Get News & Views Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Has the Rendition Program Disappeared?
The day after Barack Obama took office, he signed a series of executive orders mandating the closure of the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, as well as the global network of secret, CIA-run "black site" prisons. In addition, he committed the United States to observe the Geneva Conventions and the Convention Against Torture. The Bush administration had exempted U.S. interrogators from these two treaties, arguing that the Global War on Terror presented unprecedented intelligence-gathering challenges that had to be overcome by all means necessary.
Obama’s stated commitment to ban torture also extended to the outsourcing of interrogations to countries where torture could be employed without the legal barriers that exist within the U.S. military and civilian justice systems. He vowed to end the “extraordinary rendition” program whereby terror suspects were disappeared by U.S. agents, transferred into the custody of third-party intelligence services and tortured by foreign agents asking questions provided by the CIA. The European Parliament estimated that the CIA flew at least 1,245 rendition flights between 2001 and 2007, but all information on those flights, including who the passengers were and how many people were abducted, remains shrouded in secrecy. Such a policy contrasts with “rendition to justice,” a transfer that takes place at least nominally within the legal system. This kind of rendition requires that the detainee be arraigned and tried in court on arrival in the United States — without having been tortured during the capturing process.
More than two years later, the Obama administration has not followed through on most of these promises, even reversing several commitments. For one, the administration confirmed that Guantanamo not only remains open, but that it will even take in new "high-value" detainees in the event of their capture. Meanwhile, in Afghanistan, at least 20 secret prisons are still actively torturing "short-term transfer" detainees. The only change Obama has brought to these classified prisons is granting access to the facilities by the International Committee of the Red Cross (their reports, issued to the executive branch of the detaining power, are seldom released to the public or even to Congress). Instead of operating directly under CIA control, they are run by the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC). Nevertheless, CIA personnel still participate in the interrogations held within their anonymous concrete walls.
This evidence alone is enough to raise serious questions about the Obama administration’s willingness and ability to reverse the Bush era’s use of kidnapping, extrajudicial detention and torture in the fight against terrorism. Granted, the administration has faced vocal and vehement opposition from congressional Republicans on many issues, including the closure of Guantanamo, and it is no secret that the military and intelligence services of the United States are slow to accept changes, to say the least. But Obama’s political about-face raises questions about the sincerity of the administration’s professed desire to wield American power in a more principled manner that conforms to international law. In order to find out more about the current administration’s re-branding of the so-called war on terror, it is necessary to delve deeper into what Dick Cheney famously called the "dark side." The culture of secrecy and impunity that has come to characterize the executive branch, which the Obama administration has continued to cultivate, poses a serious threat to democracy, pitting the state’s definition of security against the security of individuals.
Torture and Rendition
Before becoming president, Obama was a professor of constitutional law. Before that, he was president of the Harvard Law Review. He knew that the United States under Ronald Reagan had signed the UN Convention Against Torture. He had read the Geneva Conventions and knew the obligations warring powers face regarding the treatment of detainees.
Because of this background, the president had to know that the United States was violating international law with its policy of extraordinary rendition, more than ever under the Bush administration. Under the Convention Against Torture, a country may not knowingly pass a detainee into the custody of a country where the detainee will “more likely than not” face torture. If there is any doubt about the recipient country’s record on torture, the detaining country must receive assurance that the detainee will not be tortured. According to human rights attorney Scott Horton, the Bush administration “turned [the Convention’s provisions] into a complete joke: people were being turned over to countries where they would be tortured, [constituting] a violation of both domestic and international law.”
The agents who turned detainees over to foreign interrogators did obtain assurances from recipient countries like Egypt, Syria, Jordan, Morocco, Poland, Macedonia, Kosovo, Romania, Bulgaria, Ukraine, and even Libya, that detainees would not be abused. But in practice, these assurances were as empty and dishonest as George W. Bush’s repeated claims that the U.S. “government does not torture people.” One rendition victim, Canadian-Syrian engineer Maher Arar, was rendered to Syria and imprisoned there for nearly a year where he was tortured regularly. After he was freed and cleared of all charges, the Canadian government lodged an official complaint against the United States for transferring a Canadian citizen into the custody of a country with a record of torture. Arar filed suit against former Attorney General John Ashcroft only to have the case thrown out due to the executive invocation of the “state secrets privilege,” claiming that evidentiary information on the rendition program would endanger U.S. national security.
