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Better than the Inquisition: Valentine's Day Torture Trifecta
The Valentines Day Torture Trifecta
by Scott Horton On Valentines Day the Bush Administration was out on a mission, straight from the Orwellian Ministry of Love. That ministry of course served in Nineteen Eighty-Four as the center for torture.
And as the shortest month reached its middle point, three apologists appeared on behalf of the administration to explain to the American public that they needed to relax and start getting comfortable with torture.
Its the new American Way, after all.
Act One: We Do It Better Than the Inquisition
The first
appearance was by Steven G. Bradbury, who now heads the Office of Legal
Counsel in the Justice Department. As ABC News, the Wall Street Journal
and the New York Times collectively uncovered, Bradbury owes his rise
to a position of power due to one single issue: waterboarding. His
predecessor, Dan Levin, was reviewing the universally reviled torture
memoranda written by John Yoo, and decided to go to a near-by military
base and undergo waterboarding himself to understand better what it was
about. He was astonished at what he discovered and concluded that it
could not possibly be given a free check. He set out to write a new
memorandum putting tight collars on waterboarding. But when David
Addington and Alberto Gonzales got word of what he was up to, they
acted swiftly. Dan Levin was forced out of his job, and the search
began for a new figure who could be counted upon absolutely to protect
the torture regime. Steve Bradbury was that man.
If we had to
pick just one brief snippet that sums up the corruption that the Bush
Administration has worked inside of the Justice Departmentits literal
transformation from an institution that upholds the Rule of Law to one
that spitefully tramples upon itthen it might well be this. Take a few
minutes to listen to Bradburys evasions, dissembling and his attempts
to justify waterboarding with historical comparisons.
And heres the core of Bradburys legal reasoning. In his view, a coercive technique is not torture if it is:
"subject
to strict safeguards, limitations and conditions, [it] does not involve
severe physical pain or severe physical suffering and severe physical
suffering, we said on our December 2004 Opinion, has to take account of
both the intensity of the discomfort or distress involved, and the
duration, and something can be quite distressing or comfortable, even
frightening, [but] if it doesnt involve severe physical pain, and it
doesnt last very long, it may not constitute severe physical
suffering. That would be the analysis."
So the key is brevity.
Do it in a few seconds, no lasting effects, and its fine. And thats
the beauty of waterboarding, in Bradburys mind. A former OLC attorney
advisor, Georgetown Prof. Martin Lederman says this is flatly, 100%
wrong, and indefensible. Id say that is a charitable
characterization. My own view is that this opinion constitutes evidence
of Bradburys participation in a criminal conspiracy to introduce a
regime of torture as defined in American and international law. The law
may provide defenses for the interrogators who act in misplaced
reliance on the Justice Departments opinions, but it provides no
shield for those who in bad faith formulate the policies that foment
torture. Bradbury has no business serving in the Justice Department or
in any other public office. He should now be the target of a criminal
investigation, together with the other policy-level figures who drove
the introduction and propagation of this torture regime. Indeed, beyond
their essential criminality, no group of people have done more in the
last seven years to undermine the security of every American citizen
than these shadowy, ethically-challenged figures who seem propelled by
the credo that they stand above the law because they can twist it to
say whatever they want.
As for Bradburys future career, I
suggest he take up acting. He is a natural to play the Grand Inquisitor
in Schillers Don Carlos or Dostoevskys Brothers Karamazovhe has the
reasoning down pat, he actually looks sincere and clean-cut as he
explains that torture is good for you.
Our use of waterboarding is
humane compared to the Spanish Inquisition, he says. And then he
demonstrates the key distinction: the Japanese or Spanish would fill
the stomach with water and then stand on the body. For the American
version, we fill the lungs with water and dont do any standing. You
can exhale now.
Isnt that a great relief? Its a kinder, gentler form
of waterboarding. A waterboarding of which all Americans can be proud.
A waterboarding that reflects Americans core values of respect for
human dignity.
It would be good for Bradbury to play this
back so he can listen to the absurdity of his statements. Maybe hell
get the opportunity to hear himself on tape in legal proceedings in the
future.
