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Other Countries Probing Bush-era Torture — Why Aren't We?
WASHINGTON - In June, the Supreme Court refused to hear the case of a Canadian man who contends that U.S. authorities mistook him for an al Qaida operative in 2002 and shipped him to a secret prison in Syria, where he was beaten with electrical cables and held in a grave-like cell for 10 months.
Four years earlier, however, the Canadian government had concluded an exhaustive inquiry and found that the former prisoner, Maher Arar, was telling the truth. Canada cleared Arar of all ties to terrorism and paid him $10 million in damages, and his lawyers say he's cooperating with an investigation into the role of U.S. and Syrian officials in his imprisonment and reported torture.
Arar's case illustrates what lawyers and human rights groups call a shameful trend: While U.S. courts and the Obama administration have been reluctant or unwilling to pursue the cases, countries that once backed former President George W. Bush's war on terrorism are carrying out their own investigations of the alleged U.S. torture program and the role that their governments played in it.
Judges in Great Britain, Spain, Australia, Poland and Lithuania are preparing to hear allegations that their governments helped the CIA run secret prisons on their soil or cooperated in illegal U.S. treatment of terrorism suspects. Spanish prosecutors also have filed criminal charges against six senior Bush administration officials who approved the harsh interrogation methods that detainees say were employed at U.S. military prisons in Afghanistan, Iraq, Guantanamo Bay and other sites.
Another former prisoner whose case the Supreme Court dismissed, Khaled El-Masri of Germany, has sued the government of Macedonia for handing him over to CIA agents, who he charges tortured him in Afghanistan. His case is pending in the European Court of Human Rights, in France.
"As a result of the passage of time and the frustration of victims ... there's a movement to see what legal options exist outside the United States," said James Goldston, the executive director of the Open Society Justice Initiative, a legal project of George Soros' Open Society Institute, who's helped represent El-Masri.
The trend, although it's slow-moving and involves disparate plaintiffs, forums and legal strategies, could represent the end of a reviled chapter of the U.S.-led war on terrorism, which ensnared hundreds of detainees with the clandestine cooperation of dozens of countries. Now, some of those countries, led by new governments or under pressure from their citizens, are trying to pry open those secrets.
"This is the remarkable thing: Other countries are reckoning with the legacy of the Bush administration's torture program, and meanwhile the United States is not," said Jameel Jaffer, the director of the American Civil Liberties Union's national security program.
"That's part of why we're so concerned. The Obama administration, rather than investigate the abuses of the last eight years, has increasingly become an obstacle to accountability."
A spokeswoman for the Justice Department, Tracy Schmaler, didn't respond to requests for comment.
Detainees already have won one victory in a foreign court: Last November, an Italian judge convicted a CIA station chief and 22 other Americans - nearly all CIA officers and contractors - in the 2003 kidnapping of a Muslim cleric who ended up in a secret prison in Egypt. The victory was largely symbolic, however; the Americans were tried in absentia and aren't expected to serve jail time.
The Obama administration, which said it was "disappointed" with the Italian ruling, has declined to cooperate with the investigations, making it difficult for lawyers in some cases to question witnesses or gather evidence, according to experts involved in the inquiries.
In Lithuania, a criminal investigation of a former intelligence chief who allegedly helped the CIA operate secret prisons is stalled partly because U.S. officials haven't revealed the identities of detainees who were held there.
President Barack Obama's approach, from his earliest days in office, has been that "we need to look forward as opposed to looking backwards."
Although Obama outlawed the harsh interrogation techniques the Bush administration had approved, he's resisted prosecuting individuals who might have practiced them. He also opposed creating a commission to investigate the interrogation methods. His Justice Department, like Bush's, has fought to keep wrongful-imprisonment and torture cases out of court on the grounds that they'd jeopardize national security, as government lawyers successfully argued in the Arar case.
Lawyers say that the Bush and Obama administrations' efforts to maintain executive power have swayed federal courts.
