Arrest, Prosecute & Imprison Bush Public

to hold George W. Bush accountable for torture and other crimes
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    Arrest and Prosecute Bush
    George Bush needs to be held accountable for his crimes, which include torture and misleading the world to justify waging aggressive war against Iraq.

    Bush has now lost his diplomatic immunity as a head of state. If Bush travels abroad after Jan 20, then he can be arrested and charged by prosecutors in other countries. Please contact prosecutors in your own country and urge them to detain Bush if he comes to your country. You can also write a letter to the Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court in The Netherlands.


    Blog
    22.04.2009, Scott Cobb, 0 Comments
    European Nations May Investigate Bush Officials Over Prisoner Treatment
    By Craig Whitlock
    Washington Post Foreign Service
    Wednesday, April 22, 2009

    BERLIN, April 21 -- European prosecutors are likely to investigate CIA and Bush administration officials on suspicion of violating an international ban on torture if they are not held legally accountable at home, according to U.N. officials and human rights lawyers.

    Many European officials and civil liberties groups said they were disappointed by President Obama's opposition to trials of CIA interrogators who subjected terrorism suspects to waterboarding and other harsh tactics. They said the release last week of secret U.S. Justice Department memos authorizing the techniques will make it easier for foreign prosecutors to open probes if U.S. officials do not.

    Some European countries, under a legal principle known as universal jurisdiction, have adopted laws giving themselves the authority to investigate torture, genocide and other human rights crimes anywhere in the world, even if their citizens are not involved. While it is rare for prosecutors to win such cases, those targeted can face arrest if they travel abroad.

    Martin Scheinin, the U.N. special investigator for human rights and counterterrorism, said the interrogation techniques approved by the Bush administration clearly violated international law. He said the lawyers who wrote the Justice Department memos, as well as senior figures such as former vice president Richard B. Cheney, will probably face legal trouble overseas if they avoid prosecution in the United States.

    "Torture is an international crime irrespective of the place where it is committed. Other countries have an obligation to investigate," Scheinin said in a telephone interview from Cairo. "This may be something that will be haunting CIA officials, or Justice Department officials, or the vice president, for the rest of their lives."

    Manfred Nowak, another senior U.N. official who investigates torture claims, said the Obama administration is violating terms of the U.N. Convention Against Torture by effectively granting amnesty to CIA interrogators. He said the United States, as a signatory to the treaty, is legally obligated to investigate suspected cases of torture. He also said Washington must provide compensation to torture victims, including al-Qaeda leaders who were waterboarded.

    "One cannot buy the argument anymore that this does not amount to torture," he said. "These memos are nothing but an attempt to circumvent the absolute prohibition on torture."

    Nowak, an Austrian law professor based in Vienna, acknowledged that there is no mechanism in the anti-torture treaty to punish governments that ignore its provisions. From a political standpoint, he said, it is more important for the White House or Congress to authorize an independent commission to conduct a public examination of how terrorism suspects were treated after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

    "I still have full trust in the Obama administration to do the right thing," he said in a telephone interview from Bangkok. "It is more important for the United States to overcome a dark chapter in its history."

    On Tuesday, Obama for the first time raised the possibility of creating a bipartisan commission to examine the Bush administration's handling of terrorism suspects. He also said he would leave it up to Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. to determine whether to prosecute senior officials who approved waterboarding and other tactics.

    Several CIA and Bush administration officials have already been targeted for prosecution in Europe, though the cases have generally not progressed very far.

    In Spain, a human rights group is pushing prosecutors to investigative six senior Bush administration officials for allegedly sanctioning the torture of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay. Last week, Spanish prosecutors recommended dropping the case after Attorney General Cándido Conde-Pumpido called it a politicized attempt to turn Spanish courts "into a plaything." A Spanish judge will make the final decision.

    In Germany, human rights groups have tried to bring charges against former U.S. defense secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld over the abuse of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib. Germany's federal prosecutor has twice rejected the case, but supporters have appealed in court.

    Wolfgang Kaleck, a Berlin lawyer who helped file the complaint against Rumsfeld, said that such cases have failed largely because European courts have ruled that they should be handled in U.S. courts instead. That could change, he said.

    "Everybody prefers that prosecutions take place in the U.S.," he said. "But if nothing happens there, then that's the end of the legal argument to dismiss these cases in Europe."

    John B. Bellinger III, who was legal adviser to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, said European governments will face a worsening legal and political dilemma if human rights groups redouble their efforts to pursue criminal investigations of U.S. officials.

    "They realize this will put them in a very difficult position," said Bellinger, now a partner at the law firm Arnold & Porter in Washington. "They will be under pressure from civil liberties groups and some European parliamentarians not to oppose these cases. But if they allow them to go forward, they know it could strain their relationship with the Obama administration, which says it wants to look forward, not back."

    Additionally, European governments are unlikely to favor the prosecution of U.S. officials under universal-jurisdiction statutes for practical reasons, he said. For instance, U.S. officials facing charges or indictment could no longer travel to Europe without facing the risk of arrest, a situation that could spiral out of control diplomatically.

    "It just sets a bad precedent," he said. "Current and former government officials have to be able to travel. Once you allow one or two of these cases, it could really open the floodgates to actions against officials of many countries."

    17.01.2009, Scott Cobb, 0 Comments
    By SCOTT SHANE
    Published: January 16, 2009

    WASHINGTON — Just 14 months ago, at his confirmation hearing, Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey frustrated and angered some senators by refusing to state that waterboarding, the near-drowning technique used on three prisoners by the Central Intelligence Agency, is in fact torture.

    This week, at his confirmation hearing, Eric H. Holder Jr., the attorney general-designate, did not hesitate to express a clear view. He noted that waterboarding had been used to torment prisoners during the Inquisition, by the Japanese in World War II and in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge.

    “We prosecuted our own soldiers for using it in Vietnam,” Mr. Holder said. “Waterboarding is torture.”

    In the view of many historians and legal authorities, Mr. Holder was merely admitting the obvious. He was agreeing with the clear position of his boss-to-be, President-elect Barack Obama, and he was giving an answer that almost certainly was necessary to win confirmation.

    Yet his statement, amounting to an admission that the United States may have committed war crimes, opens the door to an unpredictable train of legal and political consequences. It could potentially require a full-scale legal investigation, complicate prosecutions of individuals suspected of committing terrorism and mire the new administration in just the kind of backward look that Mr. Obama has said he would like to avoid.

    Mr. Holder’s statement came just two days after the Defense Department official in charge of military commissions at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, said in an interview with The Washington Post that she had refused to permit a trial for one detainee there, Mohammed al-Qahtani, because she believed he had been tortured.

    Together the statements, from a current and an incoming legal official, cover both the Central Intelligence Agency, which has acknowledged waterboarding three captured operatives of Al Qaeda, and the military’s detention program.

    Legal experts across the political spectrum said the statements would make it difficult for the incoming administration to avoid a criminal investigation of torture, even as most also say a successful prosecution might well be impossible.

    Two obvious obstacles stand in the way of a prosecution: legal opinions from the Justice Department that declared even the harshest interrogation methods to be legal, and a provision in the Military Commissions Act of 2006 that grants strong legal protections to government employees who relied on such legal advice in counterterrorism programs.

    Still, Jennifer Daskal, senior counterterrorism counsel at Human Rights Watch, said, “It would be contrary to the principles of the criminal justice system for the attorney general to say he believes a very serious crime has been committed and then to do nothing about it.”

    Charles D. Stimson, who served as the Defense Department’s top official on detainee affairs from 2004 to 2007 and is now a senior legal fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation, said the statements “certainly will increase the pressure on Holder to mount some kind of investigation.”

    In addition to domestic political pressures, the United States appears to have a legal obligation as a party to the international Convention Against Torture to follow up on the torture statements. That treaty requires signatory states to conduct a “prompt and impartial investigation, wherever there is reasonable ground to believe that an act of torture has been committed in any territory under its jurisdiction.”

    The Bush administration placed its interrogation operations offshore, at the American base in Cuba and at secret C.I.A. sites, and officials have sometimes argued that they were not on territory under American jurisdiction. But that assertion has been eroded by court decisions concerning the Guantánamo detention center, and it is unlikely that the Obama administration would use such a loophole to avoid the torture convention’s effect.

    “There’s a moral, legal and practical obligation of the United States to follow this allegation in good faith wherever it leads,” said Juan E. Méndez, a veteran human rights lawyer who is president of the International Center for Transitional Justice in New York.

    Where such an inquiry might lead is an unsettling question for departing Bush administration officials, who have long worried that aggressive policies could make them vulnerable to civil or criminal liability.

    If rank-and-file interrogators are protected by the Justice Department’s assurance that their actions were legal, what about the lawyers who gave the assurances? What about the senior officials, including President Bush, who approved the use of waterboarding and other such tactics?

    Such questions are so legally daunting and politically complex that Mr. Obama has played down, while not ruling out, the possibility of a criminal investigation or a national commission to examine past policies. In an interview with ABC last Sunday, he said “my orientation’s going to be to move forward” rather than looking back.

    In recent weeks, Mr. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and other officials have strongly defended their counterterrorism methods and credited them with preventing attacks on the United States since 2001. Their implicit argument — that the Obama administration should not question policies that protected Americans — was made more explicit and personal by Michael V. Hayden, the departing C.I.A. director, in a session with reporters on Thursday.

    “If I’m going to go to an officer and say, ‘I’ve got a truth commission, or I want to post all your e-mails, or, well, we’ve got this guy from the bureau who wants to talk to you,’ ” Mr. Hayden said, it would discourage such a C.I.A. officer from taking risks on behalf of the new president’s policies.

    “We have no right to ask this guy to bet his kid’s college education on who’s going to win the off-year election,” Mr. Hayden said, alluding to legal fees that such a C.I.A. officer might face.

