Senate Report Links Bush to Detainee Homicides; Media Yawns
The bipartisan Senate Armed Services Committee report issued on Thursday -- which documents that "former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and other senior U.S. officials share much of the blame for detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba" and "that Rumsfeld's actions were 'a direct cause of detainee abuse' at Guantanamo and 'influenced and contributed to the use of abusive techniques ... in Afghanistan and Iraq'" -- raises an obvious and glaring question: how can it possibly be justified that the low-level Army personnel carrying out these policies at Abu Ghraib have been charged, convicted and imprisoned, while the high-level political officials and lawyers who directed and authorized these same policies remain free of any risk of prosecution? The culpability which the Report assigns for these war crimes is vast in scope and unambiguous:
The executive summary also traces the erosion of detainee treatment standards to a Feb,. 7, 2002, memorandum signed by President George W. Bush stating that the Geneva Convention did not apply to the U.S. war with al Qaeda and that Taliban detainees were not entitled to prisoner of war status or legal protections.
"The president's order closed off application of Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, which would have afforded minimum standards for humane treatment," the summary said.
Members of Bush's Cabinet and other senior officials participated in meetings inside the White House in 2002 and 2003 where specific interrogation techniques were discussed, according to the report.
The policies which the Senate Armed Services Committee unanimously concludes were authorized by Bush, Rumsfeld and several other top Bush officials did not merely lead to "abuse" and humiliating treatment, but are directly -- and unquestionably -- responsible for numerous detainee murders. Many of those deaths caused by abusive treatment have been formally characterized as "homicides" by autopsies performed in Iraq and Afghanistan (see these chilling compilations of autopsy findings on detainees in U.S. custody, obtained by the ACLU, which reads like a classic and compelling exhibit in a war crimes trial).
While the bulk of the attention over detainee abuse has been directed to Guantanamo, the U.S., to this day, continues to imprison -- with no charges -- thousands of Iraqi citizens. In Iraq an Afghanistan, detainee deaths were rampant and, to this day, detainees continue to die under extremely suspicious circumstances. Just yesterday, there was yet another death of a very young Iraqi detainee whose death was attributed to quite unlikely natural causes.
The U.S. military says a detainee has died of an apparent heart attack while in custody at a U.S. detention facility in Baghdad.
Monday's statement says the 25-year-old man was pronounced dead by doctors at a combat hospital after losing consciousness at Camp Cropper. . . .
The U.S. military is holding thousands of prisoners at Camp Cropper near the Baghdad airport and Camp Bucca in the southern desert.
For years, it has been common to attribute detainee deaths to "heart attacks" where the evidence makes clear that abusive interrogation techniques and other inhumane treatment -- the very policies authorized at the highest levels of the U.S. government -- were the actual proximate cause of the deaths. This deceptive practice was documented in this fact-intensive report -- entitled: "Medical Investigations of Homicides of Prisoners of War in Iraq and Afghanistan" -- by Steven H. Miles, Professor of Medicine and Bioethics at the University of Minnesota:
It is probably inevitable that some prisoners who reportedly die of "natural causes" in truth died of homicide. However, the nature of Armed Forces' medical investigations made this kind of error more likely. The AFME reported homicide as the cause of death in 10 of the 23 death certificates released in May 2004. The death of Mohamed Taiq Zaid was initially attributed to "heat"; it is currently and belatedly being investigated as a possible homicide due to abusive exposure to the hot Iraqi climate and deprivation of water.
Eight prisoners suffered "natural" deaths from heart attacks or atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Threats, beatings, fear, police interrogation, and arrests are known to cause "homicide by heart attack" or life-threatening heart failure. People with preexisting heart disease, dehydration, hyperthermia, or exhaustion are especially susceptible.[11-15] No forensic investigation of lethal "heart attacks" explores the possibility that these men died of stress-induced heart attacks. There are a number of reports of "heart attack" following harsh procedures in rounding up noncombatants in Iraq and Afghanistan.