"The government is arguing that the president has a lot of leeway in foreign policy and that Congress ceded a lot of ground when it gave the authority to use military force" in the war on terrorism, said Larry Siems, author of "The Torture Report," an online project of the ACLU. "That seems to be the framework the courts have been ruling under."
In the Obama administration's strongest action on torture to date, Attorney General Eric Holder said in June that a special prosecutor was close to completing a preliminary review into whether there's enough evidence to bring criminal charges against a limited number of CIA officers and contractors. The prosecutor, John Durham, was reviewing whether those individuals had exceeded the interrogation methods the Bush administration approved in fewer than a dozen cases, some of which ended in detainees' deaths.
Schmaler told McClatchy that she had no information on when Durham's review would be made public. However, experts say the inquiry is too narrow in scope and ignores the role of senior Bush administration officials.
"It's not that we don't think they shouldn't be held accountable," Jaffer said of the interrogators. "It just seems indefensible to focus solely on the interrogators when the problems stemmed from leading officials."
Arguing that "accountability for serious violations is neither a priority nor even a preference of the current administration," the Center for Constitutional Rights, a nonprofit group in New York that's represented many detainees, filed a brief in Spanish court in April supporting Spain's authority to proceed with a major criminal investigation into the alleged U.S. torture program.
The case charges that six senior Bush administration officials - including former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, former Deputy Assistant Attorney General John Yoo and David Addington, a former chief of staff to Vice President Dick Cheney - broke international laws by promulgating harsh interrogation tactics.
A separate case is pending that involves four Spanish citizens who were held at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where they say they were subjected to sexual assault, forced nakedness, death threats, severe beatings and constant interrogations without lawyers.
Judges in both cases sent letters last May asking U.S. government lawyers whether they're investigating these allegations; if they were, any U.S. cases probably would supersede the Spanish ones. To date, according to the center, the U.S. hasn't responded.
"As much as they're moving slowly, these are cases that have a pretty good shot of proceeding, particularly in face of inaction in the U.S.," said Katherine Gallagher, a senior staff attorney with the center.
The prosecutions would mark a turnaround for Spain, which under a conservative government earlier in the decade was one of the staunchest European supporters of the Bush administration's war on terrorism.
Lithuania and Poland - where prosecutors are considering bringing war crimes charges against the country's former president and former prime minister over allegations of secret prisons - are part of what former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld famously called the "new" Europe. It was Rumsfeld's way of distinguishing traditional powers such as France, which opposed the war on terrorism, from the continent's younger democracies, which were among Bush's early backers.
"They were strong allies, and the obstacles were very strong in the beginning," said Wolfgang Kaleck, a civil rights attorney and the general secretary of the nonprofit European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights. "At a certain point, important people within those countries made the decision to start these investigations. This is already a big step."
Last month, the new British prime minister, David Cameron, announced a judicial inquiry into whether British intelligence services had participated in the abuse of terrorism suspects. Cameron's decision followed a public outcry over the case of Binyam Mohamed, an Ethiopian national living in Britain who charges that British authorities knew that CIA agents were torturing him in Pakistan, Morocco, Afghanistan and Guantanamo and did nothing to stop it.
"Our reputation as a country that believes in human rights, justice, fairness and the rule of law ... risks being tarnished," Cameron said.
Months earlier, when the British government bowed to a court ruling and published classified details about how Mohamed was treated, U.S. intelligence officials had said that the decision was "not helpful, and we deeply regret it."
As a result, Cameron said that British courts wouldn't disclose such evidence during the inquiry and suggested that foreign witnesses - such as current and former CIA officers - won't be called to testify.
"There are foreign-policy and diplomacy considerations in how far they're willing to push this," said Siems of the ACLU.
However, Siems said, the cases weren't toothless, particularly if they result in arrest warrants for U.S. officials, as they did in Italy's conviction of the CIA officers.
