May 13, 2004
George W. Bush
The White House
Washington, DC 20500
Re: Inhumane treatment of prisoners produces blowbacks and backlashes
Dear Mr. President:
The reported widespread abuse of prisoners by your Administration adds
another condition that reflects on your failure of leadership.
Anticipation and prevention of such tragedies should have been routine
by the top officials whom you command. How can you imagine winning the
hearts and minds of the Iraqi people? You are expanding what the
intelligence agencies call "blowbacks" - expanding the networking of
stateless terrorists against the United States. In addition, your
Administration's actions put US soldiers and civilians in Iraq at
increased risk from the backlash to the abuse of Iraqi prisoners, most
of whom the press reports were charged with no wrongdoing when imprisoned.
With the publication of photos from Abu Ghraib prison the truth is
beginning to come out. In recent years newspaper articles, human rights
reports and expressions of concern from the International Red Cross, Red
Crescent and other human services agencies have claimed that torture,
degradation and inhuman treatment had become the mode of operation under
your Administration in Afghanistan, Guantanamo Bay, and Iraq. This has
included repeated reports in the media of deaths and suicides of people
being held in US military custody.
General Antonio Taguba, who wrote the Pentagon's report looking into the
abuses at Abu Ghraib prison, testified on May 11 before the Senate Armed
Services Committee describing systemic problems with the prison. He
testified that what happened was the result of a rampant failure of
leadership "from the brigade commander on down, lack of discipline, no
training whatsoever and no supervision."
The International Committee of the Red Cross issued a report concerning
prisoner abuse based on private interviews with prisoners of war and
civilian internees during the 29 visits ICRC staff conducted in 14
places of detention across Iraq between March 31 and October 2, 2003.
The report said that as far back as last May, the Red Cross reported to
the military about 200 allegations of abuse, and that in July it
complained about 50 allegations of abuse at a detention site called Camp
Cropper -- including one case of treatment that included being deprived
of sleep, kicked repeatedly and injured and having a baseball tied into
the prisoner's mouth. On May 10 the Red Cross stated that the
organization's president, Jakob Kellenberger, complained about the
prison abuses directly to top administration officials during a two-day
visit to Washington in mid-January when he met with Secretary of State
Colin Powell, national security advisor Condoleezza Rice and Deputy
Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz.
You cannot claim that you were unaware of these allegations. You are
briefed daily. In addition to these allegations being reported in the
media, human rights groups have specifically written to your
Administration about them. In July 2003, Amnesty International sent
your administration a Memorandum on Concerns Relating to Law and Order
in Iraq. The Memorandum included allegations of torture and
ill-treatment of Iraqi detainees by US and Coalition forces.
A May 7, 2004 letter signed by nine leading human rights organizations
states: "For over a year, the undersigned organizations and others have
repeatedly asked you and senior officials in your Administration to act
promptly and forcefully to publicly repudiate the statements of
intelligence officials and to assure that the treatment of detainees is
consistent with international humanitarian law." Amnesty International
also alleged torture and degradation in the treatment of prisoners and
detainees resulting from the war in Afghanistan held in that country as
well as Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. And, The Washington Post has reported
that your State Department and Department of Defense had conflicts over
the treatment of prisoners. As commander-in-chief, certainly you were or
should have been aware of these assertions - often repeated in the
media, by various organizations - and of the conflicts within your own
Administration.
Now that the photographs are beginning to make their way into the media,
the public is seeing that US treatment of detainees, prisoners and
people held in enemy combatant status includes acts abhorred by the
American people. Sadly, there will be more - more photos, videos,
testimony - where more of the facts will come out.
Human rights groups wrote you on May 7 saying: "Extraordinary action on
your part is now required to begin to repair this damage and, at long
last, bring an end to this pattern of torture and cruel treatment."
You and your aides have a disquieting habit of not responding at all to
such letters going back to the pre-invasion of Iraq early last year,
when 13 groups representing millions of Americans (e.g., religious,
veterans, business, labor, retired intelligence) wrote you requesting a
meeting. They did not even receive the courtesy of a reply.
In order to restore public confidence around the world an independent
international investigation is needed. The Department of Defense
investigating itself, or investigation by Republican controlled
congressional committees in a presidential election year, will not be
sufficient to restore the confidence of the world.
