Untitled Document
The president who campaigned on a pledge to “restore honor and
dignity to the White House” has now been compelled to declaim: “We
abide by the law of the United States, and we do not torture.” In the
closing months of 2005, President George W. Bush has been forced to repeat this
undignified denial several times, most recently with the head of the World Health
Organization standing beside him, because a dwindling number of people believe
him.
In fact, as witnessed by the International Committee for the Red Cross and
as verified by numerous US military and intelligence officers, during the ongoing
“war on terror” the United States has repeatedly employed interrogation
tactics that constitute torture and inhumane treatment and are proscribed by
the Geneva Conventions and US law. Of the 108 deaths of prisoners in custody
in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2002, at least 26 were classified as homicides,
including cases where people were tortured, beaten, frozen or suffocated to
death. In addition, and despite Bush’s denial, the US does “render
to countries that torture” -- sending captured or kidnapped detainees
off to Egypt, Jordan and other countries, where they have, on several documented
occasions, suffered illegal forms of abuse.
Even as Bush issued his latest denial on December 6, Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice was issuing a “non-apology” in Germany for the CIA’s
abduction and detention in Afghanistan of the German citizen Khalid al-Masri,
who they wrongly suspected of complicity in terrorism and who is now suing the
CIA alleging that he was tortured while in custody. Rice was in Europe to assuage
the public furor at the revelation in the November 3 Washington Post of secret
CIA prisons -- termed “black sites” -- in two eastern European countries.
ABC News reported on December 5 that in advance of Rice’s visit the CIA
had “scrambled” to move 11 “high-value al-Qaeda detainees”
from the European locations to a new “black site” somewhere in North
Africa.
The steady leaks about the Bush administration’s detention policies forced
Rice to attempt to reassure Europeans further on December 7: “As a matter
of US policy, the United States’ obligations under the UN Convention Against
Torture, which prohibits cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment -- those obligations
extend to US personnel wherever they are, whether they are in the United States
or outside of the United States.” But given the scope of the revelations
of US torture that have poured out since the first Abu Ghraib photos hit the
airwaves in late April 2004, “policy talk” will not satisfy or quiet
Bush administration critics, since by definition policy can be adjusted as circumstances
require. The ban on torture is a matter of law, not policy, and violations are
a crime, not a bureaucratic error. The Bush administration, moreover, has sought
to narrow the accepted legal definition of torture and to “legalize”
the option of cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment.
These efforts not only subvert the law of the land, but they may also thwart
the pursuit of justice for planners and abettors of the September 11, 2001 attacks
that prompted the Bush administration to launch its war on terror.
THE NEW PARADIGM
In the pantheon of crimes, torture is an exceptionally serious one, not because
it is necessarily the worst thing that people can do to others but because the
legal prohibition is universal -- it extends to all human beings in all places
and circumstances. The primary purpose of the prohibition is to limit what public
agents can do to people who are in custody but have not been found guilty of
a crime, when the capacity to do harm is so one-sided and so tempting. In US
law, the idea of forbidding torture traces back to the founding of the nation
and was enshrined in the Constitution through the prohibition of cruel treatment,
an enlightened repudiation of the tyrannical excesses of kings. Along with habeas
corpus and the separation of powers, the ban on extralegal cruel treatment served
as a foundation of the modern rule of law, because it was understood as essential
for conditions of human dignity, liberty, security and due process to thrive.
In the second half of the twentieth century, the prohibition of torture “ripened”
into a customary international legal norm, a fact that Congress recognized by
passing the Torture Victims Protection Act in 1992. The 1949 Geneva Conventions,
which prohibit torture and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment of prisoners
captured in war, are incorporated into the US Uniform Code of Military Justice
(UCMJ), and federal anti-torture and war crimes statutes passed in the 1990s
establish criminal liability for violations in times of war or peace.