A typically sketchy US Army report says, "Detainee Death during weekend combat .... Army led raid this past weekend of a house in Iraq ... an Iraqi who was detained and zip-locked (flexi-cuffed with plastic bands tying his wrists together) died while in custody. Preliminary information is that the detainee died from an apparent heart attack.[16]" Sher Mohammad Khan was picked up in Afghanistan in September 2004. Shortly thereafter, his bruised body was given to his family. Military officials told journalists that he had died of a heart attack within hours of being taken into custody. No investigation, autopsy, or death certificate is available.[17]
Or consider this:
Adbul Kareen Abdura Lafta (also known as Abu Malik Kenami) was admitted to Mosul prison on December 5, 2003 and died 4 days later.[20,21] The short, stocky, 44-year-old man weighed 175 pounds. He was never given a medical examination, and there is no medical record. After interrogation, a sandbag was put over his head. When he tried to remove it, guards made him jump up and down for 20 minutes with his wrists tied in front of him and then 20 minutes more with his wrists bound behind his back with a plastic binder. The bound and head-bagged man was put to bed. He was restless and "jibbering in Arabic." The guards told him to be quiet.
The next morning, he was found dead. The body had "bloodshot" eyes, lacerations on his wrists from the plastic ties, unexplained bruises on his abdomen, and a fresh, bruised laceration on the back of his head. US Army investigators noted that the body did not have defensive bruises on his arms, an odd notation given that a man cannot raise bound arms in defense. No autopsy was performed. The death certificate lists the cause of death as unknown. It seems likely that Mr. Kenami died of positional asphyxia because of how he was restrained, hooded, and positioned. Positional asphyxia looks just like death by a natural heart attack except for those telltale conjunctival hemorrhages in his eyes.
There are countless other episodes like this of human beings in American custody dying because of the mistreatment -- authorized by Bush, Rumsfeld and others -- to which we subjected them. These are murders and war crimes in every sense of the word. That the highest level Bush officials and the President himself are responsible for the policies that spawned these crimes against humanity have been long known to anyone paying minimal attention, but now we have a bipartisan Senate Report -- signed by the presidential nominee of Bush's own political party -- that directly assigns culpability for these war crimes to the President and his policies. It's nothing less than a formal declaration from the Senate that the President and his top aides are war criminals.
* * * * *
This Report was issued on Thursday. Not a single mention was made of it on any of the Sunday news talk shows, with the sole exception being when John McCain told George Stephanopoulos that it was "not his job" to opine on whether criminal prosecutions were warranted for the Bush officials whose policies led to these crimes. What really matters, explained McCain, was not that we get caught up in the past, but instead, that we ensure this never happens again -- yet, like everyone else who makes this argument, he offered no explanation as to how we could possibly ensure that "it never happens again" if we simultaneously announce that our political leaders will be immunized, not prosecuted, when they commit war crimes. Doesn't that mindset, rather obviously, substantially increase the likelihood -- if not render inevitable -- that such behavior will occur again? Other than that brief exchange, this Senate Report was a non-entity on the Sunday shows.
Instead, TV pundits were consumed with righteous anger over the petty, titillating, sleazy Rod Blagojevich scandal, competing with one another over who could spew the most derision and scorn for this pitiful, lowly, broken individual and his brazen though relatively inconsequential crimes. Every exciting detail was vouyeristically and meticulously dissected by political pundits -- many, if not most, of whom have never bothered to acquaint themselves with any of the basic facts surrounding the monumental Bush lawbreaking and war crimes scandals. TV "journalists" who have never even heard of the Taguba report -- the incredible indictment issued by a former U.S. General, who subsequently observed: "there is no longer any doubt as to whether the current administration has committed war crimes. The only question that remains to be answered is whether those who ordered the use of torture will be held to account" -- spent the weekend opining on the intricacies of Blogojevich's hair and terribly upsetting propensity to use curse words.
The auction conducted by Blagojevich was just a slightly more flamboyant, vulgar and reckless expression of how our national political class conducts itself generally (are there really any fundamental differences between Blagojevich's conduct and Chuck Schumer's systematic, transparent influence-peddling and vote-selling to Wall Street donors, as documented by this excellent and highly incriminating New York Times piece from Sunday -- "A Champion of Wall St. Reaps the Benefits")? But Blagojevich is an impotent figure, stripped of all power, a national joke. And attacking and condemning him is thus cheap and easy. It threatens nobody in power. To the contrary, his downfall is deceptively and usefully held up as an extreme aberration -- proof that government officials are held accountable when they break the law.