"Ultimately, that's what you could end up with: an international map with various judgments against U.S. officials which are subject to enforcement if they travel," Siems said. "That would put us in pretty dubious company."

29 Comments so far
Show AllHaven't you noticed. Obama has ordered that there be no investigation of the accused torturers. Obama has, however, ordered a full scale attack against Julian Assange and Wikileaks for leaking details of torture by the US. He is a man of action.
Why aren't we? Because we're still torturing, that's why.
Everything Bush did and his buddie Dick, was without question both illigal, and without the consent of the UN. These people are convinced that they are above the law, and America has let them feel that way. That is why our Country will never be in the right ,or succesful again, until we recognize the horrors, and crimes committed by our Goverment and ultimately us. Otherwise the world will believe we think it was right, and when they finnaly have enough to take them to the world court, and put them on trial ,we had better have been the ones demanding it too, or we will be hated around the world even more. With good reason I would like to add. Obama is a Republican, he doesn't want his boy Bush in jail, because he may end up there too, if he's not careful one day.
razor...."that is why our country will never be in the right...again...until we recognize the horrors...committed...ultimately (by) us"
i agree with you...this is more than then the mere criticism of amerikas lack of culture, or it's love of disney or celebrity or money. this particular denial on the part of good christian citizens of the good old U.S.of A., is a reveal on its' lack of soul. the country is as hollow as its narcissistic president.
one of the real horrors here is that americas chance of ever doing a mea culpa has got to be predicated on its history...honestly, how will it ever be able to admit that it really wasn't the hero of the world and the favorite of gawd almighty?
BO is the lipstick on the torture pigsty.
They are not going to investigate torture because this country has a nation wide stazi gang stalking torture network run by the FBI called cointel pro,whose criminal torture of innocent Americans is ignored by the Department of justice.
They are going to have to throw a lot of people in jail , and as a victim of this torture for three years now, I can honestly say I fully support the expansion of all jails too accommodate these torture freaks and it would be welcome by all constitutional Americans that can see torture of any kind is a crime of hate.
But the fact that these gang stalking aholes are Americans is most disturbing, and I have to wonder how large is this stazi brown shirt army going to be allowed to grow before it gets exposed and crushed.
I guess, until we can admit that our leaders committed the crime of torture, why would the stazi be committed of a crime of torture.
Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan , who shot 12 people in Texas at Fort Hood, was severely stalked and harassed by this gang stalking network 24/7 , the goal was to have him snap and commit suicide.
Well he snapped, and the deaths of those people at his hands were caused by these torture freaks that pushed the Major over the edge, but, although there is accounts of his harassment, and proof, they covered it up, because the freaks that organize gang stalking are who????
Guess????
My stalking continues every day, why, because I work in Tampa, whats in Tampa , Command and control for the military, all the FBI and private contractors plus DHS, and every gang stalking freak who is out of work right now.
Money and power , for the war mongers, thats why.
Since they started on me , I have become a peace activist and a democrat, because it was republican right wing Christian lunatics that are stalking me.
There only mistake was, I am a pure American patriot, of the constitutional brand, and people who know me, have watched what these people have done.
And good American people dont like it, so , it wont be long before I get my day in court.
But I wont take these stazi freaks to court, they will come forward and admit their crimes to rid their souls of their unconstitutional shame.
Not to belittle the Torture,
But the USA and its fellow fools have not quite finished causing the deaths of around one million people in Iraq
Where are the indictments for ONE MILLION DEATHS ??????????????
Also that Kymer Rouge jailer/torturer they just convicted, was found guilty of waterboarding among other crimes.
Ohh and why torture and detain when you can just murder them immediately like OilyBomber ??
"Other Countries Probing Bush-era Torture — Why Aren't We?"
Why? Obama said not to.
The film, "Taxi To The Dark Side" is an excellent chronicle of much of what's taken place in the way of torture under the banner of the "War On Terrorism." It's a difficult film to view (due to scenes which graphically depict a fraction of what was going on); however, if one truly wants to understand the depravity that's taken place under the aegis of American empire, this film is a must-see.