This black-letter law would seem to settle that torture and inhumane treatment
are not legitimate options for US interrogators, civilian or military. There
is also a strong consensus among experts in the art of interrogation that hurting
and degrading prisoners is highly unlikely to produce reliable intelligence
or confessions anyway. But in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks,
as part of a “new paradigm” for detention and interrogation, dominant
voices in the Bush administration’s inner circles subscribed to the idea
that torture works. If torturing -- or, the preferred euphemism, “coercively
interrogating” -- prisoners could provide intelligence to save American
lives and win a “war on terror,” then “quaint” laws
should be no obstacle. The current torture crisis is a direct product of the
policy preference for abandoning the law.
The “new paradigm” was shaped principally by Vice President Dick
Cheney and his shadowy counsel (now chief of staff), David Addington, and varnished
with legal opinions from the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel
(OLC), most prominently by Berkeley law professor John Yoo, who served as deputy
assistant attorney general from 2001-2003. Their goal was to expand executive
power at the expense of the courts and Congress. To these ends, Yoo and his
OLC colleagues produced a series of memos opining that the president, as commander-in-chief,
should have unfettered powers to wage war, that any efforts to subject executive
discretion over interrogation and detention policies to federal, military or
treaty laws would be “unconstitutional,” that the legal restriction
on cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment is unenforceable outside the United
States, and, for good measure, that prisoners designated as terrorists by presidential
fiat (rather than status review by a tribunal) should have no habeas corpus
right to contest their detention and no right not to be maltreated. These OLC
opinions were treated as “controlling legal authority” and utilized
by the CIA and Pentagon civilians to authorize practices that the International
Committee of the Red Cross (with unique access to prisoners) has characterized
as “tantamount to torture.”
REMOVING LEGAL OBSTACLES
The larger story of how the rule of law and cherished legal norms were hijacked
by right-wing radicals in the Bush administration is still being pieced together
as documents and details emerge. But it is now clear that the clandestine drive
to evade the laws of the land prohibiting torture and ill treatment started
in earnest in January 2002, when then-White House counsel (now Attorney General)
Alberto Gonzales asked the Defense Department to instruct intelligence officers
at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba to fill out a one-page form on every detainee
certifying the president’s “reason to believe” that the detainee
was involved in terrorism. Those whom the president so suspected were to be
tried by the special military commissions created by Bush’s November 2001
executive order. Within weeks, the officers began reporting back that interrogations
were not producing the information needed to fulfill Gonzales’ request.
At a time when these prisoners were touted as the “worst of the worst,”
the presumption was that legal restraints on interrogation were the problem.
The first legal obstacle was cleared on February 7, 2002, when President Bush
embraced the OLC opinion that suspected al-Qaeda detainees were not protected
by the Geneva Conventions, and that suspected Taliban detainees are categorically
not entitled to prisoner-of-war status under the conventions. This laid the
ground for a “no crime without law” approach to the handling of
prisoners. In the preceding weeks, the State Department had sharply criticized
the legal flaws and political dangers of this position, for which it was rewarded
by exclusion from discussions of interrogation and detention policies thereafter.
By the summer of 2002, official agitation was mounting over the lack of intelligence
that could lead to the capture of Osama bin Laden and other top al-Qaeda and
Taliban leaders, whose continuing evasion of the US dragnet was a political
embarrassment. The most infamous memo that has come to light, dated August 1,
2002 and signed by then-Assistant Attorney General Jay Bybee but authored by
Yoo, was written in response to the question of how far CIA agents, anxious
about the risk of future prosecution under federal anti-torture laws, could
go in interrogating high-value al-Qaeda suspects. Yoo opined that a tactic is
not “torture” unless it causes pain comparable to “organ failure
or death.” (The analysis in this memo was so shoddy and embarrassing that
it was repudiated by the administration as soon as it became public in June
2004 and replaced that December with a new OLC memo. Yoo testily defended his
work product and criticized the new memo for “muddying the water.”)
