Friday, December 12, 2014

TORTURE


it is with a heavy heart that i undertake to comment on the release of the congressional report on official united states torture of those captured in the course of the second iraq war.  the report and subsequent commentary make clear that this was explicit state policy, initiated by the president and vice-president and carried out, apparently without significant objection, by members of the government and private contractors, including professional psychologists.  the report indicates that the torture resulted in no useful information.  What is perhaps noteworthy or unusual about this state-authorized torture is that it was carried out on u.s. soil by americans, rather than by foreign governments to whom prisoners had been sent to be tortured under 'rendition' arrangements.  senior members of congress were informed of the torture as it happened, and defended it, kept it secret, and protected those who carried it out.

there are important lessons to be learned from this episode, none of which, i think, will result in any substantive change in american torture practices.

1.  contrary to oft-repeated statements by public commentators who claim to be shocked and appalled by the revelations, this is in fact who we are as a nation.  it is who we have been since the nation was founded on the labor of enslaved africans.  vastly larger numbers of americans than non-americans have been tortured in the past four hundred years by and with the complete legal approval first of the separate colonies and then of the states and the federal government. 

2.  the actions of the united states government were in violation of u.s. law and treaties signed by the united states government.  everyone involved is patently guilty of major crimes. 

3.  no one will be indicted, tried, convicted, or punished for those crimes.

4.  by its refusal to hold anyone legally accountable for the torture, or even to fire people still in government employ who were involved in the torture, president obama and the obama administration make themselves complicit in the actions of their predecessors.

5.  no one will pay any political price for having participated in the torture, or for having failed to prosecute those who did.

6 comments:

  1. It's remarkable to me that the CIA contracted out torture services. "Company Y," as the Senate report refers to it, was paid in excess of $75 million for services. In effect, torture has been privatized.

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  2. "1. contrary to oft-repeated statements by public commentators who claim to be shocked and appalled by the revelations, this is in fact who we are as a nation."

    This is very important statement. Until Americans confront this fact and its implications, I don't think it is possible to have a transformative movement that would lead to a democratic political-economy.

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  3. Some of the torture continued to go on under Obama in Bagram prison in Afghanistan (and Bradley Manning according to the UN). So if he were to hold others responsible, he would have to hold himself responsible.

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  4. Academia's silence on these matters is deafening...

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  5. 11 December 2014
    "US Congress passes bill to impose Venezuela sanctions
    "The United States Congress has passed a bill which would impose sanctions on Venezuelan officials found to have violated protesters' rights."

    "Senator Robert Menendez [Democrat, NJ], who sponsored the bill, said it was an 'unequivocal message' to the Venezuelan government".
    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-latin-america-30426439

    Unequivocal, indeed: It's only wrong when others do it. What are you gonna do about it?

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  6. Not only won't anyone involved in the torture program be brought to trial but the CIA official who leaked information about the program, John Kiriakou, was convicted of leaking classified information and is serving a jail sentence. Enough to blo your mind!

    Robert Shore

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