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Did Bush Watch the Torture Tapes?
by Scott Horton
The Times (London) Washington correspondent, Sarah Baxter, reporting with a summary of the developments in the case involving the CIAs destruction of recordings of the treatment of Abu Zabaydah, points to the growing belief in Washington that President Bush viewed the torture tapes.
Baxter reports: "It emerged yesterday that the CIA had misled members of the 9-11 Commission by not disclosing the existence of the tapes, in potential violation of the law. President George W Bush said last week he could not recall learning about the tapes before being briefed about them on December 6 by Michael Hayden, the CIA director. It looks increasingly as though the decision was made by the White House, said Johnson. He believes it is highly likely that Bush saw one of the videos, as he was interested in Zubaydahs case and received frequent updates on his interrogation from George Tenet, the CIA director at the time.
It has emerged that the CIA did preserve two videotapes and an audiotape of detainee interrogations conducted by a foreign government, which may have been relevant to the trial of Zacarias Moussaoui, the Al-Qaeda conspirator. The CIA told a federal judge in 2003 that no such recordings existed but has now retracted that testimony. One of the tapes could show the interrogation of Ramzi Binalshibh, a September 11 conspirator, who was allegedly handed to Jordan for questioning."
In this regards, the sequence of statements out of the White
House is extremely revealing. It started with firm denials, then went
silent and then pulled back rather sharply to a President Bush has no
present recollection of having seen the tapes. This is a formulation
frequently used to avoid perjury charges, a sort of way of saying no
without really saying no. In between these statements, two more
things unfolded that have a bearing on the question.
The New
York Times squarely placed four White House lawyers in the middle of
the decision about whether to destroy the tapesAlberto Gonzales, David
Addington, John Bellinger and Harriet Miers. It also reported that at
least one of them was strongly advocating destruction. Suspicion
immediately fell on the principle mover in support of torture, David
Addington.
Second, John Kiriakou clarified his statements
about the purpose for which the tapes were made. It was to brief higher
ups about the process of the interrogation. Reports persist that one
higher-up in particular had a special strong interest in knowing the
details of the Abu Zubaydah case. His name is George W. Bush.
Are
Bushs denials that he has seen the torture tapes really credible?
I
dont think so. And having seen them, the interest in their destruction
would be equally fierce, which helps account for the involvement of the
White Houses four most senior lawyers in the process. No doubt about
it. The White House desperately wants to scapegoat some CIA people over
this. (Laura Rozens article Operation Stop Talking is the best
treatment so far of this phenomenon, which finds its best current
expression in the effort to get John Kiriakou). But the trail leads
to the White House, and that is clearly where the decision was taken.
It will be interesting to see the techniques used by the Justice
Department to obscure all of this. At this point, no one whos tracked
Justice Department antics over the past six years is anticipating
anything but a crude cover-up.
Torture Lawyers Appointment Blocked
In
1946, the United States prosecuted two Justice Department lawyers for a
peculiar crime. They had written memoranda which, in disregard of
international law, facilitated the torture and abuse of prisoners. They
were sentenced to ten years in prison, less time served. That was in
the days when the Justice Department lived up to its name. The case is
called United States v. Altstoetter. It would be a good case for
Michael Mukasey to read; his underlings could benefit from a reading,
too, since the time is approaching when its going to have some direct
impact in their own lives.
In George Bushs America, however,
lawyers who specialize in making torture and abuse possible are
promoted. Indeed, they become attorney general and get appointed to
Court of Appeals judgeships. And one of the key figures in this
disgraceful saga is Steven Bradbury, the acting head of the Office of
Legal Counsel. Many senators demanded that Michael B. Mukasey withdraw
his nomination to head the office after it was learned that he had
issued memoranda enabling waterboarding and other torture practices. In
fact, it was later learned that Bradbury was brought into the job in a
rush when his predecessor, Daniel Levin, started exploring the need to
impose limits on waterboarding. Levin was fired so that Bradbury could
come in and confirm that under Bush torutre knows no limits.
However,
Mukaseys decision to wink at the process of torture and abuse is
nowhere more evident than in his decision to proceed with the promotion
of one of the prime torture lawyers, Bradbury. President Bush was
prepared to use his recess appointment power to reward Bradbury with an
order which would take away the word acting and make his position
permanentwithin the time limits of the recess appointment.
