Is the
Trump Administration Censoring a New Book on
Government Torture?
By Alberto
Mora
August
17, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Three years ago, the Senate Intelligence
Committee released the summary of its torture
report, replete with shocking details about the
way the CIA once waged the war on terror. Yet it
was only part of the story. Of the full
6,000-page report, only 525 pages were released
to the public, and those were heavily redacted.
Today,
there is much we still don’t know about the
George W. Bush administration’s fateful decision
to use torture as a weapon of war, including how
the agencies applying the policy interacted with
one another. But a new book could offer some
insight—if the Trump administration ever permits
it to be released.
The book,
Unjustifiable Means,
is a forthcoming memoir by Mark Fallon, a former
official for the Defense Department and Naval
Criminal Investigative Service. Fallon retired
in 2010 after a distinguished 31-year
career—much of it on the front lines in the
fight against Al-Qaeda. Before 9/11, Fallon
worked with the task force that investigated the
first World Trade Center attack and was the
leader of the NCIS team that probed the bombing
of the U.S.S. Cole. After 9/11, he was NCIS
chief of counterintelligence for Europe,
Africa and the Middle East, and later served as
the deputy commander and chief investigator of
the DOD Criminal Investigation Task Force, which
gathered evidence to prosecute terrorism
suspects by military commissions at the U.S.
prison in
Guantánamo Bay.
Given Fallon’s insider background, his book may
be an incredibly important account of the policy
failures that damaged our national security by
helping boost jihadi recruitment, among other
things.
Yet the
book may never be released—or, if it is, may
appear only in a heavily redacted, bowdlerized
form. Fallon’s story is currently undergoing a
pre-publication security clearance review. Ten
agencies, including the Departments of Defense
and Justice and the CIA, the three agencies most
responsible for the torture fiasco, are combing
through it. And some, myself included, worry
that the censors may be more concerned about
protecting individual reputations than improper
disclosures. Fallon was initially promised this
process would take no longer than six weeks; it
has now dragged on for more than seven months,
with no end in sight.
As
someone who has closely followed—and
participated—in the war on terror, I’m dismayed
by the prospect of Fallon’s book being censored.
When I was the Navy’s general counsel, Fallon
was one of several NCIS officials who came to my
office in November 2002 to present me with his
concerns. He, along with NCIS Director David
Brant and others, had obtained evidence that
some Guantánamo detainees were being subjected
to unlawful physical abuse during
interrogations. If unchecked, they felt, the
abuse would rise to the level of torture.
Leaving aside whether torture was legal, they
also felt that the harsh interrogation
techniques being used were inherently
counterproductive and demonstrated shocking
incompetence. Lastly, they told me, the
brutality was rumored to have been authorized
“at the highest level” of the Bush
administration.
The
NCIS team in my office was composed of the types
of officials that our nation values most: tough,
courageous, capable and experienced people who
are eager to combat the enemy and—no less
important—faithful to the laws and values that
define our country. None of them wanted to
condone illegality, incompetence or dishonor, no
matter how high the rank of the official
ordering otherwise. By refusing to participate
in and speaking out against the abuse of enemy
captives, Fallon and his NCIS colleagues were
defending their integrity and our nation.
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Fallon, who believes that it is as important to
learn from our mistakes as from our successes,
continues to serve our nation.
Unjustifiable Means
delves into how key officials were able to
manipulate governmental processes to adopt
counterproductive policies; it recounts the
leadership, ethical and moral challenges that he
and others faced in telling truth to power and
illuminates how torture contributed to the
proliferation of the global violent extremism
that jeopardizes our national security.
These
lessons are critical. The Obama administration
commendably banned torture, but it was mistaken
in believing that we could erase the temptation
to use these harsh measures without meaningful
accountability. Now, we are led by a president
who is an unabashed torture enthusiast, is
appointing architects or apologists of the
Bush-era interrogation policies to key
government positions, has abandoned U.S.
leadership on human rights and treats police
brutality as a laughing matter. The slide
toward brutishness continues.
Unjustifiable Means
can help thwart that slide—if the Trump
administration would release it already, in its
unredacted form.
Alberto Mora, a former Navy general counsel, is
a senior fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School
Carr Center for Human Rights Policy.
This article was first published by
News Week
-
The
views expressed in this article are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily reflect the
opinions of Information Clearing House.