Rushing to Acquit
In the past months, a steadily increasing flow of information strongly suggests that Bush-Cheney Administration officials may have committed or approved of the commission of War Crimes and other violations of international and domestic law in pursuit of its "War on Terror." In reaction to the building mass of evidence-- testimonial, documentary, videotapes, and photographs--of torture and cruel treatment of detainees from Guantanamo to Bagram to Iraq, a number of commentators and pundits have tried to "spin" the evidence away from accountability. According to these media partisans, no one should be prosecuted, the President should issue pardons to all, and the best option is to have some kind of truth commission later on when it's all over. Despite a scathing report from the Justice Department's Office of the Inspector General in May, 2008, reporting the F.B.I.'s observation of a catalogue of abuses at Guantanamo, Attorney General Michael Mukasey has refused to take any action against Justice Department or other officials who may have been involved in sanctioning the use of "enhanced interrogation" methods, including torture.
These "enhanced interrogation" methods, derived from Chinese and Soviet techniques developed to torture U.S. soldiers, have been called "necessary" by those who promulgated their use despite pervasive evidence that such techniques do nothing more than produce false confessions.
Ignoring the legal requirement for investigation and accountability for the use of cruel and inhuman treatment, including the use of torture, is a wholesale abandonment of this country's commitment to the Rule of Law. I firmly object to a premature pre-emption of possible prosecutions against people who have committed War Crimes or other violations of U.S. and international law. It is imperative that the United States, long a supporter of human rights, the Geneva Conventions, and the Convention Against Torture, honor its commitment to these laws. To do otherwise is to abandon the long-standing principles of this nation and to endanger the standing of the United States as an advocate for human rights. To do nothing diminishes the value of the Rule of Law.
I do not deny the horrific violence committed against the United States on September 11, 2001, or the trauma it has caused. I do deny that the attacks of 9/11 absolve the United States of its historic commitment to the Rule of Law. U.S. commitment to laws regulating war arises from deep within American history, something that the architects of the "war on terror" seem to have ignored. The United States first stood for humane treatment of captives during the Revolutionary War, when George Washington forbade his troops from mistreating the British, even if the British tortured Americans. During the Civil War, Lincoln commissioned the Lieber Code establishing a law of war. After World War II, the U.S. was a primary advocate for the Geneva Conventions. And it has honored Geneva and held the Conventions applicable through every war until the "war on terror." Moreover, the United States is a signatory of the Convention Against Torture, and the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005, which specifically forbids the military, although not the CIA, from engaging in torture or cruel, inhumane, and degrading treatment of "detainees."
The United States not only helped promulgate the Geneva Conventions, it was a signatory and enacted legislation binding the country to the Conventions. Geneva prohibits the mistreatment of any captive in a war, regardless of status. The Bush Administration lawyers decided, on the basis of one highly criticized Supreme Court case, In re Quirin, to argue that anyone designated an "enemy combatant" had no rights under Geneva or any other law, including the criminal law of the United States. The Geneva Conventions, however, contain no such description or definition. And, since Quirin, the United States has honored Geneva and the Supreme Court has repeatedly held that simply calling someone an "enemy combatant" does not remove the person from the protection of the laws, including Geneva and the Constitution of the United States.
Impunity from prosecutions for war and other crimes is for dictatorships, not democracies. Thus, I steadfastly believe that "impunity" from prosecution for crimes committed by government agents or their superiors -either through pardons or refusals to investigate and prosecute-- damages the commitment to the Rule of Law for which the United States has long stood, and for which International Law has stood, for many years. The Nuremberg Principles made clear that obeying orders from a "higher authority" did not excuse war crimes and crimes against humanity. As a chief prosecutor at Nuremberg, and as a country that has long stood for the principle of being a government of laws, not men, the United States cannot and should not abandon the Rule of Law for convenience, its own political comfort, or deniability of crimes committed in the name, if without the approval, of the American people. Ruling out prosecution in advance of the evidence is neither a legal nor a moral option.
Lynne Henderson, AB 1975, J.D., 1979, Stanford, is a Professor of Law at Boyd School of Law, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. She teaches and writes in the areas of criminal law, constitutional law , feminist jurisprudence, and violence against women. She is a member of the Society of American Law Teachers, SALT, and serves on a SALT committee dealing with human rights issues post-9/11.
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15 Comments so far
Show AllTorture is a National Security tool. Torture is being used by local law enforcement in every town across the USA.
Local law enforcement can not conduct 24/7 surveillance without court warrants, but civilians can follow any one they want. You heard me right, IAFF, EMS, community watch groups are all civilians. They can follow anyone they want, they are organized and use Cointel pro tactics. It is very difficult to prove that you are being stalked.It is not covert surveillance to protect the public, it is training for the NEW Nation Wide Stazi police state.
How???
Ask the IAFF and EMS associations. Ask Verizon and Cable company's. Ask your local community watch groups and church groups.Ask your elected officials.Ask local business owners that belong to Infragard.