    At his confirmation hearing, Mr. Holder was asked by Senator Orrin G. Hatch, Republican of Utah, whether he would pursue a criminal investigation of the interrogation programs.

    Mr. Holder hedged his response, saying, “Senator, no one’s above the law, and we will follow the evidence, the facts, the law, and let that take us where it should.”

    But, he added, quoting Mr. Obama, that “we don’t want to criminalize policy differences” and finally pleaded for time to study the matter.

    “One of the things I think I’m going to have to do,” Mr. Holder said, “is to become more familiar with what happened that led to the implementation of these policies.”

    11.01.2009, Scott Cobb, 0 Comments
    Responding to the most popular inquiry on the "Open for Questions" feature of his website, Barack Obama said on Sunday that he is "evaluating" whether or not to investigate potential crimes of the Bush administration, but that he was inclined to "look forward as opposed to looking backwards."

    The answer was delivered during an interview to This Week With George Stephanopoulos. But the question itself has been weeks in the work.

    The Obama transition team, as part of its efforts to open up the political process, had allowed web users to vote on questions for the incoming administration to field. To the top rose a query from Bob Fertik, president of Democrats.com and a former Clinton White House technology official, asking whether the incoming administration would appoint a special prosecutor to "independently investigate the greatest crimes of the Bush administration, including torture and warrantless wiretapping."

    On Obama's website, a December statement from Vice President-elect Joe Biden on the topic was offered as a response (similar older statements were used to address several other national security-related questions, which the transition team has avoided discussing). But Stephanopoulos made the matter moot by posing the question directly to the president-elect.

    "We're still evaluating how we're going to approach the whole issue of interrogations, detentions, and so forth," said Obama. "And obviously we're going to look at past practices. And I don't believe that anybody is above the law. On the other hand, I also have a belief that we need to look forward as opposed to looking backwards. And part of my job is to make sure that for example at the CIA, you've got extraordinarily talented people who are working very hard to keep Americans safe. I don't want them to suddenly feel like they've got to spend all their time looking over their shoulders and lawyering up."

    Pressed a bit -- was he ruling out prosecution? -- the president-elect suggested that decision would be that of his attorney general.

    "I think my general view when it comes to my attorney general is that he's the people's lawyer. Eric Holder's been nominated," said Obama. "His job is to uphold the Constitution and look after the interests of the American people, not be swayed by my day-to-day politics. So ultimately, he's going to be making some calls. But my general belief is that when it comes to national security, what we have to focus on is getting things right in the future as opposed to looking at what we got wrong in the past."

    I asked Fertik to share his thoughts on the president-elect's answer. This is what he had to say:

    It's absurd to talk about "upholding the Constitution" and say "no one is above the law" if you refuse to look "back" at those who have subverted the Constitution and broken the law. And you can't have one set of rules for "national security" and a different set of rules for everything else.

    So if there's any hope for prosecution in Obama's answer, it is that Attorney General Eric Holder will truly be "the people's lawyer" and fully represent us by prosecuting torturers, wiretappers, and other criminals who committed their crimes from secret undisclosed locations hidden within the Bush-Cheney administration.

    One more thing that is worth noting. As pointed out by Think Progress, Dawn Johnsen, Obama's choice to lead the Office of Legal Counsel, has said that the next president should avoid "any temptation to simply move on." Here is the relevant quote:

    We must avoid any temptation simply to move on. We must instead be honest with ourselves and the world as we condemn our nation's past transgressions and reject Bush's corruption of our American ideals. Our constitutional democracy cannot survive with a government shrouded in secrecy, nor can our nation's honor be restored without full disclosure.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/01/11/obama-leaves-door-open-to_n_156...

    Dick Cheney
    The Ten Lies of Dick Cheney (Part One)
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andy-worthington/the-ten-lies-of-dick-chen...

    On December 11, the Senate Armed Services Committee issued a compelling report into the torture and abuse of prisoners in US custody (PDF), based on a detailed analysis of how Chinese torture techniques, which are used in US military schools to train personnel to resist interrogation if captured, were reverse engineered and applied to prisoners captured in the "War on Terror."

    The techniques, taught as part of the SERE programs (Survival, Evasion, Resistance, Escape) include sleep deprivation, the prolonged use of stress positions, forced nudity, hooding, exposure to extreme temperatures, subjecting prisoners to loud music and flashing lights, "treating them like animals," and, in some cases, the ancient torture technique known as waterboarding, a form of controlled drowning that the torturers of the Spanish Inquisition called "tortura del agua."

    The report rejected the conclusions of over a dozen investigations, conducted since the Abu Ghraib scandal in 2004, which identified problems concerning the treatment of prisoners in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantánamo, but which were not authorized to gaze up the chain of command to blame senior officials for approving the use of torture by US forces, and for instigating abusive policies.

    This enabled the administration to maintain, as it did with Abu Ghraib, that any abuse was the result of the rogue activities of "a few bad apples," but the Senate Committee report comprehensively demolished this defense. The authors wrote:

    The abuse of detainees in US custody cannot simply be attributed to the actions of "a few bad apples" acting on their own. The fact is that senior officials in the United States government solicited information on how to use aggressive techniques, redefined the law to create the appearance of their legality, and authorized their use against detainees. Those efforts damaged our ability to collect accurate intelligence that could save lives, strengthened the hand of our enemies, and compromised our moral authority.
    Those singled out for blame include President George W. Bush (for stripping prisoners of the protections of the Geneva Conventions in February 2002, which paved the way for all the abuse that followed), former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Vice President Dick Cheney's former legal counsel (and now chief of staff) David Addington, former Pentagon general counsel William J. Haynes II, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Richard Myers, former White House general counsel (and later US Attorney General) Alberto Gonzales, former White House deputy counsel Timothy Flanigan, former Assistant Attorney General Jay S. Bybee, former Justice Department legal adviser John Yoo, former Guantánamo commanders Maj. Gen. Michael Dunlavey and Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller, and Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, the former commander of coalition forces in Iraq.

    The one senior official who was not mentioned -- presumably because of the talent for remaining behind the scenes that once earned him the secret service nickname "Backseat" -- was Dick Cheney. However, just four days later, as if to make up for his omission from the report, Cheney was interviewed by ABC News, and took the opportunity to present a detailed defense of the administration's national security policies, throwing down a very public gauntlet to critics of torture, Guantánamo, illegal wiretapping and the invasion of Iraq, and raising fears that he was only doing so because a Presidential pardon is just around the corner.

    Cheney's most significant remark was his first admission in public that he was involved in approving the waterboarding of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the self-confessed mastermind of the 9/11 attacks (who, it should be noted, claimed responsibility for the attacks before he was captured by US forces). However, the entire interview is worth looking at, as Cheney's version of the truth does not stand up to scrutiny, and features ten lies that should not be allowed to pass without further comment and analysis.

    1) On the supposed legality of unauthorized wiretapping

    Asked what he thought about suggestions from Barack Obama's transition team that the Bush administration's homeland security policy "has basically been torture and illegal wiretapping, and that they want to undo the central tenets of your anti-terrorist policy," Cheney replied, "They're wrong. On the question of terrorist surveillance, this was always a policy to intercept communications between terrorists, or known terrorists, or so-called 'dirty numbers,' and folks inside the United States, to capture those international communications. It's worked. It's been successful. It's now embodied in the FISA statute that we passed last year, and that Barack Obama voted for, which I think was a good decision on his part. It's a very, very important capability. It is legal. It was legal from the very beginning. It is constitutional, and to claim that it isn't I think is just wrong."

    THE LIE: Although the Bush administration secured Congressional approval for the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF) in the week after the 9/11 attacks (the founding document of the "War on Terror," which granted the President seemingly open-ended powers "to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001"), the approval for the warrantless surveillance of communications to and from the United States that followed on September 25 was neither "legal" nor "constitutional."

    In a series on Dick Cheney in the Washington Post last summer, Barton Gellman and Jo Becker explained how, on the day of the 9/11 attacks, Cheney and David Addington swiftly assembled a team that included Timothy Flanigan and John Yoo to begin "contemplating the founding question of the legal revolution to come: What extraordinary powers will the President need for his response?" Gellman and Becker described how Flanigan, with advice from Yoo, drafted the AUMF, and Yoo explained that "they used the broadest possible language because 'this war was so different, you can't predict what might come up'."

    In fact, as the authors point out, they "knew very well what would come next: the interception -- without a warrant -- of communications to and from the United States." Although warrantless communications intercepts had been forbidden by federal law since 1978, the administration claimed that they were "justified, in secret, as 'incident to' the authority Congress had just granted" the President, in a memorandum that Yoo finalized on 25 September. Far from being "legal" and "constitutional," therefore, the secret memorandum was the first brazen attempt by the key policy-makers (in the Office of the Vice President and the Pentagon) to use the AUMF as cover for an unprecedented expansion of presidential power that was intended to cut Congress, the judiciary, and all other government departments out of the loop.

    2) On the definition of torture

    Moving on to the allegations of torture, Cheney said, "On the question of so-called 'torture,' we don't do torture, we never have. It's not something that this administration subscribes to. Again, we proceeded very cautiously; we checked, we had the Justice Department issue the requisite opinions in order to know where the bright lines were that you could not cross. The professionals involved in that program were very, very cautious, very careful, wouldn't do anything without making certain it was authorized and that it was legal. And any suggestion to the contrary is just wrong."

    THE LIE: The claim, "we don't do torture," which President Bush has also peddled on numerous occasions, is an outright lie. The definition of torture, as laid down in the UN Convention Against Torture, to which the US is a signatory, is "any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person." However, in the summer of 2002 (obviously with Cheney's knowledge), John Yoo, with input from Addington, Gonzales and Flanigan, drafted another secret memorandum, issued on August 1 (PDF), which has become known as the "Torture Memo." This extraordinary document -- one of the most legally manipulative in the whole of the "War on Terror" -- drew creatively on historical rulings about torture in countries including Northern Ireland and Bosnia, and attempted to claim that, for the pain inflicted to count as torture, it "must be equivalent in intensity to the pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as organ failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death."