The media fixation on the ultimately irrelevant Blagojevich scandal, juxtaposed with their steadfast ignoring of the Senate report documenting systematic U.S. war crimes, is perfectly reflective of how our political establishment thinks. Blagojevich's laughable scheme is transformed into a national fixation and made into the target of collective hate sessions, while the systematic, ongoing sale of the legislative process to corporations and their lobbyists are overlooked as the normal course of business. Lynndie England is uniformly scorned and imprisoned while George Bush, Dick Cheney and Don Rumsfeld are headed off to lives of luxury, great wealth, respect, and immunity from the consequences for their far more serious crimes. And the courageous and principled career Justice Department lawyer who blew the whistle on Bush's illegal spying programs -- Thomas Tamm -- continues to have his life destroyed, while the countless high-level government officials, lawyers and judges who also knew about it and did nothing about it are rewarded and honored, and those who committed the actual crimes are protected and immunized.
Just ponder the uproar if, in any other country, the political parties joined together and issued a report documenting that the country's President and highest aides were directly responsible for war crimes and widespread detainee abuse and death. Compare the inevitable reaction to such an event if it happened in another country to what happens in the U.S. when such an event occurs -- a virtual media blackout, ongoing fixations by political journalists with petty scandals, and an undisturbed consensus that, no matter what else is true, high-level American political figures (as opposed to powerless low-level functionaries) must never be held accountable for their crimes.
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37 Comments so far
Show AllSO WHAT ! I remember the past wars and the reports of injured and deaths . The numbers were all lies ! When we thought Sadam was in a house in the middle of a city we dropped a 20K bomb on that house and bragged about it . Any collateral damage there ? The over 4K of our guys killed over there is no doubt more lies . How many millions of people did we really kill over there ? And now the man in charge said "SO WHAT" . Meanwhile the MSM is busy diverting attention elsewhere . While this is the greatest crime in our nation's history the people's representatives are very quiet .
Can anyone think of a crime that actually gets prosecuted in court, any court anywhere, that did not occur in the "past"? Is it possible to give one's attention to criminal behavior, such as GG writes of here of the 8-year long Bush-Cheney crime wave, that happened in the present or the future? The past is the only dimension of the time continuum in which crimes can be said to "have occurred", and yet we have a political class utterly addicted to this "I'm not interested in dwelling on the past. It's time we Move Forward and make sure these things don't happen again." As Greenwald says, and as any common sense will reveal, it will all "happen again" if we ignore the crimes that already happened, in that pointless dwelling place, the irrelevant past. All McCain is saying, and all the others exactly like him, is that "Yes, crimes may have been committed, but I'm a politician who refuses to pursue justice because it might hurt my chances for reelection, or the rabid dogs of the far right, led by the scary and omnipotent Karl Rove, will be sicced on me and I'll go down in the corrupt and all-consuming flames of politics as usual as it's perennially practiced here in the good old terminally corrupt USA."
Where are the Sunday sermons about what this country is suffering through because of Bush/Cheney crimes against humanity? Where are the religious leaders? The Pope? Oh, yea . .. they are at a right to life gathering discussing what punitive measures to support against girls and women or even politicians who vote "wrongly." There is no compassion for the dark skinned men who inhabit the jail cells at Guantanamo and are tortured to death, who apparently in their view, have no right to life.
Sioux Rose
SIERRA: Apt observation, and boy, could I add to the list!
You aren't going to like this, but you idiots who voted for McCain or Obama were told that no change would be coming.
You were also told that Bush was a liar and thief before the 2000 election. Likewise, again you were told that the same con game was working in the 2004 election with Kerry and Bush.
You have been told over and over, before the fact, but somehow you are surprised that the ruling elite maintain the power.
You must be insane.
Isn't it fascinating that the Christian right is so silent on this momentous issue? They were so exercised over Clinton's infidelity that they impeached him, but the devout in Congress and their clerical water carriers are strangely silent, even as they prepare to celebrate the birth of "The Prince of Peace" and sing carols about "Peace on Earth and Goodwill Towards Men," when the man they claimed was appointed by the Almighty himself (with a little help from the Supreme Court) is patently guilty of egregious crimes against humanity.