YOOIFICATION AND GITMOIZATION
Although the August 1 torture memo was written specifically for the CIA, the
White House forwarded it to the Pentagon, where it was seized upon as a solution
to military interrogators’ frustration that Guantánamo detainees
were tenaciously resisting lawful interrogation methods. It should be noted
that in August 2002, a senior Arabic-speaking CIA analyst dispatched to assess
Guantánamo detainees’ intelligence value concluded that few had
any meaningful ties to or information about al-Qaeda. One exception was Muhammad
al-Qahtani, alleged to be the twentieth hijacker. The desire to “break”
him was the reason for authorization to use dogs, protracted sleep deprivation
and stress positions, forced nudity and other forms of degrading treatment.
A memo by Army Lt. Col. Diane Beaver, dated October 11, 2002, noted that coercive
tactics are “per se” illegal under the UCMJ, but that this might
be circumvented on the basis of the commander-in-chief’s authority (one
of the key arguments in the August 1 memo).
A December 2, 2002 Defense Department memo authorizing a three-category menu
of interrogation tactics was rescinded on January 15, 2003, apparently because
of concerns among the uniformed military about the ramifications of abandoning
the UCMJ. The Pentagon then convened a working group to produce new military
interrogation guidelines for Guantánamo. The working group was instructed
by General Counsel William Haynes to accept the OLC’s August 1 analysis,
and forbidden from developing analysis that would conform to military law (or
50 years of military practice). Top lawyers in the Judge Advocate General’s
Corps from all four branches of the military wrote memos to the Pentagon leadership
in February and March 2003 conveying uniform dismay at the authorization of
“torture lite” tactics. They protested that this contravenes the
UCMJ, which enshrines Geneva Convention rules and governs the military, regardless
of the status of prisoners, that it would expose soldiers to the risk of court
martial, and that it would undermine military doctrine and discipline, as well
as public support for the war.
On March 14, 2003, Yoo sent a memo to Haynes responding to the JAGs’
concerns, which was used by Pentagon civilians to silence the dissent. (The
contents of this memo, which has not yet become public, are apparently so sensitive
or embarrassing that even a 2005 official investigation into prisoner abuse,
headed by Vice Adm. Albert Church, was barred from making a copy and had to
read it in a secure location.) The Pentagon working group issued its final report
on interrogation policy for Guantánamo on April 4, 2003. (This document
was also declassified in June 2004, and in March 2005 was officially rescinded
and declared to be “a historical document with no standing in policy,
practice or law to guide any activity of the Department of Defense.”)
The coercive tactics authorized for military interrogators at Guantánamo,
where the Bush administration claimed that the Geneva Conventions do not apply
to prisoners, “migrated” in late August 2003 to Iraq, where there
was no dispute that the Geneva Conventions do apply. Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez,
commander of the Iraqi theater of operations, signed off on tactics that would
“Gitmoize” Iraqi prisons, including use of dogs, sexual humiliation,
stress positions and other forms of prisoner abuse that were conveyed to the
world in the Abu Ghraib photos. When Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld was called
before Congress in May 2004 to explain the Abu Ghraib debacle, he claimed that
US forces in Iraq were adhering to the Geneva Conventions and that any violations
were the work of “rogue soldiers.” But when Army Capt. Ian Fishback
saw the footage of Rumsfeld’s testimony, he “was immediately concerned
that the Army was taking part in a lie to the Congress, which would have been
a clear violation of the Constitution.” He knew, from firsthand experience,
that the tactics depicted in the Abu Ghraib photos were being used systematically
in Iraq and Afghanistan, where he had done tours of duty. Fishback spent 17
months seeking clarification about the legal standards for interrogations, during
which he was repeatedly told by his superiors to ignore abuses and advised to
“consider your career.” The civic-minded captain finally turned
to Human Rights Watch, which corroborated his allegations with the testimony
of other soldiers.