    Last summer, Yoo confirmed that Addington was responsible for another of the memo's radical claims -- that, as Commander in Chief, the President could authorize torture if he felt that it was necessary -- and also confirmed that a second opinion was signed off on August 1, 2002, which, unlike the first (leaked after the Abu Ghraib scandal in 2004) has never been made public. An unnamed source cited by Gellman and Becker explained that this second memo contained a long list of techniques approved for use by the CIA, which included waterboarding, but apparently drew the line at threatening to bury a prisoner alive.

    As a result, all Cheney's talk of "careful" and "cautious" legal advice is nothing more than a failed attempt to justify redefining torture. Outside of the White House and the Pentagon, it has always been abundantly clear that the SERE techniques (let alone the more extreme methods approved for use by the CIA) are torture, pure and simple, and the Senate Committee's recent report quotes extensively from a number of bodies -- the Air Force, the Defense Department's Criminal Investigative Task Force, the Army's International and Operational Law Division, the Navy and the Marine Corps -- who were opposed to their implementation for this very reason. Others, who took their complaints to the highest levels, were Alberto J. Mora, the head of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, and the FBI.

    3) On intelligence obtained through torture

    Following his defense of the interrogation techniques authorized by the administration, Cheney continued: "Did it produce the desired results? I think it did. I think, for example, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, who was the number three man in al-Qaeda, the man who planned the attacks of 9/11, provided us with a wealth of information. There was a period of time there, three or four years ago, when about half of everything we knew about al-Qaeda came from that one source."

    THE LIE: With exquisite timing, Cheney's bombastic pronouncements about the torture of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (KSM) and its supposed value coincided with the publication, in Vanity Fair, of an article by David Rose, in which a number of senior officials from both the FBI and the CIA directly refuted Cheney's claims. The article, which is worth reading in its entirety, focused primarily on the torture of Abu Zubaydah, Binyam Mohamed and Jose Padilla (which I have discussed at length before), but there were also key insights into the torture of KSM. Although President Bush claimed that KSM had provided "many details of other plots to kill innocent Americans," a former senior CIA official, who read all the interrogation reports from KSM's torture in secret CIA custody, explained that "90 percent of it was total fucking bullshit," and a former Pentagon analyst added, "KSM produced no actionable intelligence. He was trying to tell us how stupid we were."

    In addition, Cheney's claims about KSM were directly contradicted by Jack Cloonan, a senior FBI operative whose torture-free interrogation of al-Qaeda operatives in the years before 9/11 provides an object lesson in how the administration should have operated afterwards. Disputing the unspecified claims that, as Cheney put it, the interrogation of KSM had produced "a wealth of information," Cloonan said, "The proponents of torture say, 'Look at the body of information that has been obtained by these methods.' But if KSM and Abu Zubaydah did give up stuff, we would have heard the details." Rose added that a former CIA officer asked, "Why can't they say what the good stuff from Abu Zubaydah or KSM is? It's not as if this is sensitive material from a secret, vulnerable source. You're not blowing your source but validating your program. They say they can't do this, even though five or six years have passed, because it's a 'continuing operation.' But has it really taken so long to check it all out?"

    However, what was probably the most damning opinion was offered by FBI director Robert Mueller:

    I ask Mueller: So far as he is aware, have any attacks on America been disrupted thanks to intelligence obtained through what the administration still calls "enhanced techniques"?
    "I'm really reluctant to answer that," Mueller says. He pauses, looks at an aide, and then says quietly, declining to elaborate: "I don't believe that has been the case."

    4) On approval for the use of torture on Khalid Sheikh Mohammed

    The key elements of Cheney's admission that waterboarding was used on Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, and that Cheney believed that this was "appropriate," are as follows:

    Jonathan Karl: Did you authorize the tactics that were used against Khalid Sheikh Mohammed? Dick Cheney: I was aware of the program certainly, and involved in helping get the process cleared, as the agency, in effect, came in and wanted to know what they could and couldn't do. And they talked to me, as well as others, to explain what they wanted to do, and I supported it. Jonathan Karl: In hindsight, do you think any of those tactics that were used against Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and others went too far? Dick Cheney: I don't. Jonathan Karl: And on KSM, one of those tactics, of course, widely reported was waterboarding, and that seems to be a tactic we no longer use. Even that you think was appropriate? Dick Cheney: I do.
    THE LIE: Cheney's explanation of how he came to "support" the CIA program that was responsible for the torture of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (and numerous other "high-value detainees") suggests that he was little more than an adviser for a preconceived project. Yet again, nothing could be further from the truth.

    To understand why, it is necessary to examine how the "Torture Memos" of August 2002 came about, by looking at the events of November 13, 2001, when, under the cover of his regular weekly meeting with the President, Cheney played the leading role in circulating and gaining approval for a presidential order that authorized the President to seize "terror suspects" anywhere in the world and imprison them as "enemy combatants" without charge or trial, (or, if required, to try them in Military Commissions, which were empowered to accept secret evidence and evidence obtained through torture).

    Approved within an hour by only two other figures in the White House -- associate counsel Bradford Berenson, and deputy staff secretary Stuart Bowen, whose objections that it had to be seen by other presidential advisors were only dropped after "rapid, urgent persuasion" that the President "was standing by to sign and that the order was too sensitive to delay" -- the order was the first move in a deliberate ploy to strip prisoners of rights, so that they could be interrogated as the administration saw fit.

    This was confirmed the following day, when Cheney told the US Chamber of Commerce that terrorists do not "deserve to be treated as prisoners of war." It took him another ten weeks to persuade the President to agree with him, but in the meantime the pressure to approve the use of torture increased when, shortly after Guantánamo opened, a CIA delegation came to the White House to explain, as John Yoo described it, that they were "going to have some real difficulties getting actionable intelligence from detainees," if interrogators were obliged to confine themselves to treatment permitted by the Geneva Conventions.

    While this timeline confirms that CIA representatives pressed for removing the protections of the Geneva Conventions in mid-January 2002, it's also clear that Cheney had a similar plan in mind at least two months earlier. After the CIA visit, Addington wrote another notorious memorandum -- to which the rather less articulate Alberto Gonzales put his name -- in which the Conventions' "strict limits on questioning of enemy prisoners" were seen as hindering attempts "to quickly obtain information from captured terrorists."

    This was issued on January 25, and on February 6 Addington provided the President with the words for his next presidential order, which, as Cheney had signaled on November 14, stated that the protections of the Geneva Conventions did not apply to prisoners seized in the "War on Terror." The final development came after the capture of Abu Zubaydah on March 28, 2002, when, as John Yoo explained, CIA officials returned to the White House to ask "what the legal limits on interrogation are." As described above, this led to the "Torture Memos" of August 2002, even though the torture of Zubaydah began four months before the memos were issued.

    In conclusion, then, although the CIA had some input, the development of the entire program, from November 13, 2001 to August 1, 2002, in which prisoners were defined as "enemy combatants," stripped of all rights so that they could be interrogated, and then set up for torture, was driven not by the CIA but by Cheney and his close advisers.

    In Part Two, Andy examines Cheney's lies about Guantánamo and the invasion of Iraq.
    Links
    www.ConvictBushCheney.org

    www.BushinPrisonPoster.com

    The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder
    www.prosecutionofbush.com

    The 35 Articles of Impeachment
    and the Case for Prosecuting George W. Bush
    by Congressman Dennis Kucinich
    http://feralhouse.com/titles/images/BushImpeachment.pdf


    Write the International Criminal Court
    Ask the International Criminal Court to Prosecute Bush and Cheney for War Crimes
    From http://www.afterdowningstreet.org/icc

    (The ICC has proposed to prosecute the President of Sudan for war crimes.) But Sudan is no more a member of the ICC than the United States is. And its president is no more a war criminal than ours, and no more already out of office than ours. Why the double standard? Is the International Criminal Court afraid of the United States? You can ask them in a short note or long letter (Below is a sample letter).

    An Open Letter to Luis Moreno-Ocampo, Chief Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court

    Information and Evidence Unit
    Office of the Prosecutor
    Post Office Box 19519
    2500 CM The Hague
    The Netherlands
    Fax: +31 70 515 8555
    Email: otp.informationdesk@icc-cpi.int

    July 15, 2008

    Dear Chief Prosecutor,

    Congratulations on your request for an arrest warrant for the president of Sudan. When the rule of law cannot be justly enforced within a nation, it must be enforced internationally. In that regard, I would like to recommend that you seek an arrest warrant for the president of my nation, the United States of America. I have read your letter of February 9, 2006, in which you decline to seek prosecution of George W. Bush, and I believe new evidence compels another review.

    With all due respect for the difficulty of your work, the case you have brought against the president of Sudan has followed quite different standards than those applied in your refusal to prosecute the president of the United States. In fact, you have refused to consider prosecution of George W. Bush because the United States is not a member of the International Criminal Court. But Sudan is also not a member of the International Criminal Court. Were you to consider the evidence of international crimes in Iraq as it exists today, and to consider the crimes committed on behalf of the president of the United States by members of the United States military and mercenaries employed by the United States, I believe you would find a case for prosecution that met the standards you applied, and applied well and admirably, to the president of Sudan.