I can think of no more trenchant moral litmus test.
Alex
Sioux Rose
ALEX: If mankind survives this era of "who's got the best weapon system" posturing and sometimes deployment, I believe television will be cited for the THING that hypnotized the vast majority, created such a massive disconnect between actual and virtual realities... the gap between what's going on and what people understand, talk about, are moved by is so great as to be incomprehensible to those who do see what's at stake.
A Presidential pardon holds no water at the ICC. Obama needs to sign on and extradite anyone who might be charged.
Hahahahahahaha!
Like ANY US administration including an Obama one would do anything but look at you like you just said grass is neon orange at the suggestion of allowing any US official to be sent to the ICC.
E G A D !
We all want to move on.
But just this past Friday, a bipartisan Senate report named Secretary Rumsfeld and other top officials directly responsible for sanctioning torture. Rumors in DC are that Bush will pardon Rumsfeld and others for these abuses.1
After eight years of defiling America's reputation and renouncing our founding principles, the Bush administration wants to jet off into the sunset without answering to the American public.
Ray Phenicie:
I'd like to be able to launch a spirited rebuttal to your post-but I can't.Sometime around June,I was very optimistic about Obama.I was even given his 2 books in anticipation of the changes coming.
Obama's frequent references to increasing military spending obliterated that optimism.The 2 books are unread and being re-gifted to an eternal optimist in the family.
Hopefully his energy and environmental teams are an improvement,but he sure doesn't seem to come near to being a peace candidate,and if severe military cuts aren't made,how in the hell can our economy improve in the long run?
would you believe infrastructure building?
for peace and sustainability
Jeanot7...Newsworthyness? The shoe gets front page coverage...The non-partisan Congressional report signed by no other than John McCain, stating that the highest officials of the Bush regime were responsible for torture, deaths, etc. at our world-wide detention camps. The story received a one day page 6 story in the San Francisco Chronicle and I didn't even see it in my local Contra Costa Times. The shoe is the important story for sure.
Every Left Leaning website needs to place this story in their headline and not remove it until the corporate (mass) media reports on it.
Every Left Leaning website must demand impeachment and War Crimes charges every single day.
Every Left Leaning website must call out the CEO's of the major corporate news networks and demand they use the public's airwaves to report on the war criminals in the White House.
Every Left Leaning website must demand that the broadcast licenses of the corporate media that use the public's airwaces be pulled unless they report this story, honestly and accurately, to its conclusion.
Unless every Left Leaning website does this this story will shrivel up and disappear. The War Criminals will escape unpunished. And our Constitutional Republic will have the final dagger pushed through its chest.
-------------------------
Whoever controls the media controls the country. Period.
I surely can understand your frustration with the media, the politicians etc. I am an RN and my license would be gone if I committed a felony. I wonder why that doesn't apply to the Senator from Alaska. I also agree with the need for judicial action and at least some investigation of the idiot passing for president and his buddies, especially Dick Cheney.
The problem that is becoming clear to me is that I don't know how to get the process started of removing the crooks who have control of our - well it used to be our - government. I don't think any of the media for sure gives a rat's behind how the people of this country feel about anything. I write to my Congressman and my Senator and if I hear anything from them it is a form letter which either asks for money (I don't have any) or the information sent has nothing to due with the question I had. I am scared and I am sick of all of them.
There will be no judicial action because the overwhelming majority of the population doesn't know about this story.
I'll help you prove it to yourself.
Ask 10 of your non-political friends what they think about the recently released Senate Armed Services Report.
I bet you'll get blank stares back from AT LEAST 9 of them.
So where will the pressure come from for a legal inquiry?
It won't come from anywhere because the corporate media has made sure this story will disappear into the ether.
This story is dead and buried already.
Torture? War Crimes?
The Obama administration is "looking to the future".
There at least two dozen missing blonde girls to focus our nation's attention on.
You must be one of those fringle liberal whackos concerning yourself with the safety and treatment of scary brown terrorists who want to slaughter your g-d lovin' Christian family.