JOHN DOES
Since June 2004, developments affecting the interrogation and detention of
foreign prisoners have come at a fast and furious pace. In that month, the Supreme
Court ruled in the Rasul v. Bush and al-Odeh v. Bush cases that Guantánamo
detainees do, in fact, have habeas corpus rights. Lawyers with the Center for
Constitutional Rights, who filed the Rasul suit, have assumed a lead role in
coordinating the work of hundreds of lawyers who were prompted by the decision,
which came on the heels of the Abu Ghraib scandal, to sign on as representatives
of other Guantánamo detainees. The hundreds of lawyers hitting the shores
of Cuba have become important sources of information both about the tactics
used there and the dubious veracity of the information extracted from prisoners
through coercion and torture. Thomas Wilner of the firm Shearman and Sterling,
who represents Fawzi al-Odeh and ten other Kuwaiti prisoners, maintains that
Guantánamo’s purpose “was to avoid law, and this lawless,
simple-minded, lousy government lawyering led to Abu Ghraib. All my clients
were tortured, however you define the term.”
The influx of lawyers impelled the CIA to shut down its operations at Guantánamo.
But the Rasul decision did nothing to clarify the nature of rights that prisoners
could claim, and the Justice and Defense Departments have fought lawyers’
requests for improved treatment or information, including the identities of
hundreds of Guantánamo prisoners, foiling any access to lawyers or courts
for habeas corpus motions. Nor has the government made any effort to charge
most of the Guantánamo detainees. As is now known, two alternatives to
prosecution have been to “render” detainees to other countries,
where they may be held indefinitely without charge, or to whisk them off to
secret CIA-run facilities overseas. A government report, declassified in March
2005, confirms that the Pentagon authorized holding “ghost detainees”
for the CIA, with no access for the Red Cross. This policy of denying access
to the Red Cross continues to date.
Among the ghost detainees in CIA custody are Abu Zubayda, al-Qaeda’s
operations chief, Khalid Sheikh Muhammad, the alleged mastermind of the September
11 attacks, and Ramzi bin al-Shibh, an alleged September 11 planner. The fate
of these men, and an undisclosed number of others, is one of the “known
unknowns” in the war on terror.
Fearing that some or all of the unknown Guantánamo prisoners might be
disposed of through secret rendition to other countries, on February 11, 2005,
the Center for Constitutional Rights filed a habeas motion in federal court,
John Does 1-570 v. Bush. “We call these petitioners ‘John Does,’”
explained the Center’s Barbara Olshansky, “because they have no
names and no faces. They have been disappeared by an administration that shows
as little regard for an order of the Supreme Court as it does for international
law and human rights.”
THE BOTTOM LINE
In July 2005, Lt. Gen. Mark Schmidt issued his report on FBI allegations of
detainee abuse at Guantánamo to Congress. The report is classified, but
according to the executive summary that has been published, Schmidt and his
fellow investigators certified that some detainees were subjected to tactics
that were clearly “abusive” (20-hour interrogations for 48 days
in a row, short-shackling to the floor for extended periods) and “degrading”
(being smeared with fake menstrual blood, being forced to bark like a dog and
perform dog tricks). In an Orwellian twist, however, the report concluded that
these tactics were not unlawful. Why not? In Schmidt’s view, echoing Yoo’s
logic, the “abusive” tactics were not “inhumane,” and
nothing in US law prohibited degrading and humiliating treatment of “unlawful
combatants.”
Defining “humane treatment” has become the bottom line in the current
battle over interrogation and detention policies. The universally recognized
baseline standard for the treatment of prisoners in wartime is Geneva Convention
Common Article 3, which extends to all detained persons regardless of status.
It states that they “shall in all circumstances be treated humanely,”
and that “[t]o this end,” certain specified acts “are and
shall remain prohibited at any time and in any place whatsoever” including
“cruel treatment and torture,” and “outrages upon personal
dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment.”
This “baseline” is far lower than the standards for lawful prisoners
of war. To go below the baseline, as the Bush administration has done -- and
seeks to continue doing -- is literally to undermine the very concept of “humanity.”
If some people cannot claim any legal right to the minimum standards of treatment
in Common Article 3, then they are, by extension, no longer legally recognized
as “human.” The 9/11 Commission, the JAGs and numerous others have
declared that, even where Common Article 3 might not apply as a matter of treaty
obligation, the standards must be the point of reference for the treatment of
prisoners. The Bush administration’s only concession on this matter is
to state that prisoners will be treated “humanely” as a matter of
policy, implying that some people still have no legal right to their humanity.