Now we should be clear, Bradbury says that
waterboarding today would be illegal. Thats because its not a part of
the program that President Bush currently authorizes. But waterboarding
in the past was perfectly legal, because Bush authorized it and his
department approved it. And waterboarding in the future? Well, it may
or may not be legal. Hes not saying. Hed have to think about it.
Hows that for legal sophistry? Actually, based on Bradburys
performance to date, theres no reason to doubt how Bradbury would
handle a request from the White House to authorize waterboarding. He
will authorize it. Of course hes not sure now how he will rationalize
it, but he will come up with something. Hes that kind of lawyer.
But
we shouldnt give Bradbury a pass on the substance. His arguments cant
be squared with the statute and his description of the American style
of waterboarding is at odds with the very graphic descriptions provided
by U.S. service personnel who have been through the SERE program
waterboarding which Bradbury acknowledges is the basis for the
technique. It is drowning, not simulated drowning, and it is designed
to bring the victim to the point of death, and then bring him back. So
Bradburys denials of these points are simply lies, and lies to
Congress, under oath.
Given the hand he plays, it is now a
matter of some urgency that the Senate Judiciary Committee disapprove
Bradbury as head of OLC. Indeed, his presence there stains the office
and the institution. But its also vital that the opinions he authored
on national security matters be carefully scrutinized by the Judiciary
Committees so that remedial measures can be taken to overturn views
that violate the criminal law and international obligationsand his
Valentines Day appearance suggests that they will be very numerous.
Act Two: Be Very Afraid and Embrace Torture
Its
hard to imagine how the Bradbury appearance could be upstaged. But it
was very quickly, by his bosss boss, the Decider himself. George W.
Bush has come under heavy criticism by the Government of Gordon Brown.
Whereas the Blair Government had used private diplomacy in its efforts
to push the Bush Administration to change its policies on torture and
conditions of detention, Gordon Brown has authorized open criticism.
Indeed, the U.S. treatment of prisoners at Guantánamo and the plans for
Military Commissions have come under direct attack. Bush decided to
defend himself in an extended Valentines Day interview with the BBC.
Pride of place in his comments went to waterboarding, which Bush
enthusiastically embraced. Heres the summary provided by The Guardian:
"But his most controversial remarks were over waterboarding. He
told the BBCs Matt Frei: To the critics, I ask them this: when we,
within the law, interrogate and get information that protects ourselves
and possibly others in other nations to prevent attacks, which attack
would they have hoped that we wouldnt have prevented?
And
so, the United States will act within the law. Well make sure
professionals have the tools necessary to do their job within the law.
He claimed the families of victims of the July 7 terror attacks in
London would understand his position. I suspect the families of those
victims understand the nature of killers. What people gotta understand
is that well make decisions based upon law. Were a nation of law.
"In the BBC interview, Bush was asked whether, given
waterboarding and other alleged human rights abuses, he could claim the
US still occupied the moral high ground. He replied: Absolutely. He
added: We believe in human rights and human dignity. We believe in the
human condition. We believe in freedom. And were willing to take the
lead. Were willing to ask nations to do hard things. Were willing to
accept responsibilities. Andyeah, no question in my mind, its a
nation thats a force for good. And history will judge the decisions
made during this period of time as necessary decisions.
So
Bushs position is clear: torture is a legitimate tool in the hands of
a power fighting from the moral highground. Without wading into the
moral dimensions of this problem, we should start by noting that this
is the man who has spent five years stating in a mantra-like fashion,
We do not torture. That statement was untrue, and he knew it was
untrue when he first uttered it. Therefore, we can conclude that Bush
also believes that a power can lie to its own people and the world
about the weightiest subjectslike reasons for war, and the use of
tortureand maintain the moral highground. In purely relative terms,
hes rightthe Bush Administration maintains a moral high ground
vis-à-vis al Qaeda. But it has slouched closer to the morals of its
terrorist adversary than any global observer ever would have thought
possible.
But the next point to consider is, again without
considering the underlying ethical considerations, whether the global
community agrees with his statement. After all, the objective of
holding the moral high ground is to have the support of world opinion
behind us. The Founding Fathers recognized that as a vital weapon and
they did much to hold it. And in Americas successful campaigns abroad,
it has followed the same course. But Bush has fatefully parted from it.