When the Obama administration came to power, it could have disclosed evidence necessary to bring justice for Maher Arar and other victims of the federal government’s rendition program. Instead Attorney General Eric Holder followed his predecessor’s lead, blocking Arar's case all the way to the Supreme Court. And indeed it wasn’t long into the new administration’s term before the continued practice of rendition came to light.
In April 2009, a 45-year old Lebanese businessman named Raymond Azar went to Afghanistan on behalf of his employer, Lebanese-based defense contractor Sima Salazar Group. Previously, his underling Dinorah Cobos had made arrangements to give $100,000 to an FBI agent posing as a contracts officer in order to secure contracts for Sima. The FBI was thus luring the pair to Afghanistan as part of a sting operation. In Kabul, eight FBI agents seized the two contractors, stripping Azar naked, subjecting him to a cavity search and blindfolding and shackling him. He was first transported to Bagram air base in Afghanistan, and later taken to Virginia where he was arrested and charged with fraud.
U.S. agents inside Afghanistan are only authorized to detain and transfer suspects out of the country if the suspect is deemed to pose an imminent threat, which Azar most certainly did not. Officials from the Departments of Justice and State claim that they received the consent of the Afghan government to conduct the rendition, but Afghan officials deny having ever been informed of the operation.
Azar pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery, but his maximum five-year sentence was reduced to only six months due to the abusive treatment he received in U.S. custody. More than anything, the rendition of Raymond Azar was an embarrassment for the Obama administration. According to Scott Horton, the unwanted controversy surrounding the Azar will push the administration to proceed with caution with the kind of renditions that the Bush administration pursued. “I can’t find any evidence of extraordinary renditions under Obama,” Horton told me, “but there’s really no problem with normal extradition.”
Rendition — particularly extraordinary rendition — turned out to be a public relations nightmare for the Bush administration, and despite the media’s lack of attention to the Azar case, it doesn’t seem to be gaining any fans during the Obama administration either. Thus to avoid negative publicity, the Obama administration has pursued a different strategy toward suspected terrorists (and whoever else happens to be in their vicinity): killing them.
Kill More, Imprison Less
Despite the rhetorical shift that Obama heralded, and the promises made by executive order, the president chose not to dismantle some of the most legally questionable tactics that the Bush administration employed in the conduct of the so-called War on Terror. Perhaps most importantly, Obama has maintained the government’s right to kill foreign nationals and American citizens alike, anywhere in the world, whom the president deems “a continuing and imminent threat to U.S. persons and interests,” evidence of guilt and constitutional rights notwithstanding.
The government’s claim was recently challenged on behalf of one of the targets on the executive hit list, Anwar al-Awlaki. The Yemeni-American Muslim cleric has for some time been a celebrity lecturer amongst extremists and has a large online following. Allegedly, he inspired the Fort Hood shooter, as well as the failed Times Square and “underwear” bombers. His father, with the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), filed a lawsuit against the government arguing that he did not pose an imminent threat. The judge threw out the case at the request of the executive. According to his lawyer, Maria Lahood, Judge John Bates called the issue of extrajudicial targeted killing “a political question which could not be adjudicated by the court. It was essentially up to the executive to decide if someone they’d identified as a terrorist should be killed and the court didn’t have any place to review that.” The judge also denied that al-Awlaki’s father had legal standing to argue the case on behalf of his son.
More recently, the government and media alike have revived the policy of targeted killing to justify the murder of an unarmed Osama bin Laden in Pakistan by U.S. Special Forces. But even bin Laden’s supposed guilt does not confer any legal legitimacy on his assassination.
Where the use of Special Forces is deemed impracticable, the CIA has a large fleet of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles — drones — to rain down Hellfire missiles on targeted suspects in various countries — by remote control from fortified bases thousands of miles away. Indeed, just days after bin Laden’s death, a drone strike targeting al-Awlaki missed its mark, killing two bystanders instead.
As reported by the Los Angeles Times last month, the Obama administration has killed more alleged terrorists than it has imprisoned. Indeed, the Obama administration launched more drone strikes in two years than the Bush administration did during its entire eight years. In 2010 Agence France Presse reported a total of more than 100 drone strikes that killed over 670 people. With a rate of civilian casualties estimated to be as high as 90 percent, drone strikes have fueled anti-American sentiment in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Yemen.
Africa: Exporting Torture
The practice of extraordinary rendition has not disappeared completely. When the practice of kidnapping people and sending them to unknown locations to be tortured struck a sour note with the American voting public, the White House stepped away from the policy. But, like lead paint, DDT and asbestos, domestic regulations haven’t stopped the export of extraordinary rendition to poorer countries.