Cheney, Addington and Yoo have continued to insist that there is no baseline
in a war on terror because no law can bridle executive discretion and that the
president is under no obligation to abide by customary international law.
TRYING TO RESTORE THE RULE OF LAW
The denouement of this rule of law fiasco may be at hand. In July, when Sen.
Lindsey Graham (R-SC) finally succeeded in his year-long quest to obtain the
release of the JAG memos written in the spring of 2003, he said, “The
JAGs were telling the policymakers: if you go down this road, you are going
to get your own people in trouble…and they were absolutely right.”
The JAG memos spurred Graham, an Air Force reserve lawyer himself, and fellow
Republicans John McCain and John Warner to draft legislation that would bring
all interrogations conducted anywhere in the world by any US agents (including
the CIA) back within the rubric of the law. Cheney led the White House campaign
to thwart their initiative, thus earning himself the nickname “vice president
for torture.” The McCain language was endorsed by dozens of retired military
officers, including former Secretary of State Colin Powell, as well as otherwise
stalwart Bush administration backers from the American Enterprise Institute
and the Weekly Standard.
On October 5, the Senate voted 90-9 to attach McCain’s initiative as
an amendment to the defense appropriations bill, prompting the threat of a presidential
veto and a lobbying campaign directed at Republicans in the House of Representatives.
McCain announced on November 5 his intention to attach his amendment to every
piece of legislation that goes before the president. For now, the amendment
is in committee, and Republicans are striving to arrive at a compromise with
the White House, which continues to insist on a CIA exemption. Domestic and
foreign pressure on the government has intensified, but the administration’s
current “policy talk” is just another way of endorsing the lawless
“new paradigm” as guiding principle for the treatment of prisoners.
JUSTICE LOST?
One of the many adverse effects of utilizing “enhanced interrogation
techniques,” conducting “extraordinary renditions” to countries
that torture and “disappearing” people in CIA custody was to undermine
the prospect of ever bringing to justice any of the captured authors of the
September 11 attacks, or other suspects. As David Cole points out in a December
3 Los Angeles Times op-ed, “One probable reason for the military’s
reluctance [to charge and prosecute most detainees in US custody] is the real
risk that any trial will turn into a trial of the United States’ own interrogation
practices. Although the military tribunal rules do not exclude the use of testimony
extracted by torture, no trial will ever be viewed as legitimate if it allows
such testimony, and defense lawyers are certain to make this a central issue
in any proceeding.”
Critics of US interrogation practices include the military defense lawyers
assigned to represent the first five Guantánamo detainees slated for
trial before the military commissions. These JAGs have mounted a vigorous defense
of their clients by speaking out against the government’s authorization
of violent and degrading interrogation tactics, as well as the military commission
rules that permit the use of information from others that might have been extracted
through torture. In November, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case of Hamdan
v. Rumsfeld, which was brought by Navy Lt. Cmdr. Charles Swift on behalf of
his client Salim Ahmad Hamdan, and which aims to challenge the constitutionality
of the military commissions themselves. Even if the McCain amendment survives
the pressures and “compromises” and the prohibitions on torture
and cruel treatment are reinforced as a matter of law, a defeat for the petitioners
in the Hamdan case would indicate that the highest court in the land has abdicated
its independence and succumbed to the “new paradigm” of unfettered
executive dispatch.
The US government has a right to pursue justice for the September 11 attacks
and for other acts of terrorism that target civilians. But justice is a matter
of law, not policy, and it requires lawful treatment of prisoners and witnesses,
and legal venues that are able and willing to function independently to interpret
and enforce the laws of the land. At this juncture, it is vital that many more
citizens school themselves in the legal issues at stake, and speak out loudly
to demand lawful policies. Torture is inimical to law and justice.
Lisa Hajjar, a professor in the Law and Society Program
at the University of California-Santa Barbara, is the author of Courting Conflict:
The Israeli Military Court System in the West Bank and Gaza [University of California
Press], and an editor of Middle East Report.