But
the Senate figured this out, and by convening every day, it has blocked
the appointment. As the Associated Presss Laurie Kellman reports:
- "A
nine-second session gaveled in and out by Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va.,
prevented Bush from appointing as an assistant attorney general a
nominee roundly rejected by majority Democrats. Without the pro forma
session, the Senate would be technically adjourned, allowing the
president to install officials without Senate confirmation."
Bravo for the Senate.
Remembering those in Need
On
Christmas Day, the superscript in the New York Times read, just as it
has read for a century: Its Christmas Day. Remember the Neediest!
And on St. Stephens Day, as Christmas continued, the editors of the
Times did exactly that. They authored an editorial addressing the
rotting cesspool of a Justice Department that the Bush Administration
has created, and all the unfinished business which Congress must pick
up in the coming year. And right at the top of the list was this:
- "There
is evidence of impropriety in several recent prosecutions, including
that of Don Siegelman, a former governor of Alabama who is serving a
lengthy prison sentence. Mr. Mukasey needs to investigate Mr.
Siegelmans case and others that have been called into question to
ensure that no one was wrongly put in jail by his department, and that
anyone who acted improperly is held accountable.
- The integrity
of the Justice Department is precious. The fair application of the law
is the cornerstone of American justice and American democracy. A
halfway resolution of this scandal is not enough. It needs to be
investigated vigorously and completely."
The fact is, since
coming to office six weeks ago, Michael Mukasey has not lifted a finger
to address the egregious abuses that led to the false charges brought
against Governor Siegelman and the corrupt process by which he was
convicted. This continues to stain the Department of Justice. And, as
we will soon be exploring in greater detail, the Justice Department
continues to cover up, make apologies for the gross misconduct of those
involved in the Siegelman case and to obstruct a proper investigation
of prosecutorial misconduct by Congress. This scandal continues to
fester, and the New Year must bring a renewed effort to secure justice
and to punish those who perpetrated this abuse.
10 Myths About Iraq
American
mainstream media coverage from Iraq remains pathetic. Its heavily
skewed by politics, which is to say, it doesnt cover things in Iraq as
they are. Rather it presents the vision of Iraq emanating from
political leaders in the United Statesfrom the White House and from
Congress. In both cases, this vision reflects 90% political aspirations
and interests and 10% reality. Shouldnt the media be reporting on the
facts on the ground rather than the politics in Washington?
Also
those facts on the ground consist not just of the U.S. forces
performing their mission, they include the complex political situation
in the country as well. Thats the vastly more important story that
regularly gets swept under the carpet because its too complicated.
Complicated enough to warrant the expenditure of American lives and
treasure, of course.
So whats the remedy? Id start with Juan
Coles Informed Comment, still the indispensable supplementand the
best way to get a peek at the eyes and ears of the local and regional
press, all within fifteen minutes. His posting yesterday is really
superiorits Ten Myths About Iraq. And heres a snippet:
- Myth: The US public no longer sees Iraq as a central issue in the 2008 presidential campaign.
Fact:
In a recent ABC News/ Washington Post poll, Iraq and the economy were
virtually tied among voters nationally, with nearly a quarter of voters
in each case saying it was their number one issue. The economy had
become more important to them than in previous months (in November only
14% said it was their most pressing concern), but Iraq still rivals it
as an issue!
- Myth: There have been steps toward religious and political reconciliation in Iraq in 2007.
Fact:
The government of Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has for the moment lost
the support of the Sunni Arabs in parliament. The Sunnis in his cabinet
have resigned. Even some Shiite parties have abandoned the government.
Sunni Arabs, who are aware that under his government Sunnis have
largely been ethnically cleansed from Baghdad, see al-Maliki as a
sectarian politician uninterested in the welfare of Sunnis.
- Myth:
The US troop surge stopped the civil war that had been raging between
Sunni Arabs and Shiites in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad.
Fact: The
civil war in Baghdad escalated during the US troop escalation. Between
January, 2007, and July, 2007, Baghdad went from 65% Shiite to 75%
Shiite. UN polling among Iraqi refugees in Syria suggests that 78% are
from Baghdad and that nearly a million refugees relocated to Syria from
Iraq in 2007 alone. This data suggests that over 700,000 residents of
Baghdad have fled this city of 6 million during the US surge, or more
than 10 percent of the capitals population. Among the primary effects
of the surge has been to turn Baghdad into an overwhelmingly Shiite
city and to displace hundreds of thousands of Iraqis from the capital.