Washington has been fighting the war on terror in East Africa since the 1998 U.S. Embassy bombings and it believes a significant network of al-Qaeda militants have been in league with local jihadist groups. The CIA presence in the region has ballooned, and much-needed humanitarian aid became linked to military cooperation with the Pentagon. And U.S. allies practiced what Washington preached in terms of fighting terrorism.
In 2007, U.S.-backed Kenyan security forces abducted more than 150 men, women, and children, mostly Somali Muslims, near the border between Somalia and Kenya. Racial profiling such as this has become all too common under regimes that oppress ethnic minorities to maintain power, and it has received the seal of approval from the United States and its allies under the auspices of counter-terrorism.
The arbitrariness of the 2007 mass arrests is evident. Only one detainee was charged in Kenya, and the rest were either deported back to their home countries or illegally rendered to Ethiopia via Somalia. Ethiopian forces subjected detainees to numerous human rights abuses, torturing several of them. FBI and British agents also interrogated the suspects, looking for terrorist connections, but just one more detainee was charged in Ethiopia, bringing the grand total to two out of hundreds. About half of the rendition victims were later released without charge, dumped at the Somali border untreated for medical issues resulting from torture. But some were held for years with no access to lawyers or their families — disappeared indefinitely. Many have been released thanks to the tireless efforts of human rights advocates in Kenya, but 22 are not accounted for according to the most recent Human Rights Watch report on the issue.
Last year, Kenyan authorities rendered several Kenyan Muslims to Uganda in connection with a suicide bombing in Kampala. In Uganda, the notorious Rapid Response Unit tortured the suspects in between interrogations by U.S. and British agents. One of the initial rendition victims, Omar Awadh Omar, is a prominent Kenyan human rights activist and an outspoken critic of the clampdown of repression in East Africa. Later, the U.S.-backed Ugandan dictatorship targeted Al-Amin Kimanthi, the leader of Kenya’s Muslim Human Rights Forum and the loudest voice in the East African struggle against illegal rendition and torture. Even his colleague Clara Gutteridge, a British human rights lawyer with whom I communicated in researching this article, was detained and deported from Kenya for attempting to investigate matters further.
Increased U.S. military involvement in East Africa and the export of extraordinary rendition to that region have clear strategic motivations. The U.S. military has long kept a major base in Djibouti, where naval cruisers can monitor and secure oil shipments through the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Moreover, the Horn of Africa is home to untapped oil reserves.
What’s Next in the Search for Justice?
The Obama administration's approach to torture and rendition has been challenged, though the most meaningful dissenting voices come from outside the country. The U.S. Congress has failed to challenge the state secrets doctrine and the concomitant executive impunity it implies, and has actively sought to keep Guantanamo active. Despite the efforts of Congresspersons like Ed Markey (D-MA) to ban renditions, the legislative branch is not likely to effectively challenge the Obama administration. The Judiciary has similarly recused itself from checking the executive. Last month, in rejecting a case brought by five innocent torture victims against the CIA contractor that flew them to black-site prisons, the Supreme Court upheld an appeals court ruling affirming the president’s right to kill any case he pleased if he felt that evidence would reveal state secrets.
However, in Britain, Germany, Poland, Spain, Italy, and Australia, investigations into the global kidnapping ring known as extraordinary rendition have been set in motion. The Italian case is perhaps the most notable, as Italian prosecutors were able to overcome intense pressure from both the U.S. and Italian governments in their pursuit of 26 conspirators involved in the kidnapping of Muslim cleric Abu Omar in Milan, who was tortured by the notorious Egyptian Mukhabarat. The Italian case blew the covers of 21 CIA agents, who were each sentenced in absentia to five years in prison. Robert Lady, the former CIA station chief in Milan, received an eight-year prison sentence. Although the judge granted diplomatic immunity to other defendants, including the ringleader of the operation, Rome station chief Jeff Castelli, prosecutors plan to challenge the merits of the designation. Meanwhile, the United States has refused to cooperate with the prosecutors of the case, and the Italian government, under U.S. pressure, is not seeking to extradite those convicted. But the European Union issued arrest warrants for the conspirators, which translates into an effective travel ban to Europe.
