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The
Bush administration thinks we are all a bunch of idiots, too stupid to know the
difference between truth and lies. Bush & Co. seem to think that, regardless of
what the facts are, they can get us to believe the opposite. If it's day,
they'll convince us is night. Black, white. You know the drill. They operate
under the arrogant assumption that if they say it is so, we'll accept that
declaration as the incontrovertible truth, even if that "truth" is unsupported
by anything other than, "Trust us."
Why shouldn't Bush and his henchmen
operate under the assumption that we're too moronic to know when they're lying
to our faces? So far, their assumption has been all-too-true. Iraq was involved
in September 11. Iraq nearly obtained uranium from Niger. Abu Ghraib was the
work of a few bad apples. They feed us dung, call it pate, and laugh as we eat
it up.
Take, for instance, the Bush administration's ongoing insistence that the U.S.
does not engage in torture. As recently as November 7, 2005, despite the
administration's vehement and open opposition to a Senate bill that would outlaw
torture, Bush nonetheless declared (straight-faced and with all the appearances
of sincerity), "We do not torture." Apparently, the administration believes that
the word of our "straight-shooting" President is enough for most Americans.
Sadly, they're right. Most Americans are far more willing to believe what the
Bush administration says than what it does. If that were not the case, the
nation would collectively shout, "LIARS!," descend upon Washington, and throw
the bastards out of office. Instead, most of us, like the gullible dolts we are,
take the administration at its word and blithely ignore the facts staring us in
the face.
The most recent example of the Bush administration's policy of "believe what we
say, not what we do," are the recent revelations that the U.S. maintains "ghost
prisons" the world over. Ominously referred to as "black sites" in government
documents, these secret prisons are thought to be located in Thailand,
Afghanistan, as well as several former members of the Soviet Union such as
Uzbekistan and Romania. Operated by the CIA, the "black sites" were heretofore
unknown to most members of Congress, even (or especially) those charged with
overseeing the CIA's covert activities. Almost nothing is known about who is
detained at the sites, how long they have been held there, or what interrogation
methods are used on them.
In response to the revelation of the CIA's global network of secret prisons,
National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley would neither confirm nor deny their
existence (thereby confirming they exist). Nevertheless, Mr. Hadley assured the
good people of the U.S. that "assuming there are such sites" (wink, wink), "the
United States will not torture" and "will conduct its activities in compliance
with [the] law and international obligations."
Really? If the U.S. is so willing to detain and interrogate suspects in
compliance with the law and international treaties, why the need for secret
prisons? Why hold people in undisclosed locations throughout the world if there
is nothing to hide? National security is not a valid excuse. These sites weren't
even disclosed to most members of Congress. Are we to believe that members of
Congress pose a security risk? Besides, it simply strains credulity to argue
that the U.S. could not securely detain high-level terror suspects in facilities
other than black sites. It already does so.
More likely, the CIA keeps its black sites secret because it knows that what
it's doing there is illegal. Indeed, according to the Washington Post,
the CIA wants to keep the sites secret in order to prevent legal challenges to
its tactics. Put simply, the CIA has hidden prisons because it has something to
hide. These are not the acts of a government interested in complying with
domestic and international legal obligations. These are the acts of criminals.
The European Union has its suspicions. Upon learning of the CIA's black sites,
the EU promised an investigation. Likewise, Scottish police are investigating
CIA "torture flights" which stop off at Scottish airports en route to such
"torture-friendly" destinations as Egypt, Uzbekistan, and Morocco. Iceland has
promised its own investigation into the CIA's use of Icelandic airports for
extraordinary rendition. Denmark, too. A Swedish investigation concluded the CIA
violated Swedish law by flying two Egyptian men from Stockholm to Cairo where
they were tortured. In Italy, an arrest warrant remains outstanding for 19 CIA
agents for kidnapping an Islamist cleric and shipping him to Egypt to be
tortured.
Nothing to hide, indeed.