I can specualte if the 'change' Obama is supposed to usher in will call for setting the Guantanamo situation right-freeing all the detainees, naming names on who committed the crimes and vowing it will never happen again.
Of course, that is only a rhetorical 'speculate'. Obama is set to follow in Bush's steps and keep the 'war on terror' going at full tilt. Including torture.
In many locations beyond our shores and beyond Guantanamo.
In many new ways, Obama will fine tune the instruments of war, murder, militarization.
In many ways he is set to impoverish the nation, load our national karma with crimes, wrongdoings, neglect of the ways of justice.
He will find many ways of reinforcing the engines of hate and desperation. He has already committed to these acts and made that commitment when he voted to continue the building of the war machine in Iraq and Afghanistan.
give obama a chance. if he fails us after we unequivocally tell him what we want, THEN complain.
for peace and sustainability
Obama already had a chance-he could have voted 'No' when asked whether more funds should be taken out of the United States Treasury to support the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. Dennis Kucinich did the right thing and did vote 'No'.
So did others in the Congress.
Barack Obama chose to do the wrong thing.
He's already shown who he is.
Do you remember how, around Fall of 2001, you turned your back on the tv news and started shutting off the box so it wouldn't fill your living room with pop culture and lies? Do you remember canceling your newspaper subscription in favor of using something else for birdcage liners? Apparently we weren't alone. Newspapers are in big financial trouble these days, probably because the party line is not only pernicious but boring. Ditto for tv. So here is the call to action for better media: do nothing. Same as you do to get rid of jerkwater Republicans like Newt Gingrich and George Bush. Leave them alone, and they'll self-destruct. Go to the blogs. Go to Amy Goodman. Leave the media to its shrinking circle of idiots.
Greenwald is correct in stating that this very important report isn't getting the attention it should have in the corporate media, but I'm extremely disappointed that Greenwald calls USA detainee treatment "abuse" or "mistreatment" rather than what it really is: torture. Even the despicable John Yoo, in his position-paper written for George Bush, said that detainee treatment couldn't really be called torture unless it resulted in organ-failure or death, and here we have prisoners dying as a result of their "mistreatment" at the hands of Americans. So even by Yoo's standard of proof, this is torture. I wonder why Greenwald fails on this point? Only General Taguba gets it right, and the corporate media have effectively ignored him ever since he went public on this.
If you don't like the media, DEFUND them by not watching them and avoid buying from their sponsors. Furthermore, let those local papers know just how fucked up the media really is. And while at it, gun down your Congress Reps and Sens and make them enact real media reform for the masses and not the elites.
"...the Geneva Convention did not apply to the U.S. war with al Qaeda"
Oh look, it's that '(global) war on terror', with al-Qaeda as the enemy, popping up again like a whacked mole to stymie progress and condone any inhumanity.
The government and military and media consider America to be at war, even if the American people are somnolent. No tribunals or accountings of leaders will take place as long as America is a nation at war.
We need to bring this war into the light of day so that America can see it for what it is, a war that has no victory but that condones and allows barbarities and crimes against humanity.
US: Detainee dies in US custody in Iraq
BAGHDAD (AP) - The U.S. military says a detainee has died of an apparent heart attack while in custody at a U.S. detention facility in Baghdad. Monday's statement says the 25-year-old man was pronounced dead by doctors at a combat hospital after losing consciousness at Camp Cropper.
And so it goes,
another 'Merry Christmas' to some Iraqi family from George W. Bush. HO-HO-HO
The "political class" of which Mr. Bush is a third generation member of, has been elevated by the ambivalence of the past to the level of arrogance that would parallel the same "class" as the Roman era known as the "12 Caesars".
With many of the same abuses, crimes, greed and wasteful excess.
To make matters worse, the U.S. is divided in ideological areas to an insane and self destructive level. For example the Southern Republicans recently took a negative stance in assisting the Auto Makers, after doing the opposite for the Banking Class, in a measure to negatively impact the Unionized labor movement. In fact many southern states have constitutional amendments that disallow and discourage Unionizing of Labor. This helps to concentrate the wealth, putting it into the hands of those who give much to the "political class", who return the favors. The fact that Labor Unions actually represent the truest form of Democracy ever to have existed; "of the people, by the people and for the people" (just to coin a catchy phrase), it irrelavant to the "political calss", and sadly to those who vote for them. Many of those voters are conditioned very early to "give up control" to either the politicians or God, or etc, instead of taking it themselves.