Public opinion polling shows that even in Americas key alliesnations
like Britain, Germany, Spain, Italy, France, Turkey and Japanthe force
of public opinion is not with the Bush Administration. Indeed, he is
reviled, and public opinion impedes the ability of those governments to
cooperate with the United States. What does this mean practically? The
cost of conflicts abroad is dramatically escalated because they are
borne by the United States and not shared. And the security of the
United States is directly undermined due to the corrosion of these
vital alliances, that generations of Americans fought and sacrificed to
create.
But then we come to Bushs core message. He argues
that because British citizens were killed in attacks on July 7, the
Government should be freed from the constraints of law and given
license to torture. Bushs vision of the world is influenced more by
Rambo and Chuck Norris movies than travel or understanding of
international relations theory. In his pathetic bubble world, he is
convinced, torture is the answer to our problems. But the British
response to July 7 was a model for Americans to observe and follow, for
in fact, the British, eschewing torture and brutal methods and
appealing for public support and alertness, did a far better job than
their U.S. counterparts. Darius Rejali makes the key point here:
"research
has shown that public cooperation is the key to solving crimes and the
public must be confident in the police to come forward with good
information. No parent would hand over his child knowing he would be
tortured. Cracking a terror cell is not unlike infiltrating organized
crime. The trick is to cultivate informers in communities where
terrorists operate. Technology is no substitute for this. Nor is
torture. Torturing for information destroys bonds of loyalty that keep
information flowing, causing remaining sources of information to dry
up.
"On their own, police are relatively helpless against
criminals and terrorists. Since the 1970s, researchers have shown again
and again that unless the public specifically identifies suspects to
the police, the chances that a crime will be solved falls to about 10
percent. Contrary to popular evening police television shows, only a
small percentage of crimes are solved with fingerprinting, forensics
and DNA sampling. In England, this constitutes as little as 5% of all
detections.
"Police captured the 21 July bombers using accurate
public information. Tanya Wright, Ibrahims neighbor, helped the police
locate Ibrahim and a second suspect, Yasin Hassan Omar, on July 22.
Police then traced Omar to Birmingham where he was arrested six days
later. Police arrested a third bomb suspect, Ramsi Muhammad, in the
same flat as Omar. Three commuters had followed Muhammad through London
until they lost him. Police identified Hussein Osman, the fourth
bomber, by releasing video surveillance. They tapped his brother in
laws phone and Italian authorities arrested him. Police captured their
suspects without torture or an American-style Patriot Act."
But
Bushs mind is never very subtle. He believes in himself and he
believes the accretion of power in his hands will benefit everyone.
Such thinking is of course the classic pattern of tyrannical
megalomania. And Edmund Burke was clear about the essential role of
fear-mongering in the tyrants desire to accumulate power. Appeals to
fear are designed not to create alert citizens, mindful of their duties
to one another, but quaking bowls of jelly, happy to cede all rights
and powers to the man Plato called the protector, who soon enough
will whip the chariot of State over the bodies of a once-proud
citizenry. Or as a friend of mine puts it, Prof. Shklar at Harvard
once remarked, that those who put cruelty first in their lives are
especially vulnerable to the vice of misanthropy. And that we see to
full effect today.
Act Three: The Jester
Any well composed
classical opera buffa brings us the crude, blundering sort of comic
relief. The figure who wants to be one of the big guys, serious, but is
a simple figure of derision. The Hofnarr, they call him, the jester.
And our Valentines Day jester was Senator Lieberman. Heres what the
senator from Connecticut had to say in a phone conference with
reporters:
"The difference, he said, is that waterboarding is
mostly psychological and there is no permanent physical damage. It is
not like putting burning coals on peoples bodies. The person is in no
real danger. The impact is psychological, Lieberman said. Lieberman
said that his position on waterboarding differs from that of Sen. John
McCain, R-Ariz., who he has endorsed as a presidential candidate. As a
prisoner-of-war in Vietnam, McCain was tortured. McCain, he said,
believes waterboarding is torture."
But Liebermans statement
demonstrates that he doesnt understand what waterboarding is all
about. Here is a summary by Darius Rejali of the four most prevalent
forms of waterboarding.
"(a) pumping: filling a stomach with
water causes the organs to distend, a sensation compared often with
having your organs set on fire from the inside. This was the Tormenta
de Toca favored by the Inquisition and featured on your website photo.