As troubling as these black sites are in isolation, they become even more
disturbing when placed in context. Obsessed with protecting the administration's
"right" to torture people, Vice President Cheney has waged war against any
attempts to ban, or even limit, torture of terror suspects. Last October, in an
effort to defeat passage of the Senate's ban on torture, Cheney and CIA Director
Porter Goss pleaded with Congress to make an exception for the CIA. After the
legislation passed 90 to 9, in early November Cheney made a closed-door,
personal appeal to Republican senators to exempt the CIA from the Senate's ban.
According to Cheney, while the U.S. absolutely does not engage in torture, the
CIA should nevertheless be exempted from any ban on the practice. Just in case.
The CIA operates secret prisons in various locations around the world. The White
House wants the CIA exempted from any ban on torturing terror suspects. You do
the math.
Keep in mind, we already know that waterboarding, electric shocks, beatings, and
sleep deprivation has been widely practiced in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay. If
such clear acts of torture are occurring in facilities that we know about and
that are subject to Congressional oversight, are we really supposed to believe
that nothing improper is happening in ghost prisons and black sites? Somehow I
doubt the CIA and the White House want to keep such facilities secret because
they're embarrassed by how well the detainees there are being treated.
Since at least January of 2002, Bush & Co. have exempted terrorists from
requirements of humane treatment; they have redefined torture so as to exclude
anything short of death or organ failure; they have authorized such acts of
"non-torture" as electrocution, waterboarding, and stress positions; they have
vowed to veto any legislation limiting the administration's ability to torture
terror suspects; they operate secret prisons around the world; they send terror
suspects to countries known for torture; and they have fought tirelessly to
exempt the CIA from any prohibition of torture.
Nonetheless, they indignantly declare, "We do not torture."
Ken Sanders is a lawyer and writer in Tucson
whose publishing credits include Op Ed News, Z Magazine, Common
Dreams, Democratic Underground, Dissident Voice, and Political
Affairs Magazine, among others. All of his articles may be found at:
www.politicsofdissent.blogspot.com.
Other Articles by Ken Sanders
*
Reading
Between the Lines
*
Adding Another Lock to Our Closet of Tortured Skeletons
* Pandora's
Box
*
Emphasizing the “Ass” in Compassionate Conservatism
* Is
Anyone Any Better Off?
* The False
Promise of Profiling Terrorists
* C'mon
Dubya, Talk to the Lady
* From
Tehran, With Love
* Valuing
Form Over Substance In Iraq
* Is DeLay
Morally Devoid
* Don't
Canadians Care About Marriage?
* Time To
Outgrow Our Naiveté
* Christian
Pity Party
* Rove's
Trove of Trouble
* Condemned
to Relive the Past
* Who Put
These Guys in Charge?
* One
Nation, Unconvinced
* Beyond
Impeachment: The Bush Administration As War Criminals
* Policy of
Deceit
* High
Crimes and Misdemeanors
* One
Nation, Under Experiment
* Trained
to "Disassemble"
* Iraq:
Bush's Land of Make-Believe
* On the
Brink of "Complete Strategic Failure" in Afghanistan
* Red,
White, and Without a Clue
* Shooting
the Messenger
* Touching
Evil: Holding Hands with Uzbekistan
* Crony
Capitalists
* Iraq in
Miniature
* Smoking
Gun Memo Appears, but Where's the Outrage?
* We're Not
Going Anywhere
* What the
Pre-War Intelligence Reports Won't Tell You About Iraq's Nukes
* The
"Freedom" of Afghanistan's Women
* Fallujah:
Dresden in Iraq
* Suffer the
Children
* The
Starving of the Five (Hundred) Thousand
* Iraq: The
Not-So-Proverbial Powder Keg
* Turning
Out the Lights on the Enlightenment
* Bush,
Schiavo, and the Stench of Hypocrisy
* Supporting
the Troops
* Scoffing
the Rule of Law
* Putting
the "Mock" in Democracy
* Torture’s
Our Business ... and Business is Good
* Remember
Afghanistan?
* The United
States’ Hypocritical Nuclear Policy
*
The “Other” Iraqi Conflict
* Cause for
Alarm: Regime Change Redux
* Still
Playing Cute With the Law
* The
Boogeyman and Social Security
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