I, for one, am glad to see attempts at justice underway in other lands. As the American empire loses its macho power, other power-blocks will emerge to thwart the lawless monster that has broken universal law repeatedly to instead make the rules up as it goes. The ideals the nation was founded upon have been up-ended by a small elite group that's effectively seized control of all levers of power. With corruption lifted to a high art, and suffering in so many places... truly, something's gotta give. The vacuum of domestic moves towards justice opens the way for other sovereign powers to step in to do what they can... and must.
Rose ------- the virtues were ignored from the get go:
Jackson telling the Supreme court to enforce their ban on the removal of the Cherokee themselves.
Polk being elected primarily to commence a War of Agression on Mexico.
because oourprez besides having turned himself into a war criminal, and being a creature of CSIS, is a pathetic wimp.
Other Countries Probing Bush-era Torture — Why Aren't We?
_________________________________
[clears throat]
Because the government of the Amerikan Imperium has in certain matters indiscreetly created and wallowed in such a vast, unfathomable, catastrophic, reeking morass of utterly unredeemable heinous evil, wickedness, and wrongdoing that we don't dare start even picking around the edges to determine its true extent and depth.
I mean, just the GLIMPSES that we've allowed ourselves are sufficient to compel us to flee from the question in abject terror and denial. Our professional cleaners and brutal fixers and spinners and sanitizers are already doing Damage Control 24/7 with a view to Making It Go Away, Dear God!
I personally wholly reject this argument, and neither believe nor accept it. But it's the one hammering us between the lines of the strained official bromides, euphemisms, equivocations, and evasions.
It's officially countenanced as "Moving Forward".
I know it sounds unconvincing, not to say nuttier than a dozen fruitcakes, but I hope this information helps answer the question.
America is and always has been a "all options on the table" kind of country. If we've done something in the past, we'll do it again in the future, no matter how morally wrong or impractical or counter-productive. We are the nation that never ever learns anything.
"'Our reputation as a country that believes in human rights, justice, fairness and the rule of law ... risks being tarnished,' Cameron said."
it already is as long as Blair and his cohorts walk free.
As I've asked before, why should Americans obey laws they find inconvenient when people guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity walk free--Bush, Obama, Rice, Powell, Rumsfeld, Gates, etc.?
'President Barack Obama's approach, from his earliest days in office, has been that "we need to look forward as opposed to looking backwards."'
O'Bamba needs to look forward to AIPAC's next campaign contribution.
Combat troops have left Iraq and we are told that the war is over. I remember one of the reasons Bush used for taking out Saddam Hussein was that he tortured prisoners. The American governments hypocrisy is evident to all the world except the citizens of the U.S. Torture comes in many forms. I believe that many Iraqi people especially the children have endured pain and suffering equal if not greater than the prisoners tortured. The countries that supported the Iraq war which was so obviously immoral and illegal, need to investigate their conservative governments part in helping George W. Bush commit an international crime against the people of Iraq. America needs to do the same and make the high powered culprits accountable for the illegal war and torture. The soldiers and the families of the troops who were killed should sue the Bush and Cheney Administration in a class action law suit for misuse and betrayal of the military.
So, if you vote for Obama in 2012, does that make you an accomplice after the fact to torture? Or just an unindicted co-conspirator? Well, if not, you should be, just as if you voted for Bush in 2004!
Because the American people elect their leaders of course they are accomplices to all the evil that American Imperialism has subjected the world to from its inception. No excuses.
If 'None of the Above' would have been on the ballot, voter participation would have been sky high and 'None' would have won hands down, or at least caused a runoff election.
Wait . . . I've just been informed that we don't have runoff elections - that's what the Supreme Court is for --- to decide for us on a Decider.
Did the American people elect George W. Bush?