In Pakistan, The Meltdown Begins
News
is now breaking about the attempt to assassinate Nawaz Sharif and the
assassination of Benazir Bhutto in Rawalpindi. Most Pakistan observers
I have been speaking with envision a dramatic further deterioration in
Pakistan, largely the result of Musharrafs decision to trash
restructuring plans in favor of military rule. The assassination of
Bhutto, whose Pakistan Peoples Party had the loyalty and support of
the nations aspiring middle class, is a tragic development and it
presages still more instability. Condoleeza Rice and her senior
advisors correctly understood that forcing Bhutto into a marriage of
convenience with Musharraf was the only available tactic that would
shore up and legitimize the generals rule. Unfortunately they acted
too late on this, and in the end their resolve was characteristically
weak. Musharraf saw the writing on the wall, and he recognized that the
real say in the Cheney Shogunate is held by Dick Cheney, not Condi
Rice. So Musharraf welched on his promises and sent Pakistan spiraling
down the maelstrom in which it now finds itself. This is more bitter
fruit from Americas grossly mismanaged foreign policy in the age of
Bush. More to come.
Tyger, Tyger Burning Bright
So back
to that question that every English student asked back in college: how
does a tiger burn bright? Was this the delusional Blake? The man who
gave us the doors of perception? Maybe. The conventional
interpretation was, of course, to juxtapose this poem against The
Lamb, and speak of evil and innocence. But that sounds like an
Anglican minister, not like William Blake. Were he to use the images
this way, it would be with a mocking tone. No, Id say that what burns
bright in the tiger is the unrestrained force of nature. And if we
have to search for meaning in this poem, there is a work that holds it
in philosophical terms as beautifully as Blake expressed it in the
poetic.
Its one of my favorite works of Edmund Burke, in facta work
that is often overlooked or shunted aside as some curious artifact of
the theory of aesthetics. But in its way, its every bit as important
as the Reflections and perhaps even more relevant to our times and
challenges.
When the young Burke wrote his Philosophical Enquiry into
the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful, in 1757, he was
testing the boundaries of Enlightenment thought and pointing the way to
the age of Romanticism. His work is about how we appreciate art and
nature, how we come to call something beautiful, but its also about
social and political interaction. When is humankind moved by terror and
what causes this to happen?
And how can this be manipulated by those
who study human emotion and want to use it to enslave, rather than to
liberate the human animal? (This he calls the essence of the Oriental
mind, but as so often the case, Oriental is probably just a mask for
something much closer to home.) Terror is in all cases whatsoever,
either more openly or latently, the ruling principle of the sublime.
Why?
Whatever is fitted in any sort to excite the ideas of pain, and
danger, that is to say, whatever is in any sort terrible, or is
conversant about terrible objects, or operates in a manner analogous to
terror, is a source of the sublime; that is, it is productive of the
strongest emotion which the mind is capable of feeling.
This notion of
terror exists in objects all about us all the time, though we may seek
to domesticate them, to render them harmless to us. We have
continually about us animals of a strength that is considerable, but
not pernicious. Amongst these we never look for the sublime: it comes
upon us in the gloomy forest, and in the howling wilderness, in the
form of the lion, the tiger, the panther, or rhinoceros.
And
with this in mind, read Blakes Tyger and see the point well
encapsulated. The tiger is a powerful image for the human psyche and
our perceptions of the world.
And so is the tragic tale we
unfold in todays paper of the last minutes of life and death of the
Siberian tiger Tatiana, and her human prey, in the San Francisco Zoo
yesterday. Tatiana killed. But did she do wrong?
She acted according to
the force of her nature. Tatiana truly burned brightshe did as her
nature would have her doit meant terror for men. Blakes tiger is the
raw force of nature, brutal, amoral, terrorizing, but also capable of
illuminating those who understand her way and behavior without becoming
blindly panicked in the face of them. Blakes poem is about terror, but
not simply experiencing itit is about the need to surmount fear, to
achieve mastery of it.
And for America in the closing days of 2007, is
there a lesson more essential than this?
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