The French in Algeria called in the tube or tuyau after the hose they
forced into the mouth to fill the organs.
"(b) chokingas in
sticking a head in a barrel. It is a form of near asphyxiation but it
also produces the same burning sensation through all the water a
prisoner involuntarily ingests. This is the example illustrated in the
Battle of Algiers movie, a technique called the sauccisson or the
submarine in Latin America. Prisoners describe their chests swelling to
the size of barrels at which point a guard would stomp on the stomach
forcing the water to move in the opposite direction.
"(c)
chokingas in attaching a person to a board and dipping the board into
water. This was my understanding of what waterboarding was from the
initial reports. The use of a board was stylistically most closely
associated with the work of a Nazi political interrogator by the name
of Ludwig Ramdor who worked at Ravensbruck camp. Ramdor was tried
before the British Military Court Martial at Hamburg (May 1946 to March
1947) on charges for subjecting women to this torture, subjecting
another woman to drugs for interrogation, and subjecting a third to
starvation and high pressure showers. He was found guilty and executed
by the Allies in 1947.
"(d) chokingas in forcing someone to
lie down, tying them down, then putting a cloth over the mouth, and
then choking the prisoner by soaking the cloth. This also forces
ingestion of water. It was invented by the Dutch in the East Indies in
the 16th century, as a form of torture for English traders. More
recently it was common in the American south, especially in police
stations, in the 1920s, as documented in the famous Wickersham Report
of the American Bar Association (The Report on Lawlessness in Law
Enforcement, 1931), compiling instances of police torture throughout
the United States."
The forms of waterboarding used by the CIA
today come extreme close to the last two techniques described above.
They involve actual drowningnot the sensation of drowningand the
statement that there is no real danger reflects consummate stupidity.
Indeed, the victim will drown absent intervention to revive him, and
accidental killings involving this technique are fairly commonplace.
Back
in 2005-06, when I was working with Senator McCains staff on an effort
to enact the Detainee Treatment Act, designed to overturn the use of
torture techniques, one of his senior staffers told me Much as Senator
McCain likes and respects Lieberman, we absolutely cannot trust
Lieberman on this issue. Hes a real snake in the grass. Truer words
were never uttered.
But theres another aspect of Liebermans
statement which needs some attention. He presents his rationale as an
outtake from the Fox Networks 24, he talks about ticking bombs and
the urgent needs to wrestle information from a participant in a plot in
the course of performance. But of course, not a one of the instances in
which waterboarding was actually applied related to anything like such
a scenario.
Indeed, a Judiciary Committee staffer who carefully tracked
Bradburys testimony earlier in the day drew this conclusion from it:
This is an official acknowledgment that we do not use these tactics
only in (fanciful) ticking bomb scenarios we use them to find about
potential planning of attacks and enemy whereabouts thats just
general intelligence gathering. Thats precisely correct and it
demonstrates the fraudulent way the ticking bomb argument is being
used.
Students of moral philosophy of course will recognize the
technique. It was put forward by Sophists in the post-Platonic period.
They suggested that they could contrive a set of facts sufficient to
topple any moral law that a moral philosopher could postulate. The
plank of Carneades is a prime example of their approach comstructed
by the Sophists from a teaching of the second century BCE skeptic
Carneades.
Carneades of Cyrene, bust, first century
CE
It suggested that in extremis, a person could violate most
natural and moral laws to save himself. Carneades did not actually
believe this, he presented it as an example of a powerful and malicious
form of argumentation with strong appeal to the weak-minded against
which society must ever be on guard. And the ticking bomb scenario is
merely an updated version of this line of reasoning. The way to
approach such arguments entails a series of questions:
(1) Has the factual scenario that is posited ever occurred? Is it likely to occur?
(2)
What is the consequence to society of taking the exception as a basis
for overturning the general rule? How is the exception granted and
applied?
(3) What is the objective of those advancing the exception?
However,
this approach suggests we treat Liebermans comments as something
serious and worthy of analysis. In fact the man is not a serious figure
and his argumentthat waterboarding is better than placing burning
coals on the fleshis simply ludicrous, and thats the best way to
treat it.
In the end, Liebermans comments add nothing to the debate; but they tell us much about Lieberman.