long as we're on the topic..........I'd really like to know why it is that with republicans it always comes down to sex and abuse, in the end? What is it with these people, anyway?
Ahhhh…the Indian Wars, I'll have to get up to speed on those. I don't know much about them actually. So that's where Yoo is drawing his quackery from. I see, Americans used inquisition style tribunals against the native people. They had the death penalty option too, just like Yoo's version, way to go Yoo! Now I understand why University of California at Berkeley wanted him. They are clearly understaffed in the position of profs who want to turn back the clock on legal theory to a time of savagery, and I'm not talking about the American Indians.
One small problem, U of C at B. Any court para-legal or court stenographer in, well pick any democratic country you want, could make Yoo's sophistry into swiss cheese. Are American legal professionals really that stupid? Surely not. That is why most of Yoo's garbage is still, woop-dee-doo, "top secret". The, not so, secret is that Yoo couldn't reason his way out of a garbage bag.
How much do you guys pay to go to a school like University of California at Berkeley? At our schools the curriculum is a little lighter on the commissioning of war crime and focuses more, for example, on the tools one might need to prosecute, say persons who commit war crimes.
Berkely is a disgrace to the nation. If release from tenure was good enough for Ward Churchill, then it's good enough for John Yoo. The students there should be protesting Yoo's presence on a daily basis. If his presence there causes too many disruptions in the academic environment, they'll have no choice but to release him from tenure. They need to keep protesting!
Once again: why is Yoo still an honored professor at a prestigious university? Berkeley, of all places?
I'm with "overkill:" why on earth do the students put up with it? Is anybody in his classes? Is he doing anything for his salary besides writing dishonest op-eds? And why isn't the administration ashamed of itself?
He is guilty of both moral turpitude and gross incompetence, both traditional grounds for removing tenure. So far, the administration's excuse is that he hasn't been convicted of a crime: is the bar really that low at Berkeley? He is clearly GUILTY of a crime, whether or not he's been convicted.
Why aren't students and others dogging his steps and making his life a misery?
...there is a very encouraging trend in the media nowadays: where just a few years ago Bush, Cheney, Yoo et al. seemed unstoppable, with an ever obedient media enabling their abuses of governmental power and privilege, we are now seeing the pendulum swing the other way: Yoo is on the defensive. Bush is also on the defensive: a diminished and mocked lame duck. Cheney, alone, continues his shrill defiance of basically the entire civilised world--with his insane demands to the Pentagon for ever "More war! Attack Iran/Syria/Democrats/_(you name it)_ by air and land! Invade! Kill everybody! Take no prisoners!!!". Egads what a sociopath.
...It may not be over yet, but the tide IS shifting...and as the tide gradually shifted for Chile's Pinochet--from all powerful dictator to an old, weathered man constantly on the run from prosecution at home an abroad--I sincerely hope Bush, Cheney, Yoo, Addington, Libby, et al are aggressively pursued by the long and patient hand of The Law (be it USA's or International Law makes no difference), and severely punished for their grave misdeeds.
We will NEVER FORGET.
Justice SHALL BE SERVED...
A professor of sadistic torture at Berkeley?
In the 70's the students would have used him to paint Red Square red.
Seems only fair to render these wonderful fellows to a secret location and apply various persuasive techniques to them until they confess to everything that's put to them.
Surely they must have realised that when the power balance changed they'd get the same techniques they proposed for others?
There may well come a time in which any American or other national who served in the blatantly illegal war in Iraq could be subject to arrest and trial anywhere in the world. Intellectual thugs like Yoo and Addington had better watch where they vacation.
Can't Yoo be held responsible legally for distorting the law in order to cover up human rights abuses and war crimes?
The University at Berkely was once noted as the most liberally minded and fair college of humanitarian thought. But along came REagan and what followed was this professor of law, Yoo and who knows how many more who have sold out our basic principles. If the college students at Berkely have any muster, then the professor should be blackballed and forced to resign. Let's see if our youngsters care.