This arrogance could be curtailed tremendously by assuring that the Bush administration is held responsible, not in the U.S. Courts, but the highest court, the International Court of Justice. Then enact legislation that makes the "political class" as accountable as all other "federal employees".
For one small example. All Federal Employees and even the Non-Commissioned Ranks of the Military are held to 90 day fitness reports. Two negative Fitness reports in the same year will result in a "review". Some would argue that "elections" are the equivalent of "term limitations", but a "term" can result in what would be two or more years of "negative fitness reports" without the 90 day intervention or Probationary period. Therefore much damage can be done in a "term", without the "political class member" facing any performance review or oversight.
The myth of "liberal" or "conservative" "left or right" media is ridiculous.
The "media" is a "business" pure and simple, they pander to their audience, that is, whomever is paying them; to do other wise would mean they would be "out of busisness".
Sioux Rose
COUNT COUP: Good analysis. (By the way, thank you for the kind words on the "Atheists on the bus" thread. I was unable to log on for several days. Not sure why.)
Glenn Greenwald's critique of the mainstream media's consensus news reporting priorities captures the ironies of the moment: Blagojevich's sleazy, pathetic, and successfully-thwarted effort to shake down members of his own political party in a pay-to-play auction of Barack Obama's old Senate seat gets headline treatment, while actual war crimes like torture induced detainee homicides, and the successful, systematic audit-evading misappropriation of billions of dollars during the global war on terror by high officials of the Bush regime get nary a mention while the wrongdoers slip and slide out of Washington.
What is on display is more of the old I-can-make-you, I-can-break-you mentality of the MSM. Any connection (no matter how tenuous) between the incoming Obama administration and scandal, must be pressed vigorously as a matter of urgent national interest. Simultaneously, any evidence of criminal wrongdoing (no matter how well documented) by the outgoing Bush administration must be downplayed, all in the interest of transcending divisive political partisanship.
Also, I strongly suggest linking over to the article about Thomas Tamm in Glenn's article by the way.
Although (as usual) Newsweek frames the issue as a false question (is a Justice Department whistleblower who helped break the story of the illegal NSA domestic wiretapping a hero or just a common criminal - stay tuned!), it does shed some interesting new light on the chronology of how the NSA story broke, and the innerworkings of the FISA court itself. And speaking of ironies, can you believe the FBI agent in charge of making a criminal case against Mr. Tamm the whistleblower actually is named Lawless?
Bill from Saginaw
I know -- it's as I recently read -- The media has picked up where they left off 12 years ago. EVERYTHING is made into something concerning the new president and everything ends with a "gate". Everything is a scandal.
Meanwhile, NOW ONE G*D D*MN word is said about all the CRIMES of the Repukican (p)resident when they really should be talking about:
Iraq-gate
Torture-gate
Male-Prostitute-Whitehouse-gate
Oil-gate
911-gate
Lies-gate
Election-theft-gate
I would love to see our whole media come tumbling down. It is still FASCIST. I refuse to watch any of it. Those are our airwaves and we, the people, need to figure a way to take them back. If all the people would wake up and stop giving one cent to any media outlet via movies, DVD's, sponsors, magazines, etc. we could do it. Waking up the people is proving to be a hard one. They still want to have the media do their thinking for them and to be fed cr*p news about TV and movie personalities instead of dealing with reality. And those people are the reason they've been able to get away with this Fascist cr*p for so long.
"We're in this long twilight struggle here, and so America's prestige and image, as we all know, was damaged by these stories of mistreatment."
One more comment on John McCain's performance on This Week yesterday. This line, which followed the one about only looking forward, is disgraceful! His language indicates that he's not concerned about what actually happened, but more about the "stories" of what happened. He's far more concerned with "...America's prestige and image..." than he is about a single life being ended through the use of torture. It's reminiscent of how the Catholic church lamented the damage the pedophile priests inflicted on the church...without ever once mentioning the children that were abused.