The following steps are needed:
1. Get the truth out through an impartial, international commission.
This should include people of unquestioned integrity from within the
United States and around the world. You should state that you or anyone
in your Administration will testify in public before this fact-finding
Commission. This should include involvement of the International
Humanitarian Fact-Finding Commission provided for by Article 90 of
Additional Protocol II of the Geneva Conventions to look into the
allegations of abuse and related US investigations. The US should agree
to pay restitutions to all individuals whose rights were violated.
2. Renounce interrogation techniques that destroy basic human dignity
and the very purpose of eliciting valuable information. Remove those in
the chain of command who in anyway countenanced or ordered such
activity. Direct the Department of Defense and US intelligence agencies
not to engage in any practices that are inconsistent with the US
Constitution forbidding cruel and unusual punishment, the Geneva
Convention, and the Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman
or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. This includes banning "stress and
duress" techniques, incommunicado detentions and transfer of prisoners
to countries that use torture techniques. Strong and clear penalties
should be announced for anyone who uses such interrogation techniques.
Adequate funding should be provided to allow for investigation of
allegations of abuse.
3. Ban the use of private civilian corporate contractors in
interrogation and any direct contacts with prisoners or detainees held
by the United States. These are essential governmental functions under
established rules of military, domestic and international law. You
would do well to examine the corporate contracts in Iraq for waste,
corruption, non-performance and favoritism - before the media gets there.
4. Allow access to all prisons, prisoners, detainees and people held in
non-combatant status to the Red Cross, Red Crescent and UN International
Humanitarian Fact-Finding Commission. This should include private
interviews of prisoners as well as visits by medical personnel.
The photos showing abusive treatment are serious. They come on top of
reports of US military actions that took the lives of hundreds civilians
- including women and children - in Fallujah, as well as reports of over
10,000 Iraqi civilians being killed in the US war and occupation of
Iraq. It comes at a time when it is evident that under your leadership
as commander-in-chief there has been inadequate planning for post-war
Iraq and moving that country to independence from US military and
corporate occupation. Further, it has now become evident that the
reasons you gave for the invasion and occupation of Iraq were
fabrications and deceptions. In truth the United States and the stronger
countries surrounding Iraq were never threatened by a tottering dictator
with a dilapidated military having no command and control over his
troops. Richard Clarke, former White House Terrorism Advisor has argued
that the Iraq War and occupation diverted us from preventing stateless
terrorism and has been counterproductive to making the United States
safer. Gen. William Odom who served as director of the National
Security Agency under President Reagan, has called for withdrawal from
Iraq saying: "I don't think that the war serves U.S. interests. I think
Osama bin Laden's interests and the Iranian interests are very much
served by it, and it's becoming a huge drain on our resources both
material and political."
The combination of these actions under your leadership as
commander-in-chief amounts to an accumulating failure. You are clearly
not able to win the hearts and minds of mainstream Iraqis. You are
making the United States less safe by producing more stateless terrorist
recruiting, as leading security specialists have pointed out in the
media. Your attempt to restore our relations with the international
community and involve them in winning the peace in Iraq is too little
and too late. Polls report that the majority of Iraqis now want the US
to leave immediately - a sharp turnaround by desperate people who wanted
Saddam Hussein out.
You need to make major adjustments by giving the Iraqi people truthful
expectations - no puppet government (See Yochi Dreazen and Christopher
Cooper, "Behind the Scenes, US Tightens Grip on Iraq's Future," Wall
Street Journal, May 13, 2004, page 1, 8) a responsible withdrawal of
both US military and corporate occupations - to protect our troops by
bringing them home - and internationally supervised elections with
international peacekeepers from neutral countries. This withdrawal from
Iraq is consistent with the recommendations of General Odom who
explained in an interview on Nightline: "[T]o say you can't fail at that
now, is to fail to realize that you've already failed. Now, when I say
get out, I don't mean just pull out and walk out today. I would go
through the procedures of going to the United Nations and encouraging a
United Nations resolution to approve some U.N. force there. And I would
be quite prepared to participate in that for a while, if we could get
allies and others to come in. But then I would make it clear that I am
slowly moving that responsibility to this force and withdrawing the U.S.
over six months or so."
Perhaps you now see the wisdom of meeting with some of the thirteen
groups of Americans - including those composed of retired military
officers and intelligence officials, business, church and labor - who
asked to meet with you before you declared your unconstitutional war.
They could have cautioned you about the Iraqi quagmire.
Sincerely,
Ralph Nader
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