Are all candidates provided equal time on television, by our crack news media?
Did the American people destroy the potential candidacy of Howard Dean?
I seem to missing something here.
The American creed is that foreigners are just obstacles to be overcome by slaughtering them and I don't believe that torture is something new in their repertoire as people claim because they are also the world's biggest liars as well.
Why should the Empire investigate its own crimes (I mean policies)?
"Investigations? We don't need no stinkin' investigations!!!"
Our reputation risks being tarnished? Oh come on. Everyone outside of the US knows us as the big bad sociopath with no law over him. Untold thousands brutalized, tortured. Untold million innocents slaughtered, maimed, dispossessed. And naturally, it's the whistleblowers Obama wants to execute. We're a remarkably stupid people with little comprehension of the rest of the world, with no sense of history, ours or others. We are so hypnotised that we don't understand why they hate us. I feel great shame to be a USian--just that term "American" pisses me off, as if we're the only country in the Americas.
Look forward, not back? Of course. When do we ever look back? We are the US of Alzheimer's. If we could look back, we would see a history of genocide, enslavement, brutal wars, sociopathic occupations. If we looked at the present, we'd see the preparations for Marshall Law right here and ongoing slaughter and torture abroad, a society that revels in incarceration, torture, illegal pre-emptive attacks, distain for the humanity of the vast majority of humans and absolute disregard for the rest of life on this planet. As our technology zooms ahead, always geared toward destruction, we are increasingly barbaric. That's just too scary to look at.
I don't know if we will ever come to our senses. It doesn't seem possible, although we must try nonetheless.
That's my rant for the day. God, what a way to start the morning.
The USA has been headed by war criminals for many decades now. It's a can of worms that the imperialists just don't want to open. The world however has judged this criminal country and live in fear that American imperialism can be unleashed anywhere in the world at any time. It didn't start with Bush and it won't end with him. It's the nature of the beast - state terror against the world to prop up the global capitalist system.
Don't worry, Obama will change all that.
Right after you vote for him in the next election.
No problem..
(Hint: Vote Third Party)
As we consider with disgust the recent actions of our country, justified and authorized at the highest levels of our government, we should heed the words of Alexander Solzehnitsyn, the great Russian writer who so bravely spoke against the crimes of the Soviet Union:
“In keeping silent about evil, in burying it so deep within us that no sign
of it appears on the surface, we are implanting it, and it will rise up a
thousandfold in the future. When we neither punish nor reproach evildoers
... we are ripping the foundations of justice from beneath new generations.”
Moving forward without holding those accountable for dragging our country down to the shameful level of the great despotic regimes of the past is a formula for a loss of our national soul. We citizens must insist that these crimes are not forgotten.
Why aren't "we" probing 0bama-era torture?
Could be because guilt runs deep on both sides of the aisle.
Could be because the torturers still run the government.
Could be because the executive plans more torture, and does not want to discourage his torturers.
t
Could be because that "we" is carrying out illegal occupations of several countries.
Could be because the president has claimed that he can kill any American citizen abroad by simple fiat.
..
Most all of American officialdom is implicated in torture and in the wholesale loss of 4th Amendment rights in the United States, including rights respected in English and American law since the signing of the Magna Carta at Runnymede in 1215.
We worry, some of us, about a sudden slip into fascism. We might better worry about a narrowing plutarchy that runs outward elections, disappears its citizens in silence, and grants no more representation than any other despotism.
Were Capone running the country, we might be better off.
ATTENTION ALL LAW BREAKERS:
President Obama has set a new precedent in law: you may now simply say to the judge "The President has decreed that we not look back, therefore, your obligation, your honor is to dismiss my case."
It could all be summed up well by one former innocent Iraqi who was released from Abu Ghraib prison, "they brought electicity to my ass before they brought it to my house". If there is any consolation to all these crimes it is that the former CIA staion chief who was going to retire in Italy, will not be doing so because he was one of the CIA men convicted in absentia.