They are receiving DHS grant money to develop local spy programs.You know them as Community Watch or Neighborhood Watch.
Conintel Pro tactics are used to create suspects, that they use to train there 24/7 spy groups.
You can not have a spy program without suspects.
I say Cointel Pro , because I know, I am a victim.There are thousands of Americans being subjected to this torture every day, nation wide, the Stazi police need suspects to grow their networks.Our congress knows it, that's why they gave Verizon immunity, because I could prove through phone company records what is happening to me and others, and they know it.
I have had my phones tapped for well over a year. I have had Verizon trucks, Ems vehicles, Fire trucks with sirens blasting on me in every town I visit for my work. I am a Field Engineer for a large company and have a 200 mile territory, I do a lot of driving through at least 7 county's.
I am a great suspect because I have helped these Natzi spys create communications links and surveillance networks through 7 county's.
And trust me when I tell you, they have hundreds of different vehicles involved every day.And its been that way for 18 months. What ever it is they have told these watch groups about me, is nothing but horrific lies.
My life has been put in harms way by a bunch of super hero freaks, and being paid for by DHS.I tell you right now, if I win the lotto, I will have to hire Blackwater to escort me and pick up my check. Thats how safe I feel having these national security home grown community watch freaks on me 24/7 for the last 18 months.
I will not see my day in court ,redress of grievances, because without taking thousands of pictures and lots of video I would look like a stark raving crazy man. An if I could take thousands of pictures I would need a data base linking all these cars to my daily travels , which I could do, but I would still look crazy in a court of law.
Cointel Pro at its very worst and best.
The vehicles always have headlights on, one brighter then the other, one park light out, left or right, or high beams on, or headlights and fog lights on all the time.
For one 6 month stretch I had cars with loud music playing come by my house every night every 15 minutes.From the 6 pm to about 11 pm, no one around me ever called the police for noise infractions. Because, they were all approached and told that they had a criminal in there community that they were trying to flush out.
They love to tail gate me within feet , to let me know they are there and try to get a reaction out of me, to prove to there zombie spy army I am a threat.
This is psychological torture.
Hell , for three months I had vehicles all around me, all the time with the following stickers:
IAFF, Sheriff emblems, EMS stickers , Fish Symbols, Free Mason symbols, Support your Troops, Marine Stickers , Army stickers.
Right wing fanatics that have taken over our country in the name of God and fighting terrorists.
Torture you say, try getting our main stream media to uncover this torture. You can't , because they belong to these watch groups.
Americas real dirty secret, the birth of a Nation of Stazi spys.
Hey George, and Dick , torture during a time of War is a War Crime.
Hey Stalkers, there is no statute of limits on War Crimes.
I will wait , and when the days arrives, have my day in court.
By the way, they know every word I type online, and know every word I speak in my home and on the phone.I have learned to use this to my advantage. I am here today,surviving, after all this and open heart surgery a few months ago , because I believe that God wants me to lead Americans in this fight to uncover this madness, and restore justice.
BornFreeMen
I will not join a group,church or organization that is involved in psychological torture, or practices warrantless surveillance on Americans.
This is my bond and oath to my Fellow American Citizens.
even were Bush to pardon the whole lot, war crimes prosecutions need not be stopped. these are international crimes that need no rely on an American court, and the presidential power of pardon does not apply outside of the American system.
jlocke,
I agree, the detainees are either criminals or innocent of committing crimes. This is a matter for courts to decide.
However , if one desires to to instill a corporate fascist junta, the first thing one must prove is disdain for any limitation of authority.
A stupid question - if I may? Why aren't people of the calibre of this woman - Lynne Henderson - in high places in my Government - perhaps even our Attorney General?
The Mental and Moral cripples who seem to be at the head of my government is a constant source of agony for me and many others who can actually form a cogent thought and posess a modicum of common decency completely absent - it seems - from any of my so-called leaders.
AdeleTheCzech, Let me try to answer your questions.
-"Isn't it more akin to Pres. Jefferson trying to deal with the Barbary pirates (a multinational group of thieves and cutthroats)in the 1800s?"
The Barbary differed from al-Qaida in certain ways. The pirates were a formidable military challenge in the Mediterranean with powerful backers. They sunk thousands of European vessels; they enslaved millions of people. The only way to stop them was through the force of arms. In contrast, al-Qaida, is at most a loose association of perhaps one thousand people scattered around the globe. They are responsible for no more than several thousand deaths, although those deaths are looped over and over on US propaganda outlets. Dealing with al-Qaida clearly should have been a police matter, as the FBI pointed out to Bush, no later than 2002. For example the FBI report by Glenn Fine says:
The Bush methods: "were not working, would not work and would come back to haunt the United States as it moved from intelligence gathering to prosecution"
-Is this a reasonable requirement when we have arrested a terrorism suspect? We can't interrogate him? (I don't mean torture, to which I'm unalterably opposed.)