America is a disgrace as long as these criminals (including John McCain) are walking free in the world.
McCain (via guntotinganglion) sez: ""We're in this long twilight struggle here, and so America's prestige and image, as we all know, was damaged by these stories of mistreatment."
***
Now, again, stripping out McInsane's filler verbiage ...
"America's image was damaged by these stories."
Notice the mistreatment wasn't the problem, but the fact that it got publicized. And America no longer has any prestige to damage, so it's the IMAGE of America that took a hit.
McLame's just bummin' cuz truth landed a rare uppercut to propaganda. But truth remains a heavy underdog, as Greenwald's piece illuminates.
John McCain, on This Week with George Stephanopolous yesterday, when asked about this report, and whether a special prosecutor should be appointed, said "I'm not that interested in looking back." His bi-partisan committee has issued a searing report that clearly states that torture and murder have taken place as the direct result of the President's (and all of his enablers) actions/orders, and he's not that interested in looking back? Say what?!?!
He stated that "What I am interested in and committed to is making sure we don't do it again". As in, it was okay for Bush and his entire administration to torture and murder innocent Iraqi's, but from now on we're gonna not allow that to take place. That is, in a word, stupid. It's also fatuous and downright insulting, and, self-serving in that John McCain himself is complicit in all of these crimes against humanity. He has every reason to move forward without looking back, because if he did look back, and did pursue prosecution and indictment, he'd have to include himself in the indictment. Simply put, along with the rest, John McCain has blood on his hands too.
Imagine, if after WW2, a Senator of the United States took part in the issuing of a highly critical, and detailed report on concentration camps, and the codified death that was inflicted there, who then said, it's time to move on and make sure this doesn't happen again. Imagine him NOT recommending holding the Nazi's responsible, rather, saying that's best left behind us so we can concentrate in future on never letting this happen again! Sorry, you can't stop it from happening again if you deny justice to the people who committed the crimes. If they are not held to account, to the standards of justice around the world, then those crimes are not crimes at all...instead, they are codified standards of behavior. And thus it is that to this moment, people continue to be brutalized and tortured and murdered by the very people that this report indicts. Any "honor" that John McCain might have claimed, is non-existent in the face of this self-serving intransigence regarding high crimes of the most vicious nature.
Odoco -
It's like blaming Marxists for the Holocaust because their vocal opposition to the rise of Hitler and the Nazi Party alienated too many moderate Germans during the last days of the Weimar Republic.
Bill from Saginaw
I just witnessed Rick Sanchez (CNN) ask Scott Ritter if he wasn't somehow responsible for the debacle in Iraq because his opposition to the war was too strident and people tuned him out as a result of it. What the hell can you say to that?
Oy.
It is past time for looking into these crimes. They've been looked into. It's time for indictments, domestically and internationally. But, I'm sure impeachment, or any other method of accountability, is still off the table. Why? Because the people who would be in charge of said accountability measures are afraid that they, too, may one day be held accountable - either for their tacit acquiescence for these crimes, or for crimes that they may one day commit in the future should they find themselves with the power to commit them. This is a testament to our dysfunctional society: if you have high enough status, money, power, you are immune from the consequences of your actions so long as the parties in power, including the "opposition", deem you valuable. Everyone else? Well, they better follow orders then head directly to their prison cell because they are such a bad apple (for following orders!) Hope the crash gets here soon; this autopilot living is depressing!
I think we have to separate the "political class" "political establishment" and the media. There has to be accountability for each in their own sphere, whatever the overlaps between pols and pundits in the media. Robert Fisk of the "Independent UK" frequently cites his colleague Amira Haas, journalist with Ha'aretz, the Israeli paper she works for, that her admonition sums up the role of journalists: the job of journalists is to watch government and expose government abuses of power. Glenn Greenwald gets an "A".
Fantastic as always by Greenwald. This is a huge story that has largely been ignored and passed over for the more sensational scandal in Illinois. Obama needs to recommit this country to the rule of law and a fine way of doing this would be to call for an independent investigation or a special prosecutor to look into the abuses at the highest levels within the Bush Administration.
- Chris
For more independent views you can visit:
http://www.cincinnatibeacon.com
http://chriscommons.blogspot.com