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| Body Politics:The Senate's Sham Rebellion Against Tyranny and Torture |
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| Written by Chris Floyd |
| Thursday, 17 November 2005 14:14 |
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Below is an expanded version of my column in the Nov. 18 edition of The Moscow Times. Four years ago, George W. Bush quietly assumed dictatorial powers with a secret executive order granting himself the right to imprison anyone on earth indefinitely, without charges or trial or indictment or evidence, simply by declaring them an "enemy combatant," on his say-so alone. This week, the assemblage of bootlickers and bagmen that now befoul the U.S. Senate voted to codify the core of this global autocracy under the pretense of curtailing it. With great self-fluffing fanfare, the Senate passed two measures ostensibly designed to stem the But what can we actually see from this lofty moral promontory? We see that all foreign captives in Bush's worldwide gulag have now been stripped of the ancient human right of habeas corpus. They will not be allowed to challenge "any aspect of their detention" in court – until they have already been tried and convicted by a "military tribunal" constituted under rules concocted arbitrarily by Bush and his minions. Only then, after years of incarceration without rights or legal protection, will they be given access to a single federal appeals court which can review their conviction – subject to the usual "national security" restrictions on challenging evidence gathered by secret means from secret sources in secret places. Remarkably, the Supreme Court is expressly prohibited from any jurisdiction whatsoever over any aspect of gulag captivity, the Washington Post reports. And of course, Bush can simply skip the tribunal and keep anyone he pleases chained in legal limbo until they rot. Neither of the ballyhooed amendments affects this raw despotism. Meanwhile, American citizens can also be arbitrarily imprisoned indefinitely without charge or The Senate originally voted to cast Bush's captives into outer darkness forever, without a single legal recourse. But then a few prissy hens and bleeding hearts made the usual squawk about rights and law and all that pinko jazz. So the compromise of allowing a post-conviction appeal – for people who have been arbitrarily seized and held in isolation for years without charges, often tortured, humiliated and driven to madness or attempted suicide before facing a kangaroo court – was hastily cobbled together and presented to the world as a triumph of the human spirit and the American way. Ah, but what about the anti-torture amendment, sponsored by the Republican "maverick," Senator John McCain, and hailed by editorialists across the land as a great leap forward in the evolution of political morality? The effusions that have greeted this measure are puzzling. It does nothing more than re-state what is already the law of the land. American forces were already forbidden to subject any captive "to cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment" as prohibited by the U.S. Constitution and the UN Convention Against Torture. This regurgitation of existing law is the extent of the McCain amendment, along with an adjuration to interrogators to follow written guidelines for rough stuff set down by the Pentagon. But the partisans of atrocity in the Bush White House knew these laws when they set up the gulag's torture regimen in 2 This is borne out by a little-noticed announcement released by Bushist warlord Donald Rumsfeld earlier this month. The directive gives Rumsfeld – or anyone he deputizes to act for him – the power to "authorize exemptions" to those still-unformulated Pentagon guidelines restricting "inhumane" treatment, AFP reports. This mile-wide loophole makes a sick joke of the much-trumpeted crackdown on "abuse" in the Bush gulag. The dual amendments are little more than a cynical PR ploy: torture will be condemned in public, but quietly continued in the former KGB camps and other secret hellholes that Bush has strung across the world like a barbed-wire necklace. The Pentagon's own lawyers certainly understand the true nature of the game. As one told the Observer: "If detainees can't talk to lawyers or file cases, how will anyone ever find out if they have been abused?" No one ever will, of course; that's the point. With habeas corpus denied up front, the worst cases of torture and false imprisonment can now be buried forever in "indefinite detention;" the tribunals, with their access to appeals, will be reserved for open-and-shut showpieces. These draconian measures reach far beyond a handful of hard-core terrorists. According to the Pentagon's own figures, more than 21,000 innocent people have been caged without due process in Iraq alone, the Guardian reports. Hundreds more have been unjustly imprisoned around the world. A regime that thrives on fear requires a steady stream of "enemy combatants" to justify its unlimited "war powers." The belly of this beast will never be full. See annotations below: Senators Agree on Detainee Rights Senate Rebukes Bush on Iraq Policy McCain Amendment to 2006 Department of Defense Appropriations Bill Detainees Deserve Court Trials Democrats Provided Edge on Detainee Vote Rumsfeld can authorize exceptions to new "humane" interrogation directive Guantanamo Inmates to Lose All Rights Who They Are: The Double Standard that Underlies our Torture Policies Jose Padilla and The Death of Liberty White House declines to totally rule out torture We Do Not Torture' and Other Funny Stories Habeas Corpus Court Rules Military Panels to Try Detainees Domination by Detention Ruling Lets U.S. Restart Trials at Guantanamo Alberto Gonzales' Tortured Arguments for Reigning Above the Law Torture Treaty Doesn't Bar `Cruel, Inhuman' Tactics, Gonzales Says Bush Has Widened Authority of CIA to Kill Terrorists Special Ops Get OK to Initiate Its Own Missions, Coward's War in Yemen, Drones of Death, Gonzales Excludes CIA from Rules on Prisoners The Secret World of US Jails The Torture Memos: A Legal Narrative CIA Takes on Major Military Role: 'We're Killing People! Our Designated Killers A U.S. License to Kill CIA Weighs 'Targeted Killing' Missions US Again Uses Enemy Combatant Label to Deny Basic Rights [Bush Order] Lets CIA Freely Send Suspects to Foreign Jails Review: Torture and Truth and The Torture Papers The Torture Papers: Full Faith and Credit of the U.S. Government |









flood of torture and tyranny issuing from the White House. But the twinned amendments to a military spending bill have the curious effect of cancelling each other out: the anti-torture measure leaves Bush's tyranny intact, while the anti-tyranny measure will allow torture to continue unabated. This switcheroo, we are told by one of the scam's sponsors, "will reestablish moral high ground for the United States," the Washington Post reports.