Elsewhere, as documented by WikiLeaks, the U.S. diplomatic corps under both the Bush and Obama administrations has worked hard to kill foreign investigations into CIA renditions. In Germany, U.S. arm-twisting succeeded in stifling the prosecution of 13 CIA agents involved in the rendition of German citizen Khaled al-Masri from Macedonia to Afghanistan, where he was tortured. In Spain, U.S. diplomats threatened Spanish politicians and political appointees with Uncle Sam’s cold shoulder if they failed to prevent prosecutors from investigating allegations of illegal rendition and torture of Spanish citizens, but those cases remain open. Even the family of drone victims in Pakistan have filed suit against the United States for the wrongful deaths of two loved ones. The odds of success may seem nil, but the desire for justice is enormous.
The WikiLeaks revelations may empower foreign governments and judiciaries, with broad popular support, to continue to challenge Washington on its illicit record of kidnapping and torturing foreign nationals. But the United States won’t give up the fight easily, whether the continued expansion of the renditions program in the Horn of Africa or the heavy-handed meddling in European jurisprudence.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

23 Comments so far
Show AllGdpxhzx,
You wrote:
"How long before backroom, domestic police antics we've all heard about...and some have experienced...become a harsh legal reality for all."
It has already become a harsh legal reality for all. The very words that you wrote have been or will be analyzed by supercomputers of the National Security Agency and other intelligence agencies. The very words that you wrote could be considered seditious and an act in support of terrorism. Without a warrant your telephones might be in the process of being tapped. Minutes from now federal agents could violate your Fourth Amendment rights and kick down your door. They could disappear you and deny you of your Sixth Amendment right to legal counsel, deny you of your right to confront your accusers in an open court, and deny you of your right to a speedy trial. You could be detained indefinitely. They can deny you habeas corpus. They can disappear you for your seditious speech and not tell your loved ones that you have been detained.
These isn't conspiratorial, paranoid ideation on my part. These domestic polices currently exist within the United States. Law abiding American citizens have been subjected to these policies. Articles have been recently posted on this site that detail the violations of US citizens civil liberties that are now occurring under the guise of national security.
The United States is no longer a democratic republic. It has become a national security police state.
I would like to write some eloquent statement encapsulating my agreement with this post, but I think it's been coined already:
Fuckin' A.
(for fun: http://onlineslangdictionary.com/meaning-of/fucking-a )
Has the rendition program disappeared?
Of course not. Neither has torture at Gitmo and Bagram and elsewhere.
The U.S. has tortured and trained torturers for decades (School of the Americas) and conducted heinous medical and biological experiments on U.S. citizens that would make Mengele wet his assless leather chaps (if that reference escapes you, Google "Les Boys") in envy.
We still torture.
Worse, if you look seriously at history, like, oh, slavery and the Native American extermination, WE ALWAYS HAVE.
Perhaps one day we can emerge from the shadow of this and other evil, but we've a bit of work to do...
Would someone please explain to me how having committed the abuses that are detailed in this article that constitute violations of US law, international law, international treaties, and basic human decency; the United States can claim to have any moral authority among the world of nations and claim that the United States is a force for good in the world?
All of the individuals who contributed to the development of and implementation of the secret CIA run black-prisons, torture of detainees, extraordinary rendition, and the laws that are violating the civil liberties of US citizens in support of the global war on terror are war criminals. They should be indicted and prosecuted before the International Criminal Court at the Hague for waging aggressive war and crimes against humanity.
dbl
This is an important article.
"Because of this background, the president had to know that the United States was violating international law with its policy of extraordinary rendition, more than ever under the Bush administration."
...
"Thus to avoid negative publicity, the Obama administration has pursued a different strategy toward suspected terrorists (and whoever else happens to be in their vicinity): killing them."
This is decidedly NOT the hope and change we were so cynically sold by this snake oil hawker. In fact, as a wolf in black sheep's clothing, the great deceiver has been able to achieve ever more monstrous regressive change than his predecessor ever could, acheived in part by the emasculation of progressive black leadership and the co-optation of the "'professional' left"
This period is a critical test for the American people and the world in standing up to manifest tyranny and state-sponsored terror. Eventually this empire too shall pass; and those with the courage to oppose its evil, whether or not they survive, will have new standing in its aftermath.
The White House has just asserted that the President has the power and authority to order the killing of anyone, anywhere in the world if he (or his agents) deem that person to be a threat against the interest of the United States. And we need to stand united behind the President least anyone doubt that he will do it.
