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Surprise! Mukasey Covers Up Torture
by Robert Parry Last month, Democratic Sens. Charles Schumer of New York and Dianne Feinstein of California joined Republicans to ensure Michael Mukaseys confirmation as Attorney General, even though he refused to acknowledge that the simulated drowning of waterboarding was torture.
Senate Democratic Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada helped the Bush administration, too, by rushing a floor vote on Mukasey before rank-and-file Democrats could get organized and push for a filibuster.
To show thanks, Mukasey now is slapping the Democratic-controlled Congress in the face by demanding it back off any oversight investigations into how and why the CIA in late 2005 destroyed videotapes of the waterboarding of al-Qaeda suspects.
Mukasey is pressing the House Intelligence Committee to shelve
its investigation into the videotape destruction and is refusing to
turn over information to other congressional committees. He claims that
to do so would interfere with his own investigation of what appears to
be criminality that his Justice Department may have sanctioned.
And,
to add insult to the stonewalling, Mukasey justified his refusal to
provide information to Congress by citing his promise during his
confirmation hearing that he would ensure that politics plays no role
in cases brought by the Department of Justice.
In other words,
Mukasey is arguing that congressional oversight of possible criminal
wrongdoing by President George W. Bush and other senior administration
officials represents politics and that the only legitimate
investigation of Bushs Executive Branch is one carried out by Bushs
Executive Branch.
Some senior Democrats objected to Mukaseys actions, though mostly in muted tones.
Sen.
Patrick Leahy of Vermont, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee,
expressed disappointment and restated that his panel needs to fully
understand whether the government used cruel interrogation techniques
and torture, contrary to our basic values.
Rep. Silvestre
Reyes, D-Texas, chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, and Rep.
Peter Hoekstra of Michigan, the ranking Republican, issued a joint
statement saying they were stunned by Mukaseys decisions.
There is no basis upon which the Attorney General can stand in the way of our work, Reyes and Hoekstra said.
What Will Congress Do?
But its less clear what Congress can or will do.
Over
the past year, since Democrats won control of both houses, Bush has
bested them time and again, with the Democrats often surrendering their
most promising opportunities for pressuring the administration to make
concessions.
In line with that pattern, Schumer and Feinstein
broke with other Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee and joined
with Republicans in November 2007 to clear Mukaseys confirmation. They
did so despite Mukaseys adamant refusal to designate the centuries-old
tactic of waterboarding as torture.
Furious rank-and-file
Democrats argued that Mukaseys equivocation on torture should have
disqualified him to be the nations chief law-enforcement officer,
since torture violates domestic law, international law and the U.S.
Constitution with its ban on cruel and unusual punishment.
They
also noted that Mukasey embraced the Bush administrations view of an
all-powerful executive and, as a federal judge, had endorsed indefinite
incarceration of hundreds of Muslims on phony material witness warrants
after the 9/11 attacks.
Ironically, the post-9/11 round-up of
Arab cab drivers, pizza delivery men and students came as the Bush
administration was granting special permission for rich Saudis,
including members of Osama bin Ladens family, to flee the United
States after only cursory FBI questioning.
The arresting of the
usual suspects while the well-connected who actually might know
something were whisked away was perhaps the first signal of how
Bushs war on terror would proceed, draconian actions that create the
appearance of a tough crackdown when the reality is entirely different.
Bush made clear, too, that he was prepared to say anything, no matter how transparently false, to fend off public oversight.
For
instance, he has said repeatedly that his administration doesnt
torture although U.S. intelligence operatives have acknowledged
subjecting terror suspects to waterboarding, which has been considered
torture since the days of the Inquisition.
Waterboarding
involves strapping a person to a board tilted so the head is lower than
the feet, covering the face with cellophane and pouring water over it
to create the sensation of drowning.
Bushs semantic defense of
his administration claiming that whatever he approved was not torture
made Mukaseys word games to the Senate Judiciary Committee
necessary. If Mukasey agreed that waterboarding was torture, he would
have had little choice but to mount criminal investigations of Bush and
other senior officials.
So, it should come as no surprise now
that Mukasey is trying to fend off any independent investigation of
Bushs possible criminal exposure, while twisting words and logic again
this time, by defining outside inquiries as playing politics and
insisting that his internal investigation will be impartial.
Democratic Failure
Schumer
and Feinstein claim they voted for Mukasey in November because he was
an improvement over Alberto Gonzales, who helped establish the
framework for Bushs torture policies both as White House counsel and
Attorney General.
Nevertheless, the failure to force clear
answers on torture from Mukasey represented another moment when the
Democrats abandoned a pressure point that might have won them some
concessions or at least some straight talk from the administration.
That
has been the Democrats' pattern dating back to the November 2006
elections when they followed up their stunning victories by reverting
to their timid practices of taking Bush at his word and avoiding
aggressive oversight.
The Democrats not only failed to mount a
sustained challenge to Bushs policies, they avoided any systematic
hearings that would educate the American public about why Bushs
presidency has represented such an extraordinary threat to the
Republic. [For details, see Consortiumnews.coms Democrats Year of
Living Fecklessly.]
In exchange for their repeated surrenders,
the Democrats have gotten nothing from Bush and the Republicans, other
than their contempt.
As the first session under the new
Democratic majority nears an end this month, Bush is riding roughshod
over the Democrats on a wide range of issues. He insists that they sign
off on his budget figures; he demands another blank check for the Iraq
War; and his Attorney General is obstructing congressional oversight of
the torture scandal.
Yet, the Democrats are in a far worse
position today to stand up to Bush than they were a year ago. Then,
they had a majority of the American people behind them, hoping that the
Democrats would protect the nation from Bushs executive power grab and
would bring Bushs disastrous Iraq War to an end.
Today, only a
tiny fraction of Americans believes that the congressional Democrats
will do much more than run up the white flag, once again.
Robert
Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the
Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Neck Deep: The
Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, was written with two of his
sons, Sam and Nat, and can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. His two
previous books, Secrecy & Privilege: The Rise of the Bush Dynasty
from Watergate to Iraq and Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press
& 'Project Truth' are also available there. Or go to Amazon.com.