    While there is good reason to expect multiple prosecutions of George W. Bush and of his Vice President and top advisors by individual nations, the rule of law would benefit were the International Criminal Court to take the lead. Should it fail to do so, the entire idea of international law will suffer seriously. In the time since your 2006 letter, Judge Baltasar Garzón of Spain, on March 20, 2008, has written these words in El Pais:

    "Breaking every international law, and under the pretext of the war against terror, there has taken place since 2003 a devastating attack on the rule of law and against the very essence of the international community. In its path, institutions such as the United Nations were left in tatters, from which it has not yet recovered....We should look more deeply into the possible criminal responsibility of the people who are, or were, responsible for this war and see whether there is sufficient evidence to make them answer for it....There is enough of an argument in 650,000 deaths for this investigation and inquiry to start without more delay."

    You wrote in your 2006 letter that you cannot prosecute the crime of aggressive war but only the commission of war crimes that take place during a war, and that in 2009 it may become possible for you to prosecute the crime of aggression. While we must all strive to make that prosecution possible in 2009, it is not needed in order to prosecute George W. Bush, and his prosecution should not wait. As the Nuremberg Tribunal stated so well, "To initiate a war of aggression…is not only an international crime, it is the supreme international crime, differing only from other war crimes in that it contains within itself the accumulated evil of the whole." This has proven to be true in Iraq, and in Bush's global "war on terrorism", and there is no reason to delay prosecution for each separate element of the accumulated evil.

    In order to prosecute crimes against humanity, you write that you need to identify "widespread or systemic attack directed against any civilian population." The civilian population of Iraq has suffered as a result of the US-led invasion and occupation in numbers and proportion that can only be called widespread and systemic. Iraqi deaths as a result of the invasion and occupation, measured above the high death rate under international sanctions preceding the attack, are estimated at 1.2 million by two independent sources (Just Foreign Policy's updated figure based on the Johns Hopkins / Lancet report, and the British polling company Opinion Research Business's estimate as of August 2007). According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the number of Iraqis who have fled their homes has reached 4.7 million. If these estimates are accurate, a total of nearly 6 million human beings have been displaced from their homes or killed. Many times that many have certainly been injured, traumatized, impoverished, and deprived of clean water and other basic needs.

    In examining attacks on civilian populations, some specific incidents can be highlighted, not all of them occurring between March and May 2003, the period of time you referred to in your 2006 letter, and not all of them involving soldiers of the United Kingdom. It is necessary to examine the entire length of the US-led occupation, and to examine the crimes of US troops and mercenaries. Since May of 2005 I have collected evidence of these crimes on a website at http://afterdowningstreet.org A thoroughly documented October 2006 report posted there and prepared by Consumers for Peace (www.consumersforpeace.org) with the advice of Karen Parker, President of the Association of Humanitarian Lawyers (www.humanlaw.org) and Chief Delegate to the United Nations for the International Educational Development/Humanitarian Law Project (IED/AHL), will provide you with much useful evidence of crimes during the sieges of Fallujah, Samara, Tal Afar, and other cities, as well as systemic violations of the basic duties of an occupying power, and widespread illegal use of a variety of weapons. See: http://afterdowningstreet.org/warcrimesreport

    *****

    The above report, as many others, also makes the case that the killing of civilians in thousands of isolated incidents has been standard operating procedure for occupying forces in Iraq:

    "One reason for the huge numbers of civilian casualties under the U.S. occupation is that U.S. soldiers have often behaved as if they have been told to shoot anything that moves. As noted in the Christian Science Monitor: 'The rules of engagement instruct U.S. soldiers to bring withering force to bear on positions they're attacked from, even when an insurgent ducks into a private house for cover'. However, many NGOs have attested that private homes and persons who are clearly civilians are attacked without any possible excuse that a particular attack was directed at insurgents....

    "'One sergeant in northern Iraq puts it this way: "If someone runs into a house, we're going to light it up. If civilians get killed in there, that's a tragedy, but we're going to keep doing it and people are going to get the message that they should do whatever they can to keep these people out of their neighborhoods."'-- Dan Murphy, Christian Science Monitor....

    "An attack on the small town of Baiji illustrates situations that have been repeated numerous times and on both larger and smaller scales. The following excerpts are taken from an article by Michael Schwartz, using reports from the New York Times and the Washington Post:

    'In early January 2006, …a relatively small incident (not even worthy of front page coverage)…illustrated perfectly the capacity of the American military to kill uncounted thousands of Iraqi civilians each year.'

    "Schwartz cited the Times account of what happened at Baiji, 150 miles north of Baghdad, on January 3. The account relied on U.S. officials who had stated:

    "'A pilotless reconnaissance aircraft detected three men planting a roadside bomb about 9 p.m. The men "dug a hole following the common pattern of roadside bomb emplacement," the military said in a statement. "The individuals were assessed as posing a threat to Iraqi civilians and coalition forces, and the location of the three men was relayed to close air support pilots."

    "'The men were tracked from the road site to a building nearby, which was then bombed with "precision guided munitions," the military said. The statement did not say whether a roadside bomb was later found at the site. An additional military statement said Navy F-14's had "strafed the target with 100 cannon rounds" and dropped one bomb."

    "'Schwartz continues his narrative: The target was a "building nearby," identified by a drone aircraft as an enemy hiding place. According to eyewitness reports given to the Washington Post, the attack effectively demolished the building, and damaged six surrounding buildings. While in a perfect world, the surrounding buildings would have been unharmed, the reported amount of human damage in them (two people injured) suggests that, in this case at least, the claims of "precision" were at least fairly accurate.

    "'The problem arises with what happened inside the targeted building, a house inhabited by a large Iraqi family. Piecing together the testimony of local residents, the Times reporter concluded that fourteen members of the family were in the house at the time of the attack and nine were killed.

    "'Because in this case -- unlike in so many others in which American air power utilizes "precisely guided munitions" -- there was on-the-spot reporting for an American newspaper, the U.S. military command was required to explain these casualties. Without conceding that the deaths actually occurred, Lt. Col. Barry Johnson, director of the Coalition Press Information Center in Baghdad, commented: "We continue to see terrorists and insurgents using civilians in an attempt to shield themselves."

    "'Notice that Lt. Col. Johnson (while not admitting that civilians had actually died) did assert U.S. policy: If suspected guerrillas use any building as a refuge, a full-scale attack on that structure is justified, even if the insurgents attempt to use civilians to "shield themselves." These are, in other words, essential U.S. rules of engagement. The attack should be "precise" only in the sense that planes and/or helicopter gunships should seek as best they can to avoid demolishing surrounding structures.'"

    *****

    A thoroughly documented Article of Impeachment introduced in the United States House of Representatives in June 2008 charges, in part:

    "In the course of invading and occupying Iraq, the President, as Commander in Chief, has taken responsibility for the targeting of civilians, journalists, hospitals, and ambulances, use of antipersonnel weapons including cluster bombs in densely settled urban areas, the use of white phosphorous as a weapon, depleted uranium weapons, and the use of a new version of napalm found in Mark 77 firebombs. Under the direction of President George Bush the United States has engaged in collective punishment of Iraqi civilian populations, including but not limited to blocking roads, cutting electricity and water, destroying fuel stations, planting bombs in farm fields, demolishing houses, and plowing over orchards.

    "Under the principle of 'command responsibility', i.e., that a de jure command can be civilian as well as military, and can apply to the policy command of heads of state, said command brings President George Bush within the reach of international criminal law under the Additional Protocol I of June 8, 1977 to the Geneva Conventions of August 12, 1949, and Relating to the Protection of Victims of International Armed Conflicts, Article 86 (2). The United States is a state signatory to Additional Protocol I, on December 12, 1977.

    "Furthermore, Article 85 (3) of said Protocol I defines as a grave breach making a civilian population or individual civilians the object of attacks. This offense, together with the principle of command responsibility, places President George Bush's conduct under the reach of the same law and principles described as the basis for war crimes prosecution at Nuremberg, under Article 6 of the Charter of the Nuremberg Tribunals: including crimes against peace, violations of the laws and customs of war and crimes against humanity, similarly codified in the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, Articles 5 through 8."

    See: http://afterdowningstreet.org/busharticleVIII

    *****

    Your 2006 letter explained that in your investigation of willful killing and inhumane treatment in Iraq you were able to find fewer than 20 victims. It would appear you were limiting your investigation to victims of British troops, if not limiting it in other ways as well. More than 20 victims of U.S. murder, torture, and inhumane treatment can be found in photographic evidence from Abu Ghraib prison alone.

    According to the just released book "The Dark Side: The Inside Story of How the War on Terror Turned Into a War on American Ideals," by Jane Mayer, a report by the International Committee of the Red Cross documents and describes what it concludes is unequivocally torture in widespread use by the United States in Iraq and elsewhere. Mayer reports that this Red Cross report has long been known to President Bush. Bush, of course, signed an order in February 2002 brushing aside the Geneva Conventions and authorizing the use of torture. The evidence of torture by US mercenaries and troops is extensive and includes the testimony of numerous victims and witnesses, photographs, and video.