If he can blow up a house in Waziristan, he can blow up a house in Columbus, Ohio. If he can grab a person off the street in Islamabad and keep him in jail forever, he can grab a person off the street in Philadelphia. If he can kill Osama bin Laden without a trial, he can kill you.
Once the principle is asserted, there is no limit. Does the Constitution not apply if the president is acting outside the borders of the United States? Anything he can do there, he can do here. Who is to stop him?
Best question yet! After the Nazis were rounded up we had the Nuremburg trails, After we defeated Japan we had UN sponsored trails.
The big question is who is big ecough to bring down a war criminal leader in a country without totaly bringing said nation to it's knees?
As long as he can stand behind the biggest military inthe world and hold off all comers with the largest nuclear arsonal the world has ever known. Who indeed can go against, or around that? to get at the crimonal mastermind? >^^<
Who can guarentee justice against that kind of raw power?
"Has the Rendition Program Disappeared?"
__________________________
Photius has already ably expounded upon the truth of the matter.
But I'm struck by the clever double-entendre of the headline; "disappeared" can mean either " become extinct; obliterated" or merely "vanished; out of sight".
The strident defenses of Obama and his maladministration have subsided considerably over the past several months, at least at CD and other Internet sites I visit.
But for a long time, Obama apologists strenuously argued that Team Obama had indeed reversed, or was in the process of reversing, the heinous, draconian policies and practices aggressively established by its predecessor.
OK, maybe Obama didn't close Gitmo because he was stymied by his political foes and insufficient public support, they asserted-- but he's "ended" egregious and reprehensible excesses like surreptitiously-sanctioned torture and “extraordinary rendition”.
I've always felt that such defensive apologetics were fatally crippled by an epistemological flaw: how could we truly, reliably KNOW that such practices had been discontinued?
Put the other way around, such claims seem to rely on the presumption of honesty and probity in public officials: we "know" because they tell us so, and it's "unthinkable" that they would lie.
Of course, there are pragmatic or common-sense corollary arguments that buttress this position: surely they wouldn't lie about it, because even if they WANTED to they would realize that the truth would "out" sooner or later-- i.e., even if they're not compelled to be honest for ethical reasons, they surely would be honest for practical reasons.
I don't find those rationales persuasive or despositive, to say the least. There are just too many ways that intellectual hubris can dodge and weave around the truth. Government agencies, especially the military intelligence and security-state apparatus, have developed sophisticated strategies and rationales to preserve and guarantee "deniability" on demand, or as needed to obscure and conceal officially prohibited, illegal, and illicit activity.
I wish I could be confident that the Amerikan Imperium is constrained by what amounts to the possibility that a Seymour Hersh or Jeremy Scahill would eventually discover continuing "black ops" or nefarious practices like torture and renditioning, and that such discovery would bring down the Hollow State government as the Watergate scandal brought down the Nixon administration.
But I'm not. Alternative-news muckraking may cause a ripple across the Internet, or be publicized on "Democracy Now" and "RT News". But such revelations seem fated these days to freeze in the ether of apathy, "future shock" fatigue, and civic paralysis, like prehistoric insects trapped in petrified amber.
My assumption is that the Amerikan Imperium and other authoritarian governments do as they please, and whatever its officials believe to be necessary to achieve their sinister ends.
For the second time this week, I feel constrained to cite journalist Ron Suskind's ominous 2004 quote from "a senior adviser to Bush", reportedly Karl Rove:
"The aide said that guys like me were 'in what we call the reality-based community,' which he defined as people who 'believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality.' I nodded and murmured something about enlightenment principles and empiricism. He cut me off. 'That's not the way the world really works anymore,' he continued. 'We're an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you're studying that reality -- judiciously, as you will -- we'll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that's how things will sort out. We're history's actors... and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.'"
It's obvious that this philosophy, for lack of a better term, was no fluke or aberration of the Bush II right-wing Republican administration. It's not the exception; it's the rule.
Obedient Servant,
Excellent post. You wrote:
"My assumption is that the Amerikan Imperium and other authoritarian governments do as they please, and whatever its officials believe to be necessary to achieve their sinister ends."
As I have pointed out on CD, and as you have eloquently expressed in your above statement, what the American Empire and authoritarian governments throughout the world are enunciating are "Reason of State" arguments. The Reason of State argument is an abominable Machiavellian argument that provides rationalization for the idea that all means are justifiable to achieve the end-point of preservation of a state. Officials therefore believe that all sinister means are necessary and justifiable to preserve the viability of the state. Reason of State arguments are amoral and lead to tyrannies characterized by the abuses that are delineated in the index article.
