[Mb-civic] EDITORIAL Blood on Our Hands LATimes
Michael Butler
michael at michaelbutler.com
Wed Oct 6 11:46:19 PDT 2004
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/editorials/la-ed-torture6oct06.story
EDITORIAL
Blood on Our Hands
October 6, 2004
Despite a last-minute hesitation by the Bush administration, the House may
still take up provisions that would allow U.S. officials to ship terror
suspects to countries that permit torture. If this language, attached to the
larger intelligence reform bill, survives, it would shred the international
treaty against torture that the United States signed on to 20 years ago.
Beyond the diplomatic fallout, it would mock any claim to moral high ground
offered up to justify the war in Iraq.
The House measure allows what is legally called "extraordinary rendition,"
a comfy abstraction that essentially means to torture by proxy. The Senate's
intelligence reform bill fortunately has no such provision.
Torture by proxy seems already to have been applied to Maher Arar, a
Canadian citizen born in Syria. The computer technician was arrested between
international flights at John F. Kennedy Airport in 2002 on suspicion of
being a member of Al Qaeda. After 13 days of interrogation, federal
officials expelled him to Syria. There, Arar said, he was held for 10 months
in a "grave-sized cell" and beaten and tortured before Syrian officials
decided he was innocent and released him.
Arar, now back in Ottawa, may not be the only terror suspect so treated.
CIA agents are believed to be holding as many as 100 so-called "ghost"
detainees in Iraq. Their names and locations and the conditions under which
they are held are secret contrary to international law governing prisoners
of war. Some off-the-books prisoners may have been packed off to Yemen or
Pakistan for the bare-knuckles treatment.
The American Bar Assn. is incensed by the House's apparent willingness to
bless torture by proxy. Its pressure seems to have pushed Alberto Gonzales,
the president's chief lawyer, into publicly distancing the administration
from the measure.
Still, a spokesman for House Speaker J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) has said
the Justice Department "really wants and supports" these provisions.
Presumably those are the same Justice Department officials who argue that as
commander in chief, the president is bound neither by international nor
domestic laws barring torture.
If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at
latimes.com/archives.
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Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
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