    Here are a few sources of information made public since your 2006 letter:

    ACLU Announces Publication of Administration of Torture, a Groundbreaking Account of Prisoner Abuse in U.S. Custody Abroad
    http://aclu.org/about/staff/administrationoftorture.html

    FBI Details Possible Detainee Abuse
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/16890

    Cheney's Leading Role in Torture
    http://blog.washingtonpost.com/cheney

    Uninvestigated Crimes: CIA Torture Flights Out of North Carolina
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/17997

    Abu Ghraib: "Man In the Hood" provides testimony at War Crimes Conference
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/18337

    New Light Shed on CIA's "Black Site" Prisons
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/19084

    Aspects of Padilla's Treatment Confirmed
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/19085

    What Happened to the Padilla Interrogation Videos?
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/19632

    'We Were Torturing People For No Reason' -- A Soldier's Tale
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/20720

    'Outsourced Guantanamo' - FBI & CIA Interrogating Detainees in Secret Ethiopian Jails, U.S. Citizen Among Those Held
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/20977

    CIA Tortured Me in Iraq, Claims Freed Iranian Diplomat
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/20992

    Photos of 'Tortured' Iraqi's Corpse Released
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/21391

    Former Guantanamo Inmate Describes Interrogations
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/23719

    Rumsfeld, Perjury, and Shoving Things Up Rectums
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/23721

    Guantánamo Man’s Family Release 'Torture' Dossier
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/25717

    CIA Detention Program Remains Active: U.S. Official
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/27486

    Torture Victim Tells His Story to Congress
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/27876

    Guantanamo Military Lawyer Breaks Ranks to Condemn "Unconscionable" Detention
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/28147

    Dozens of 'Ghost Prisoners' Not Publicly Accounted For
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/28211

    Torture Orders Came from Bush
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/28347

    Flight Logs Reveal Secret Rendition
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/28955

    Jordan's Spy Agency: Holding Cell for the CIA
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/29065

    Former Chief Prosecutor for the Office of Military Commissions Resigned his Post
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/29300

    Kiriakou: White House Approved Abuzabaydah's WaterBoarding
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/29335

    *****

    In fact, the evidence of crimes against humanity authorized and ordered by my president is overwhelming. Please allow me to recommend for your review just a few sources of information that have become public since your 2006 letter was written:

    2007 May 4 United States Army Surgeon General's Report on Declining Morale and War Crimes
    http://armymedicine.army.mil/news/mhat/mhat.html

    US Attack on Iraqi Peace Parliamentarian
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/16887

    US Electromagnetic Weapons and Human Rights
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/17011

    'Shocking' video: Shi'a Iraqi soldiers beat Sunnis as US trainers watch
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/17779

    Death Squads, American Style
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/17862

    Fifth Marine Pleads Guilty in Murder of Innocent Man
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/18557

    Jailed Two Years, Iraqi Tells of Abuse by Americans
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/18690

    Coerced Labor Building Baghdad Embassy?
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/23182

    Marine Told to Destroy Haditha Photos
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/23473

    The Other War: Iraq Veterans Speak Out on Shocking Accounts of Attacks on Iraqi Civilians
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/24605

    Marine Says Beatings Urged in Iraq
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/24762

    Video: Marine on Hamdania Shooting
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/25661

    U.S. Soldier Convicted of Beating Iraqi Detainee With Baseball Bat
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/25824

    Marine Tells of Order to Execute Haditha Women and Children
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/26350

    Documents Show Troops Disregarding Rules
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/26439

    U.S. Aims To Lure Insurgents With ‘Bait’
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/27114

    Soldier: Sergeant From N.C. Ordered Me to Shoot Unarmed Iraqi Man
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/27233

    US Violating Chemical Weapons Convention in Iraq
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/28563

    *****

    I would, in particular, recommend for your review the first-person testimony of U.S. soldiers and Marines returned from Iraq:
    http://ivaw.org/wintersoldier

    *****

    In your 2006 letter you suggest that the crimes, if they are to be prosecuted, must have been "committed as part of a plan or policy or as part of a large-scale commission of such crimes." I believe this can be well established for the war crimes authorized and ordered by the president of the United States in Iraq and elsewhere. Not only has it been U.S. policy to attack and to punish civilians, to arbitrarily detain, and to torture, but President George W. Bush has gone to great lengths to ensure that those obeying his illegal orders not be subject to prosecution. The question of whether U.S. mercenaries or soldiers will be subject to Iraqi law is a major sticking point in ongoing negotiations between Bush and Prime Minister Nouri al Maliki.

    According to a thoroughly documented Article of Impeachment introduced against President Bush in the United States House of Representatives in June 2008, Bush has

    "established policies granting United States government contractors and their employees in Iraq immunity from Iraqi law, U.S. law, and international law.

    "Lewis Paul Bremer III, then-Director of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance for post-war Iraq, on June 27, 2004, issued Coalition Provisional Authority Order Number 17, which granted members of the U.S. military, U.S. mercenaries, and other U.S. contractor employees immunity from Iraqi law.

    "The Bush Administration has chosen not to apply the Uniform Code of Military Justice or United States law to mercenaries and other contractors employed by the United States government in Iraq.

    "Operating free of Iraqi or U.S. law, mercenaries have killed many Iraqi civilians in a manner that observers have described as aggression and not as self-defense. Many U.S. contractors have also alleged that they have been the victims of aggression (in several cases of rape) by their fellow contract employees in Iraq. These charges have not been brought to trial, and in several cases the contracting companies and the U.S. State Department have worked together in attempting to cover them up.

    "Under the Fourth Geneva Convention, to which the United States is party, and which under Article VI of the U.S. Constitution is therefore the supreme law of the United States, it is the responsibility of an occupying force to ensure the protection and human rights of the civilian population. The efforts of President Bush and his subordinates to attempt to establish a lawless zone in Iraq are in violation of the law."

    See: http://afterdowningstreet.org/busharticleXV

    *****

    For documentation of crimes by U.S. mercenaries, please review these reports:

    2007 Oct 11 UN Report on Blackwater and Other Mercenaries Killing Indiscriminately
    http://uniraq.org/FileLib/misc/HR%20Report%20Apr%20Jun%202007%20EN.pdf

    Blackwater Security Shot Iraqi Man
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/18363

    CIA Mercenary Gets 8 Years for Beating a Prisoner to Death
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/18556

    Blackwater Guards Killed 16 as U.S. Touted Progress
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/27244

    FBI Admits Blackwater Mercenaries Murdered at Least 14 People
    http://afterdowningstreet.org/node/28704

    *****

    The crimes of George W. Bush are not limited to Iraq. For an excellent summary and extensive documentation of charges that he has authorized illegal detention, torture, and rendition to nations that torture, please see these three Articles of Impeachment:

    http://afterdowningstreet.org/busharticleXVII

    http://afterdowningstreet.org/busharticleXVIII

    http://afterdowningstreet.org/busharticleXIX

    *****

    Thank you for your careful and impartial consideration and courage.

    Sincerely,
    David Swanson
    From Harper's Magazine December 2008
    Justice after Bush: Prosecuting an outlaw administration
    http://www.harpers.org/archive/2008/12/0082303
    By Scott Horton

    I. The Crimes
    Americans may wish to avoid what is necessary. We may believe that concerns about presidential lawbreaking are naive. That all presidents commit crimes. We may pretend that George W. Bush and his senior officers could not have committed crimes significantly worse than those of their predecessors. We may fear what it would mean to acknowledge such crimes, much less to punish them. But avoiding this task, simply “moving on,” is not possible.

    This administration did more than commit crimes. It waged war against the law itself. It transformed the Justice Department into a vehicle for voter suppression, and it also summarily dismissed the U.S. attorneys who attempted to investigate its wrongdoing. It issued wartime contracts to substandard vendors with inside connections, and it also defunded efforts to police their performance. It spied on church groups and political protesters, and it also introduced a sweeping surveillance program that was so clearly illegal that virtually the entire senior echelon of the Justice Department threatened to (but did not in fact) tender their resignations over it. It waged an illegal and disastrous war, and it did so by falsely representing to Congress and to the American public nearly every piece of intelligence it had on Iraq. And through it all, as if to underscore its contempt for any authority but its own, the administration issued more than a hundred carefully crafted “signing statements” that raised pervasive doubt about whether the president would even accede to bills that he himself had signed into law.

    No prior administration has been so systematically or so brazenly lawless. Yet it is no simple matter to prosecute a former president or his senior officers. There is no precedent for such a prosecution, and even if there was, the very breadth and audacity of the administration’s activities would make the process so complex as to defy systems of justice far less fragmented than our own. But that only means choices must be made. Indeed, in weighing the enormity of the administration’s transgressions against the realistic prospect of justice, it is possible to determine not only the crime that calls most clearly for prosecution but also the crime that is most likely to be successfully prosecuted. In both cases, that crime is torture.

    There can be no doubt that torture is illegal. There is no wartime exception for torture, nor is there an exception for prisoners or “enemy combatants,” nor is there an exception for “enhanced” methods. The authors of the Constitution forbade “cruel and unusual punishment,” the details of that prohibition were made explicit in the Geneva Conventions (“No physical or mental torture, nor any other form of coercion, may be inflicted on prisoners of war to secure from them information of any kind whatever”), and that definition has in turn become subject to U.S. enforcement through the Uniform Code of Military Justice, the U.S. Criminal Code, and several acts of Congress.11. In addition to being illegal, torture is profoundly un-American. The central premise of the American experiment is the belief, informed by Enlightenment principles, that the dignity and worth of the individual is at least as important as that of the state. This belief weighed heavily on the minds of the Founders. The new American military was to be a force of yeoman soldiers, citizens in peacetime who were to be regarded as no less than citizens in wartime. Enemy soldiers likewise were to be treated with respect. George Washington, in the winter of 1776, sent a written order to officers overseeing prisoners: “Treat them with humanity.” And in 1863, at another time of crisis, Abraham Lincoln included the prohibition of torture in the first American codification of the laws of war, which he also issued as a direct order to his field commanders. By way of such American leadership, the prohibition on torture was gradually absorbed into international law.