It is reprehensible that the current administration that is lead by a president who is purportedly a constitutional law scholar has continued and enhanced "the heinous, draconian policies and practices aggressively established by its predecessor." It is similarly reprehensible that these policies are being defended by Attorney General Eric Holder the highest law enforcement official in the United States.
dbl
dbl
trpl?
Great post, Obedient Servant, as are Photius's and most everyone else's. You're right that our trashed rights are the rule, the rule of no rule. As Gore Vidal said, we have become barbarous--I wonder what's happened to him, and intermittently scan the Internet for news. I hope he's writing something really scintillating about the Obama administration.
You write about your wish that someone like "Seymour Hersh or Jeremy Scahill would eventually discover continuing "black ops" or nefarious practices like torture and renditioning, and that such discovery would bring down the Hollow State government as the Watergate scandal brought down the Nixon administration.” The wretched fact is that plenty of journalists have broken the story. I can keep to the NYTimes, PBS, and the New Yorker and show a class that all this happened and then provide evidence that it still is, using mainstream sources. But it just does not register, and Karl Rove was right. They can conjure reality out of nonsense. As O’Brien told Winston Smith, if I tell you that the law of gravity does not exist, and that I am floating in air, you will see me floating in air. Something like that.
For those of us caught in what I think is a “reality-based community,” there seems to be an eerie nonreaction, just a waiting for the other shoe to drop. Well, we think, perhaps this is just a nice letting-off steam site like all those other marginal groups throughout the Internet of every stripe. But behind that is the reality that they really do store our every electronic keypress, and for one such as me who cannot believe this massively bloated police state is earnestly seeking out these vexingly rare terrorists around the country, that’s bothersome. And I think, well, I haven’t been fired yet by bringing up subjects such as torture, rendition, and the destruction of very basic rights in the classroom, but I’m always afraid I’m going to be.
So we wait, hoping sometimes it will get better and sometimes that it will get worse, just to shake this massive country into some semblance of a reality-based community. The police become more invasive and brutal, Xe is our official moral conscience, Obama trumpets his assassination list, and we know there is this massive barbarian force gaining strength, this iron rule of no rule, and we wait.
By the way, thanks for the compliment and kind words on yesterday’s post.
Our last two presidents are dreadful men, representing the worst element in the American populace, an appetite for torture and war.
What is upsetting about the rendition programs is that they are essentially extrajudicial. People suspected of breaking the law are not prosecuted appropriately with legal teams, evidence and charges filed in a court of law, but simply made to disappear. Many of the victims of this program have an embarassing tendency to turn out to be completely innocent ( Maher Arar a case in point ) and then the whole program becomes discredited. If the govt wants to punish terror suspects, it has to be done within the framework of the law, not outside it.
Obama has reversed almost all major Liberal / Left / Libertarian promises, see:
http://whatinthefuckhasobamadonesofar.com/
All organizations lie, secret ones even more so.
Has the rendition program dissappeared,
dusted under the carpet, or is still hiding low?
Does torture still happen, and cruel imprisonment feared?
Why do drone bombers multiply and bring death from the sky?
The number of wars and campaigns has soared,
Like fires in forests that climate change has made dry.
Agitation and chaos spread from fossil fuel bill denied.
The cacophony of not caring readies our lives to toss,
Ripped by tornadoes of change, and by winds to batter.
Our casualties must become in the end, enormous.
With clash of civilization with nature will everything shatter.
We are the unsupportable losers scared of coming loss.
Denial exists so we can live till we no longer matter.
the usa went to war with and decimated afghanistan cuz they refused to extradite the criminal, OBL. now Britain, Germany, Poland, Spain, Italy, and Australia want to extradite some CIA trash for probably many 1000s of illegal renditions, unlawful detainment, torture, and permanent disappearance, and the usa refuses to extradite or punish the criminals. the hypocrisy that americans live with [which seems to sail right over their lowbrow heads] never fails to amaze me.
Government by gangsters and thugs. Great what we've allowed out country to become.
The most charitable explanation for President Obama's doing a 180 on torture, rendition and Guantanemo might be to note that a naive and inexperienced Obama thought that winning the election meant that he was actually in charge I guess he quickly found out that he was not. Now he plays along to get along with the promise of a wealthy future after he leaves office and stops betraying those who voted for him in favor of those who actually run the country.