Torture Report Raises Hopes, Offers Ammo for Bush & Co. Prosecutions
Few if any people, given recent history and the consistent position of the Obama administration, are expecting that former President Bush or any of his top officials will ever see the inside of a U.S. courtroom (not to mention a prison cell) for their role in authorizing the torture of suspected terrorists. Despite that dim view, however, calls for prosecutions are now louder than they’ve been in years and new hopes have surfaced that international prosecutions could fill the void left by the unwillingness of the U.S. to pursue such charges.
As Michael Rattner, president of the legal advocacy and human rights group Center for Constitutional Rights, declared on Thursday, “Bush and company shouldn’t plan on visiting the Prado soon unless they want to end up in a Spanish jail.”
Those comments are part of renewed and international chorus calling for accountability and prosecutions that has emerged since Tuesday’s release of the Senate Intelligence Committee’s executive summary of their investigation into CIA torture that was authorized at the highest levels of the Bush administration at the onset of the so-called “War on Terror,” which began in 2001 and continues to this day.
In the days since the report’s release the call for prosecution of Bush, his vice president Dick Cheney, his Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld, and other high-ranking officials who were involved with orchestrating, authorizing, and executing the CIA program have only grown.
As Andrew Prokop explored in his article at Vox.com on Thursday: Torture is illegal. Americans tortured. Why isn’t anyone being prosecuted?
In a statement released on Thursday, Juan E. Méndez, the United Nations’ special rapporteur on torture, decried the example set by the U.S. in regards to torture, calling its failure to forcefully condemn its own behavior “a big drawback in the fight against such practice in many other countries throughout the world.”
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Méndez called the Senate’s report “a first step in the direction of fulfilling other US obligations under U.N. Convention against Torture (CAT), namely to combat impunity and ensure accountability, by investigating and prosecuting those responsible.”
“I travel to parts of the world [in my capacity at the UN] and I can attest to the fact that many states either implicitly or explicitly tell you: ‘Why look at us? If the US tortures, why can’t we do it?'” he said. “There is no doubt that torture programs right after 9/11 have made the matter of terrorism worse and the torture that has taken place has been a breeding ground for more terrorism.”
On Wednesday, Zeid Raad al-Hussein, the U.N. high Commissioner for Human Rights, said that because the U.S. has ratified the CAT, it has a “crsytal clear” legal obligation to ensure accountability for the crime of torture.
“In all countries, if someone commits murder, they are prosecuted and jailed,” al-Hussein said. “If they commit rape or armed robbery, they are prosecuted and jailed. If they order, enable or commit torture—recognized as a serious international crime —they cannot simply be granted impunity because of political expediency,” he said.
Meanwhile, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Counter-Terrorism and Human Rights Ben Emmerson said the Senate report on torture shows “there was a clear policy orchestrated at a high level within the Bush administration, which allowed (it) to commit systematic crimes and gross violations of international human rights law.”
Refusal to pursue such prosecutions by the Obama administration, argued director of Human Rights Watch Kenneth Roth this week, “means that torture effectively remains a policy option rather than a criminal offense. The message sent to future presidents facing a serious security threat is that the domestic and international prohibition of torture can be ignored without consequence.”
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