    Nor can there be any doubt that this administration conspired to commit torture: Waterboarding. Hypothermia. Psychotropic drugs. Sexual humiliation. Secretly transporting prisoners to other countries that use even more brutal techniques. The administration has carefully documented these actions and, in many cases, proudly proclaimed them. The written guidelines for interrogations at Guantánamo Bay, for instance, describe several techniques for degrading and physically debilitating prisoners, including the “forceful removal of detainees’ clothing” and the use of “stress positions.” And in a 2006 radio interview, Dick Cheney said simply that the use of waterboarding to obtain intelligence was a “no-brainer.”22. Cheney at the time declined to refer to this practice as torture, preferring instead to describe it as “robust interrogation,” and that reluctance has been echoed in the press. I myself was twice warned by PBS producers, in advance of appearances on The Newshour with Jim Lehrer, that I could use the word “torture” in the abstract but that I was to refrain from applying it to the administration’s policies. And after an interview with CNN in which I spoke of the administration’s torture policy, I was told by the producer, “That’s okay for CNN International, but we can’t use it on the domestic feed.” More recently, however, the consensus appears to be that “torture” is a perfectly adequate description of administration policy. In the vice-presidential debates, Joe Biden said that Cheney has “done more harm than any other single elected official in memory in terms of shredding the Constitution. You know—condoning torture.” In the first presidential debate, John McCain said we must ensure “that we have people who are trained interrogators so that we don’t ever torture a prisoner ever again.” And Barack Obama, though vague, seemed to accept this formulation. “I give Senator McCain great credit on the torture issue,” he said, “for having identified that as something that undermines our long-term security.”

    Finally, there can be no doubt that the administration was aware of the potential criminality of these acts. In January 2002, White House lawyers began generating a series of memos outlining the administration’s motivation for torturing. They claimed that “the war against terrorism is a new kind of war” requiring an enhanced “ability to quickly obtain information from captured terrorists” and that “this new paradigm renders obsolete Geneva’s strict limitations on questioning of enemy prisoners.” The legal term for such contemplation is mens rea, or “guilty mind,” and it is an important consideration in criminal trials. Which is perhaps the reason that John Ashcroft—when he, Dick Che ney, Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice, Donald Rumsfeld, and George Tenet gathered at the White House in 2002 to formally approve the application of specific torture methods—asked the assembled, “Why are we talking about this in the White House? History will not judge this kindly.”33. In an interview with Jane Mayer of The New Yorker, a former senior CIA official with knowledge of the administration’s torture program summarized its attitude more bluntly: “Laws? Like who the fuck cares?”

    II. The Consequences of Inaction
    The accuracy of Ashcroft’s prediction remains to be determined. The United States does, in fact, have a long history of prosecuting torturers, but the punishments have varied considerably. In 1902, U.S. Army Captain Edwin Glenn confessed to and was court- martialed for using “the water cure” on Filipinos as part of the U.S. prosecution of the Spanish-American War. He was required to pay a fifty-dollar fine. And in 1926, when the Mississippi Supreme Court declared waterboarding to be torture and overturned the conviction of a man who had confessed to another crime under its application, the police who had elicited the confession went entirely unpunished. In other circumstances, though, the consequences have been more significant. In 1983, an east Texas sheriff named James Parker was convicted of waterboarding six men in order to coerce confessions. He was sentenced to ten years in federal prison. And when American prosecutors convicted Japanese officials at the end of World War II of war crimes that included waterboarding, the sentence sought, and obtained in some of the cases, was death. Which is not to say that administration officials will or should face similarly dire sanction. But such consequences are a measure of the gravity of the crime.

    Waterboarding is far from the worst that detainees have suffered under U.S. supervision. Its use is especially worthy of note, however, because it is universally understood that 1) the administration authorized waterboarding, and 2) waterboarding is a serious crime.44. This last point is not even slightly controversial. Richard Armitage, a Republican former Navy officer who served as deputy secretary of state from 2001 to 2005, is likely the highest-ranking administration official to personally have experienced this form of torture. In the late Sixties, he was waterboarded as part of a training program— Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape, or SERE—designed to prepare military personnel to resist enemy interrogators. His conclusion was straightforward. “Of course waterboarding is torture,” he told the BBC in 2007. “I can’t believe we’re even debating it.” Military lawyers agree. In a 2007 letter to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy, four retired judge advocates general hammered the point again and again. “Waterboarding is inhumane, it is torture, and it is illegal,” they wrote, adding that “it is not, and never has been, a complex issue, and even to suggest otherwise does a terrible disservice to this nation.” Even Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, himself a onetime reserve military judge and sometime supporter of administration detainee policy, admits that waterboarding is illegal. “I don’t think you have to have a lot of knowledge about the law,” he said in 2007, “to understand this technique violates Geneva Convention Common Article Three, the War Crimes statutes, and many other statutes that are in place.”

    Open criminality is a cancer on democracy. It implicates all who know of the conduct and fail to act. Such compliance presents a practical crisis, in that a government that is allowed to torture will inevitably transgress other legal limits. But it also presents an existential political crisis. Many democracies have simply collapsed as the people permitted their leaders to abandon the rule of law in the face of alleged external threats. The turn to torture was rapid, for instance, in Argentina at the time of the Dirty War and in Chile after the American-directed coup against Salvador Allende. In both cases, that turn had little to do with a perceived benefit from the use of torture in interrogation. To the contrary, the very criminality of the act had a talismanic significance. It asserted the primacy of the will of the torturer. It made the claim, for all to accept or reject, that the ruler was the law. Such a claim is, of course, intolerable to democracy, which presupposes, as Thomas Paine wrote, that “the law ought to be King; and there ought to be no other.”

    Reasserting the rule of law is no simple matter. A new administration may—or may not—bring an end to open torture in the United States, but it will not bring an end to our knowledge and acceptance of what has already taken place. If the people wish to maintain sovereignty, they must also reclaim responsibility for the actions taken in their name. As of yet, they have not. Pursuing the Bush Administration for crimes long known to the public may amount to a kind of hypocrisy, but it is a necessary hypocrisy. The alternative, simply doing nothing, not only ratifies torture; it ratifies the failure of the people to control the actions of their government.55. It is not without justification that Bush was able to claim in 2005, “We had an accountability moment, and that’s called the 2004 elections.” Such taunts recall the (likely apocryphal) moment when William Tweed, the corrupt head of New York’s Tammany Hall, was confronted with indisputable evidence of graft. “Well,” he said, “what are you going to do about it?”

    III. Possible Methods of Sanction
    Torture is a war crime, and war crimes present an unusual legal challenge. They can be prosecuted domestically, like any other crime. But because they are war crimes, they also are subject to enforcement by all nations, under a well-established principle of universal jurisdiction. Making matters more complex, such crimes can be prosecuted not only in standing courts here or abroad but also in domestic or international ad hoc courts—like those convened for the Nuremberg trials—designed to deal with specific political concerns. Various combinations are suited to different situations:

    International Criminal Tribunal

    In recent years, nations have joined together on an ad hoc basis, often with U.S. support or under the auspices of the United Nations, to prosecute military and political figures from Cambodia, Rwanda, West Africa, and the former Yugoslavia. Many of these tribunals are still in progress and thus far have achieved mixed results. But they have by and large followed a predictable pattern. Rather than attempting to prosecute all potential war criminals, they have instead focused on those in positions of authority whose action or inaction had broad consequences. And they have shown a particular concern for offenses committed systematically against persons outside of combat, who in many cases have been disarmed and taken prisoner.

    The precedent for all of these tribunals was the Nuremberg trials, convened at the end of World War II. Under U.S. leadership, the Allies prosecuted not only leaders of the Nazi Party but also industrialists, doctors, and prison commandants. The Americans and Soviets also wanted to prosecute the people who had created the legal framework for the Nazi regime, but British and French leaders objected. Consequently, the United States, acting on its own, convened a separate Nuremberg tribunal to try lawyers, judges, and legal policymakers. In doing so, it established the principle that policymakers who overrode the mandatory prohibitions of international law against harming prisoners in wartime could be prosecuted as war criminals, no matter how many internal memos they had written to the contrary.

    The International Criminal Court, headquartered in the Netherlands, was created in 1998 to provide a permanent version of such a tribunal. The ICC bears many traces of U.S. authorship, and indeed its establishment, in one form or another, was urged by presidents from Thomas Jefferson to Bill Clinton. But American conservatives, opposing what they saw as a limitation on American sovereignty, have blocked the U.S. from joining the 108 other nations that have signed the Court’s foundational treaty. And even the institution’s strongest advocates agree that, although the ICC is suited to prosecuting political leaders in minor states, it was never intended as a check on the great powers. In fact, the ICC’s success depends upon its gaining the support of those great powers.

    As things stand it would be legally very difficult and politically impossible for the ICC to indict American policymakers for war crimes, and even more difficult for an ad hoc group of nations to do so. Moreover, any such effort would probably provoke a public-opinion backlash within the United States.

    Foreign Courts

    Most crimes are subject to sanction on the basis of territoriality—that is, the crime is viewed as having occurred on the soil of one particular state, and that state has the right to enforce its criminal law by prosecuting the crime or not. War crimes, however, are not subject to this territorial limitation. Any nation that has a reasonable relationship to the crime can prosecute the alleged criminal—the state where the offense occurred, any of the warring states, or a state whose nationals were harmed or mistreated. Consequently, many other nations have standing, under international law, to pursue war-crimes prosecutions against U.S. citizens.

    The example of Augusto Pinochet shows how such an approach might unfold. In 1998, the onetime dictator of Chile, then eighty-two, was seized in Britain on a Spanish arrest warrant. He was charged with several crimes stemming from his seventeen years in power—including torture, illegal detention, and forced disappearances—and placed under house arrest in a Surrey mansion while diplomats from all three countries debated the next steps. After several months of complex legal proceedings, the British determined that Pinochet was medically unfit to stand trial and returned him to Chile, thus maintaining their claim to jurisdiction without actually pursuing a prosecution. Even this attenuated process would be difficult to replicate with an American political figure, however. Most nations that have a record of prosecuting war crimes are close allies of the United States and would be justifiably concerned about the practicalities of maintaining positive defense relations with the world’s preeminent power. Moreover, the United States—like Chile— almost certainly would not extradite a former official for such purposes.