Well here you have answered your own question. If the US has arrested a suspect, of course they can interrogate them. But that is not what has happened. The US has paid bounty hunters for innocent people. The US has kidnapped innocent people off the streets of the US and Europe. Go ask a policeman what an "arrest" is. That is not what is going on here. What is going on here is kidnapping and torture, not of stateless murderers but of everyone from chauffeurs to children to others that have no connection to terrorism at all. And the soldiers doing the reviews of the prisoners in Guantanamo and the CIA agents know this. It is in their Combatant Status Review Tribunal reports.
-"Reasonable in war; utterly unreasonable, in my opinion, when we're holding terrorism suspects."
Well I think I have explained above how, just because Bush calls the threat of al-Qaida a "war" that doesn't make it a war, however, Bush did misuse the 9/11 event as an opportunity to commit war crimes. By skipping back and force between war and policing, the criminals in the white house have created a legal limbo with the most hellish consequences for the future of the US.
Mukasey's conduct amounts to obstruction of justice, a felony. He should be disbarred and prosecuted. His conduct degrades the legal profession and threatens the integrity of our system of justice.
In my view, the Bushies have committed so many impeachable offenses that we KNOW about (and who knows how many we DON'T know about) that it would take all day to read the indictment. But I want to comment on one of the major focuses of this article:
"After World War II, the U.S. was a primary advocate for the Geneva Conventions. And it has honored Geneva and held the Conventions applicable through every war until the "war on terror." ...
Two things always spring to my mind when people write about terrorism and the Geneva Conventions or "Laws of War." The first is that the "war on terror" is a contradiction in terms -- we can't make war on a tactic. The second is, what kind of war ARE we in, then? Isn't it more akin to Pres. Jefferson trying to deal with the Barbary pirates (a multinational group of thieves and cutthroats)in the 1800s?
I don't see how the "laws of war" apply to a stateless group of mass murderers such as al-Qaida. To cite just one example, under the Geneva Conventions a prisoner has the right to refuse to answer all questions, other than his name, rank and number. Is this a reasonable requirement when we have arrested a terrorism suspect? We can't interrogate him? (I don't mean torture, to which I'm unalterably opposed.)
Also, under Geneva (the Conventions really lay out exemplary standards for captured people in conventional wars) detainees have the right to correspond with their families on a regular basis. Reasonable in war; utterly unreasonable, in my opinion, when we're holding terrorism suspects.
I wonder if anyone else who reads CD regularly has a good answer to this. I consider dealing with these detainees to be a real dilemma.
'These "enhanced interrogation" methods, derived from Chinese and Soviet techniques developed to torture U.S. soldiers, have been called "necessary" by those who promulgated their use despite pervasive evidence that such techniques do nothing more than produce false confessions.'
========
I think the inescapable conclusion is that the Bush-Cheney Gang wanted false confessions.
What better way to cover up their own complicity in the 9-11 attacks?
And, since they have empowered themselves to disappear anyone they want, they are fully capable of disappearing anyone who know too much about what actually happened that day.
Well, if you don't like this mess and I certainly don't, you might want to consider 3rd party candidates for leadership for a change. Ralph Nader, Cindy Sheehan, Cynthia McKinney, and countless other 3rd/Independent party progressive/liberals are ready to help you. All you need to do is offer them your support and get out of the two party mess because you're only part of the problem if you don't.
2 questions...
The troops have been following orders from a 'higher authority'. Should they be indicted?
Approximately 1000 have the power in the US to indict - 50 State Attorneys General and 950 Prosecutors. The crimes have been evident for a few years now. No indictment has been sought. Doesn't that prove that the 'rule of law' does not exist in the US?
If you want to see the TV coverage of the House Judiciary Committee hearing on the crimes of the Bush Junta...
http://liberationvideo.blogspot.com/2008/08/crimes-of-bush-junta.html
the author:
"Impunity from prosecutions for war and other crimes is for dictatorships, not democracies. Thus, I steadfastly believe that "impunity" from prosecution for crimes committed by government agents or their superiors -either through pardons or refusals to investigate and prosecute– damages the commitment to the Rule of Law for which the United States has long stood, and for which International Law has stood, for many years."
wow - she not only believes but she steadfastly does so
to the writer: i steadfastly call upon you to disclose, immediately, a full list of the medications you are currently taking - i want to go to happyland too
and i want to do that steadfastly
Good article, Lynne Henderson. The jury is still out on whether the US is going to sweep the war crimes under the rug or go with the rule of law.
Lynne Henderson is completely correct in her argument. We as a nation insist on the rule of law. To practise selective compliance is a violation of the principal's our country was founded on.
The rule of law must be honored because if you refute its mandates or breach its principals to further your political or social agenda you are worse than a criminal, you are also a traitor to your country.
There can be no exceptions.
Thank you, Lynne, for your excellent article.
Everyone who agrees please send it on to Senator Feinstein and others who enabled Mukasy to become Attorney General and ask that they now work to debar him.
We the people must demand a restoration of our Rule of Law, our balance of powers, our Bill of Rights and our Constitution. . . over and over and over again.
Many voices together have strength.