A good report by Human Rights Watch on toture and ill treatment on detainees under the Bush administration just came out, naming and establishing the responsibility of high-ranked officials in the commission of what ammounts to war crime .
We shall like to highlight the appendix, focusing on legal proceedings in foreign countries regarding US detainees treatment (France, Germany, Spain...) and remind everyone that an Spanish Journalist, Jose Couso, was killed by US troops in Baghdad in April 8th 2003;US authorities blocked all attempts by Spanish judicial authorities to investigate his death
Here is the
slightly reduced press release and access to the report:
The Bush Administration and Mistreatment
of Detainee
The report, Getting
away with torture, presents substantial information warranting
criminal investigations of Bush and senior administration officials,
including former Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld, and CIA Director George Tenet, for ordering practices such as
“waterboarding,” the use of secret CIA prisons, and the transfer of
detainees to countries where they were tortured.
The evidence is overwhelming that former US President George W. Bush and senior members of his administration ordered torture, a war crime, during the armed conflicts in Afghanistan and Iraq. President Barack Obama’s failure to investigate these allegations undermines US credibility in pressing other countries to address human rights abuses and to bring alleged international war criminals to justice.
Although
the Obama administration would like to shut the book on this topic,
it’s important to keep it in the spotlight. This week, we did just that,
in media interviews from South African radio to Colombia-based TV and an opinion piece in the Washington Post.
The
United States is right to call for justice for serious crimes that
violate international law in places like Syria and Darfur. But the
United States would be a stronger advocate for justice if it prosecuted
someone other than low-ranking soldiers for crimes such as torture.
If the US government does not pursue credible criminal
investigations, other countries should prosecute US officials involved
in crimes against detainees in accordance with international law,
In August 2009, US Attorney General Eric Holder appointed
Assistant US Attorney John Durham to investigate detainee abuse but
limited the probe to "unauthorized" acts. That meant the investigation
could not cover acts of torture, such as waterboarding, and other
ill-treatment authorized by Bush administration lawyers, even if the
acts violated domestic and international law. On June 30, Holder
accepted Durham's recommendation to carry out full investigations of two
deaths in CIA custody, reportedly from Iraq and Afghanistan. Human
Rights Watch said that the narrow scope of Durham's inquiry failed to
address the systemic nature of the abuses.
In citing the four top-level Bush administration officials, Human
Rights Watch said that:
- President Bush publicly admitted that in two cases he approved the use of waterboarding, a form of mock execution involving near-drowning that the United States has long prosecuted as a type of torture. Bush also authorized the illegal CIA secret detention and renditions programs, under which detainees were held incommunicado and frequently transferred to countries such as Egypt and Syria where they were likely to be tortured;
- Vice President Cheney was the driving force behind the establishment of illegal detention and interrogation policies, chairing key meetings at which specific CIA operations were discussed, including the waterboarding of one detainee, Abu Zubaydah, in 2002;
- Defense Secretary Rumsfeld approved illegal interrogation methods and closely followed the interrogation of Mohamed al-Qahtani, who was subjected to a six-week regime of coercive interrogation at Guantanamo that cumulatively appears to have amounted to torture;
- CIA Director Tenet authorized and oversaw the CIA's use of waterboarding, stress positions, light and noise bombardment, sleep deprivation, and other abusive interrogation methods, as well as the CIA rendition program.
In media interviews, Bush has sought to justify his authorization of
waterboarding on the ground that Justice Department lawyers said it was
legal. While Bush should have recognized that waterboarding constituted
torture without consulting a lawyer, there is also substantial
information that senior administration officials, including Cheney,
sought to influence the lawyers' judgment, Human Rights Watch said.
"Senior Bush officials shouldn't be able to shape and hand-pick legal
advice and then hide behind it as if it were autonomously delivered,"
Roth said.
Human Rights Watch said the criminal investigation should include an
examination of the preparation of the Justice Department memos that were
used to justify the unlawful treatment of detainees.
Human Rights Watch also said that victims of torture should receive
fair and adequate compensation as required by the Convention against
Torture. Both the Bush and Obama administrations have successfully kept
courts from considering the merits of torture allegations in civil
lawsuits by making broad use of legal doctrines such as state secrets
and official immunity.
An independent, nonpartisan commission, along the lines of the 9-11
Commission, should be established to examine the actions of the
executive branch, the CIA, the military, and Congress, with regard to
Bush administration policies and practices that led to detainee abuse,
Human Rights Watch said. Such a commission should make recommendations
to ensure that the systematic abuses of the Bush administration are not
repeated.
In February 2011, Bush cancelled a trip to Switzerland, where alleged
victims of torture had intended to file a criminal complaint against
him. An investigation implicating US officials in torture is under way
in Spain. Documents made public by Wikileaks revealed that US pressure
on Spanish authorities to drop the case has continued under the Obama
administration.
Human Rights Watch said that the US government's failure to
investigate US officials for the torture and ill-treatment of detainees
undermines US efforts to press for accountability for human rights
violations abroad.
"The US is right to call for justice when serious international
crimes are committed in places like Darfur, Libya, and Sri Lanka, but
there should be no double standards," Roth said. "When the US government
shields its own officials from investigation and prosecution, it makes
it easier for others to dismiss global efforts to bring violators of
serious crimes to justice."
More info
US Should Investigate Bush for Torture HRW press release with all the numerous quotes by Kenneth Roth.
US Should Investigate Bush for Torture HRW press release with all the numerous quotes by Kenneth Roth.
Getting away with torture The 107-page report presents substantial information warranting
criminal investigations of Bush and senior administration officials,
including former Vice President Dick Cheney, Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld, and CIA Director George Tenet, for ordering practices such as
“waterboarding,” the use of secret CIA prisons, and the transfer of
detainees to countries where they were tortured.
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