    At present, however, one criminal prosecution is already pending. It arises from the abduction in Italy, under the CIA’s “extraordinary rendition” program, of an Egyptian cleric named Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr. Twenty-six Americans—including diplomats, intelligence officers, and a military attaché—face criminal charges in absentia in the case. For the Americans the abduction was a sensitive national- security operation. But for the Italian criminal-justice authorities it was simply the armed assault and kidnapping of a resident alien. Even if, as widely expected, the case produces convictions, the American operatives will not be extradited to Italy. They will, however, have difficulties traveling outside the United States.

    Even this mild form of sanction, however, fails to address the domestic political problem. True justice cannot be compelled from without. If the United States wishes to demonstrate to the world, and to itself, that its abdication of human-rights principles was an anomaly, it will have to do so under its own auspices.

    Domestic Courts

    Most violations of the laws of war are punished through a military court system. Under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, which provides the tools for enforcement of the laws of war in the United States, civilians as well as uniformed service members may be prosecuted, though such prosecutions are rare and raise significant constitutional issues. Moreover, such systems are fine for punishing errant soldiers, but they seldom function properly when the culpable person is far up the chain of command. This is largely because military justice is not concerned exclusively with justice; it is also concerned with upholding command authority. There is little likelihood, therefore, that policymakers would be prosecuted before a court-martial.

    Torture is forbidden by federal law as well.66. 18 U.S.C. § 2340 makes it a crime for any “person acting under the color of law” to “inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering (other than pain or suffering incidental to lawful sanctions) upon another person within his custody or physical control.” The penalty for this crime—as Bush’s Office of Legal Counsel carefully noted in a 2003 memo on the subject—is up to twenty years in federal prison. Could a federal prosecutor take it upon himself to enforce that law? Alberto Gonzales expressed concern in a 2002 memo that a prosecutor might display sufficient independence to do just that. But thus far none has. The scandal surrounding the dismissal of nine U.S. attorneys in 2006 helps explain why: the Bush Administration has maintained an unprecedentedly tight rein on its prosecutors, acting harshly when they depart from the prescribed political path. Indeed, so many high-level figures at Justice were involved in creating the legal mechanism for torture that the Justice Department has effectively disqualified itself as an investigative vehicle, even under a new administration.

    Another major obstacle to domestic prosecution will be pardons. The exercise of a presidential pardon to protect war criminals would violate international law and would not be respected outside the territory of the United States. Under the Constitution, however, Bush’s pardon power is nonetheless nearly absolute. Those advocating a pardon hope that it would put an end to questions about criminal conduct, but historical experience suggests that a pardon might have just the opposite effect. It would implicitly concede that serious crimes were in fact committed; the public would not necessarily reject a pardon, but it might well insist on full disclosure of what was done; and the president’s political party likely would pay a significant price for all of this, as Republicans experienced in the election following Gerald Ford’s decision to pardon Richard Nixon.

    Pardons would have another unintended effect. Under well-established notions of international law, the fact that a state attempts to immunize officeholders from prosecution (such as by the issuance of a presidential pardon) would boomerang by actually conferring on other states the jurisdiction to prosecute.

    Commission of Inquiry

    In recent decades, the commission of inquiry, often in the form of a “truth and reconciliation commission,” has established itself as the preferred means of approaching politically sensitive issues such as war crimes while avoiding the destabilization that might result from direct prosecutions. In Argentina, Chile, East Timor, Peru, and South Africa, newly elected leaders feared that the criminal prosecution of their predecessors would wreck the fragile political consensus that had been used to establish both peace and a legitimate democracy. A commission of inquiry allowed these countries to move toward accountability in a slow but deliberate way. In some cases, a bargain was struck under which the truth about past misconduct was divulged in exchange for a pardon, on the premise that establishing a record of historical truth was more important to democracy than punishing individual malefactors. In other cases, however, the commission’s fact-finding process gradually built a public consensus that prosecutorial action was needed. In Peru and Chile, prosecutions occurred even after comprehensive pardons had been granted, as the courts relied on international-law concepts to disregard those pardons.

    These commissions have not always performed as their authors intended them to. For instance, it was anticipated that the South African commission would widely disseminate pardons in exchange for more detailed accounts of homicides and abuse under apartheid. In the end, however, very few such pardons were even sought, since many witnesses simply counted on a sentiment of general amnesty to see them through. Such commissions also shift the balance of historical memory, which usually favors those who hold power, by ensuring that the accounts of victims are carefully recorded. Often this occurs by taking the victim’s testimony in a public setting. In Argentina, Chile, and South Africa, the commission process served one function especially well: the public was educated about the wretched practices of the prior regime, and demands for a clear separation from these practices—often including the rehabilitation of victims and the punishment of perpetrators—changed the landscape of public opinion.

    IV. A Two-part Solution
    Given the political situation in the United States, it seems clear that the last option is the best. Although “truth and reconciliation” may strike many people as somehow too exotic a process for the United States, investigative commissions in fact have a long history here that includes the Warren Commission, which was established in 1963 to investigate the assassination of John Kennedy, and the Kerner Commission, which was established in 1967 to examine the causes of race riots in the United States. Such investigations have had a mixed record of success, but they are the best means available to the U.S. political system for investigating issues that raise broad public concern but cannot be satisfactorily delved into by such established bodies as the FBI or a congressional oversight committee.

    Investigative commissions can provide truth. They can establish an important record. They can reaffirm important taboos. But they cannot provide justice. For that they are simply a first step. The second step, which I will discuss only briefly, is a formal prosecution, most likely by an executive- appointed special prosecutor. In this model—call it “commission plus special prosecutor”—the commission would find the facts, weigh them, and, if the facts warrant, make a formal recommendation for the appointment of a prosecutor, identifying the matters that necessitate further investigation. Even if the commission were to determine that no prosecutable crimes had occurred—and, given the legal complexities of such an undertaking, such a finding is possible—it would perform the absolutely necessary function of educating the public. If, on the other hand, the commission were to determine that criminal investigation was appropriate, it already would have created essential public support for such action.

    From what source would the commission draw its authority? The most obvious place would be the executive branch itself. The next president could appoint a commission of inquiry with the stroke of a pen, and such a commission would have many strengths. It could be created quickly; it would answer to one master; and, since it would be created with the authority of the president, it could demand the cooperation of government actors and access to classified documents. Gerald Ford, for instance, created the Rockefeller Commission in 1975 to examine allegations of domestic spying, and it put on record a series of tawdry CIA operations and helped to impose several congressional restraints on domestic action by the agency. The problem with presidential commissions is that they can easily be accused of covering up for previous administration77. Or even their own administrations: George W. Bush formed the Robb-Silberman Commission in 2004 to look into why his administration’s conclusions about Iraqi WMDs were so completely wrong, but the commission somehow failed to discover the pressure that the administration itself had brought to bear on intelligence analysts to cook their conclusions—in part, perhaps, because Dick Cheney was personally responsible for putting part of the commission together, starting with the appointment of his friend Laurence Silberman as co-chair. The Tower Commission, created by Ronald Reagan to look into the Iran-Contra scandal, was a similarly lukewarm exercise in damage control, in which the authors ultimately concluded that all that was really needed to avoid future such scandals was a modest restructuring of the role of the national security adviser. or, conversely, of seeking “victor’s justice.”88. This may explain why, when Will Bunch of the Philadelphia Daily News asked Barack Obama in August “whether an Obama administration would seek to prosecute officials of a former Bush Administration,” the senator’s response was guarded. “I can’t prejudge that, because we don’t have access to all the material right now. I think that you are right: if crimes have been committed, they should be investigated. You’re also right that I would not want my first term consumed by what was perceived on the part of Republicans as a partisan witch hunt, because I think we’ve got too many problems we’ve got to solve.” Obama adviser Cass Sunstein has similarly warned that pursuing prosecutions of Bush Administration officials would generate a “cycle” of partisan recriminations.

    The alternative is a hybrid—an executive-legislative commission that would be created by an act of Congress but would draw also on the authority of the president. This alternative typically involves an elaborate process for the appointment of commissioners by both the White House and the congressional leadership. The National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, usually called the 9/11 Commission, is the most recent example of this approach. The hybrid commission can be challenged on constitutional grounds as an intrusion on executive prerogative, so its success still requires the president’s support and cooperation.99. The leaders of the 9/11 Commission were, in fact, pointed in their criticism of the false or misleading statements that were provided by some agencies, particularly the Department of Defense and the Federal Aviation Administration. In their book, Without Precedent, the commission’s co-chairs, Thomas Kean and Lee Hamilton, write that they openly considered recommending prosecution of some government officials for criminal obstruction, a threat that ultimately secured some compliance. They remained skeptical, however, about how much cooperation they ultimately received. In general, the presidential commission seems a smoother, less legally problematic model, whereas the hybrid commission is cumbersome but more likely to command broad public support and confidence from the outset.

    In either model, the commissioners themselves must have the right measure of integrity and commitment. Are they willing to pursue their questions to definitive answers, no matter who is embarrassed or injured by the outcome? Do they place the interests of those who appointed them ahead of their obligation to investigate the facts? A well-constituted commission is neither partisan nor relenting. It publishes the truth and leaves the prosecution to later actors.

    V. Implementation
    Many commissions failed to achieve positive ends because they were poorly designed. History suggests that certain structural and legal characteristics, combined with a careful definition of scope, can lead to a successful outcome.

    Composition

    The first action of any administration whose conduct comes under scrutiny is to claim that the process is politically motivated. The first step in addressing those claims is to separate the process of initial investigation from the process of prosecution, as discussed above.1010. Newsweek columnist Stuart Taylor, long a defender of the administration’s detainee policies, wrote in July that a war-crimes trial would “touch off years of partisan warfare. The lesson for occupants of the toughest government jobs—if the next administration could find people willing to fill them—would be that saving innocent lives is less important than covering their posteriors.” Taylor has, however, embraced the idea of a truth commission. But the commission itself also can be structured in such a way as to mitigate partisan concerns. This will require real wisdom, however. Simple “balancing” won’t do the job.

    The 9/11 Commission, for instance, was crafted as a “bipartisan” institution, with co-equal Democratic and Republican chairs, on the premise that each would counteract the partisan proclivities of the other. In the end, though, this balancing served only to provide political ammunition to both parties. Any future war-crimes commission should therefore avoid openly partisan commissioners and staff.

    The political parties cannot be ignored—in order to command appropriate levels of support within the Washington political establishment, the commission will need party- affiliated co-chairs who none-theless are viewed as being consensus-builders—but the balance of the commission should be persons of established integrity whose professional backgrounds involve the skills essential to studying, understanding, and dealing critically with the issues arising from the practice of torture. A record of partisan political engagement should weigh against a candidate’s selection. The experience pool should include prosecutors, intelligence professionals, retired military leaders, religious leaders and ethicists, human-rights advocates, health-care professionals, and diplomats.

    Someone will have to choose those people. The 9/11 Commission legislation gave that responsibility to the secretary of defense, the speaker of the House of Representatives, the Senate majority leader, and the minority leaders in both houses of Congress. It probably will be difficult to avoid a similar delegation of authority. But to ensure that the persons selected are not simply partisan political surrogates, a further layer might be incorporated. A qualifications commission could be appointed first, consisting of a dozen members who would have the sole task of preparing a list of pre- approved candidates. The appointees would then have to be drawn from this list. This approach was taken by South Africa in its Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and it resulted in a final body that commanded broad public respect. Indeed, observers of the South African process have often cited the two-tiered appointments process as a key to the commission’s overall success.

    Powers of the Commission

    The bulk of the commission’s work would be carried out not by politicians but by a professional staff of lawyers, investigators, subject experts, and various assistants. The authorizing legislation should assume a staff roughly equal to that of the 9/11 Commission, which totaled nearly eighty. Preference would be given to persons who had previously obtained the necessary security classifications, but the new commission should also be given the power to quickly address security- classification issues. Staff members should be authorized not only to hold and deal with the most sensitive classified documents in a dedicated, secured document room but also to declassify or require the declassification of documents, redacted as appropriate, and to publish the results.

    It will be essential for the commission to exercise subpoena power; that is, the ability to force witnesses to appear and testify before it with the possibility of civil or criminal penalties if they fail to appear or give misleading or false testimony. Without this power it would be very difficult for the commission to assemble the information it needs to issue its report. To invest the commission with these powers would be a somewhat complex legal matter, but not an insurmountable one. 1111. The White House has forbidden several of its former employees—including former chief of staff Joshua Bolton, former counselor Harriet Miers, and former senior adviser Karl Rove—from testifying before congressional oversight panels. When a court ordered them to appear, the administration sought to appeal the ruling in a transparent, and thus far successful, effort to run out the clock. The administration has also withheld documents, citing exotic theories of privilege. In congressional hearings, White House attorney John Yoo simply refused to answer questions, on the grounds that he had been instructed by the Justice Department not to answer, even though many of the questions concerned matters that Yoo had discussed in two books and dozens of other public forums. The difference between Yoo’s public discussion and his testimony was, of course, that the latter was under oath.

    Scope of the Investigation

    The commission’s mandate requires definition and focus. It must also, however, provide the commission with reasonable room to pursue leads that arise in the course of its investigation. The commission’s charge, therefore, should be _to examine the formation and implementation of policy concerning the treatment of detainees in operations (including intelligence operations) undertaken in connection with the Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Terrorists. _Tying the subject matter to a specific piece of legislation will keep the investigation focused on a single controlling authority even as it allows investigators to explore all of the operations in which that authority was used, whether in Iraq or Afghanistan, nearby staging areas, or other sites around the world, including Guantánamo and “black sites” yet to be identified.1212. The Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Terrorists, passed into law shortly after the attacks of September 11, 2001, is the statute that has provided general authority for the conduct of military operations in what the administration has came to call the “Global War on Terror.” Since the president’s repeated assumptions of extralegal powers was predicated in Justice Department memoranda on his commander-in-chief authority, that military link should help define the time, the space, and the nature of the conduct that requires investigation.

    Such a mandate would also allow the commission to investigate a variety of non- administration actors, including Congress itself. Republicans have frequently argued that many powerful Democrats, including House Majority Leader Nancy Pelosi and Intelligence Committee Chairman Jay Rockefeller, were fully briefed on the administration’s torture policy and failed to raise objections. Did Congress acquiesce to the administration’s choices? Did it provide legal authority? Republicans may be questioning Democratic involvement simply in order to discourage congressional inquiries. But such questions nonetheless are completely legitimate.

    Findings

    The commission should conduct its work in public to the fullest possible extent. Open hearings will educate the people about the issues under inquiry and also help to build a consensus in resolving those issues. Putting the testimony of victims and witnesses on the record will be a crucial element of that process. It will be a first step toward restoring the dignity and humanity of the victims, and it will also serve to reveal, authenticate, and preserve vital evidence that may be used in later legal proceedings.

    Documents, particularly the many classified documents that the administration continues to withhold from Congress and the public, will be at the core of the commission’s work. The president and his advisers, like members of many regimes engaged in legally questionable actions, have placed great emphasis on creating a legal groundwork for their actions. The commissioners would examine these memos, briefs, and other records with the aid of witnesses, but it is essential that the documents themselves also be made permanently available to journalists, scholars, and lawyers. A full fact-finding process is likely to take decades. Public scrutiny can lead to the identification of important details that even the most talented investigators may miss on the first and second pass.

    The commission would also be required to prepare an in-depth report. The report should provide a comprehensive narrative, setting out in detail how U.S. torture policy came to be formed and identifying the key actors and the decisions they made.

    Recommendations

    The report’s function would be more than historical, of course. It must be forward-looking. Should laws be changed, regulations rewritten, new procedures adopted?1313. One highly controversial area of inquiry will be the question of efficacy. The major argument for torture now is simple: It works, and therefore any state that wants to protect itself would be foolish to dispense with it. But does torture “work”? Many human-rights activists have strongly discouraged even asking the question. Doing so, they argue, transforms a moral argument—a basic respect for the dignity of all humans forbids torture—into a utilitarian argument. Such a consideration of ends versus means opens the door to all kinds of “what if” scenarios that would eventually lead to wider social acceptance of torture. (One way to more easily assess that concern would be to substitute another taboo act—say, child rape—for torture. Would it be acceptable to rape a child if there were a ticking time bomb under the Empire State Building and you sincerely believed that raping that child was the only way to find it?)

    There is much to be said for these concerns. And yet those who are against torture also have the better end of the utilitarian argument. Under centuries of the lex talionis, or law of retribution, if a nation inflicted indignities on its captives, others were free to do the same to its soldiers. One of the clearest consequences of the Bush torture policies has been to put American service personnel at risk. Nor is there any evidence that torture is an effective means to the end of national security. Bush has argued that “the program” he helped establish did in fact secure information that “saved American lives.” But others who have looked into the incidents that Bush cites say that, in fact, what useful intelligence was gathered in these interrogations was gathered before the interrogators resorted to torture. Indeed, the techniques utilized at Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib were developed not for the purpose of gathering intelligence but rather to elicit false confessions to be used for political purposes.

    This invites a number of questions: Was the intelligence collected inherently more or less reliable than intelligence gathered using other techniques? Was it necessary to turn to highly coercive tactics to secure this information? What other consequences for national security flow from the use of the new techniques in terms, for instance, of loss of intelligence-gathering channels, damage to reputation, recruitment gains for enemies, and compromised cooperation from allies? These questions, although they may suggest, perniciously, that “reasonable minds differ” on torture, nonetheless are worth asking for one reason above all. The answers, coming from administration officials, would also act as a kind of confession. Their self-justification should be part of the record. More important, the commission must look at the conduct of official actors. Were laws and policies faithfully applied or were they broken? If laws were broken, was there criminal conduct that merits study by law- enforcement professionals? This analysis would establish the background for the three most important potential results of a commission: the formal recommendation to pardon, the formal recommendation to pursue prosecution, and the formal recommendation to make reparations.

    On the matter of reparations, the commission could do a great deal of good. The United States has already committed itself, under existing international agreements, to making reparations to victims of torture. Thus far, though, government action on this front has consisted primarily of efforts to foreclose recovery. Moreover, the U.S. litigation system is extremely costly and may not be an efficient means of providing redress in situations where victims are non-citizens and located outside of the United States. A commission might recommend such alternative approaches as creating a claims-settlement commission or granting special authority for ex gratia payments under which the United States could offer compensation without being seen as acknowledging wrongdoing. In cases in which a victim is convicted of criminal wrongdoing, the fact that he suffered torture may be considered in connection with sentencing, and some guidelines for this should be furnished.

    The recommendations to prosecute or pardon would not be binding in any formal sense. Only the president has the constitutional authority to pardon at the federal level, and any indictment ultimately would have to find its way to prosecutors and the courts. The recommendations, then, would be persuasive only to the extent that the commissioners successfully made the case for them. (Many of the 9/11 Commission recommendations, for instance, have yet to be enacted.) Still, the commission would certainly be staffed with some career prosecutors. It should be in a solid position to assess whether a special prosecutor should be appointed. And that prosecutor would have a great deal of evidence and political momentum at his or her disposal. If the process is pursued faithfully, the recommendations should have considerable political influence.

    The hallmark of the Bush Administration has been its tendency to rush to judgment, certain of propositions that turned out to be dead wrong. In addressing its errors, such failings cannot be repeated. The commission should proceed with care and take the time it needs to develop a full record. The process is likely to consume at least two years and possibly much longer. This is not necessarily a liability. Right now, the administration looms large and justice seems distant. That perspective will change significantly with the passage of time.