Torture’s Time for
Accountability
By Ray McGovern
December 21, 2014 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" -
I
trust I was not alone in seeing irony in
President Barack Obama’s public chiding of
Sony on Friday for caving in to hacker
demands to cancel distribution of its comedy
“The Interview” – about a fictional CIA plot
to assassinate North Korea’s real-life
leader Kim Jong-Un – after a retaliatory
cyber attack blamed on North Korea.
Rather than questioning
Sony’s wisdom in producing a film that jokes
about something as serious as assassinating
a nation’s leader, Obama upbraided Sony’s
producers for the decision to pull the movie
from theaters. “I wish they had spoken to me
first,” said Obama, warning them not to ”get
into a pattern in which you’re intimidated.”
The irony that I saw was
in Obama’s “tough-guy” advice just after he
had been so intimidated by the real-life CIA
that he could not muster the courage to fire
those who managed and carried out a
quite-unfunny policy of torture on an
industrial scale – much less try to find
some way to hold senior officials of the
Bush/Cheney administration accountable.
However great the financial loss to Sony’s
bottom line, the costs attributable to
Obama’s timidity are incalculably more
damaging to the United States.
Of course, the common
thread between assassinations and torture is
Official Washington’s disdain for
international law at least as it pertains to
the “exceptional” U.S. government. I suppose
it might have been even more ironic if
President Obama, who has overseen an actual
targeted assassination program for six
years, would have voiced concern about a
movie making light of a made-up
assassination plot.
(There was a time,
especially after the 1960s, when Americans
didn’t find the notion of murdering
political leaders very amusing.)
Anyway, veteran UPI editor
Arnaud de Borchgrave had it right on Friday
when he
noted that the CIA torture abuses
revealed in the report released by Senate
Intelligence Committee chairwoman Dianne
Feinstein on Dec. 9 have “given the U.S. a
geopolitical black eye of worldwide
dimensions. For the average Russian,
Chinese, Indian, Pakistani, African, Arab,
Iranian, or any other race or nationality,
America is now no better or worse than any
other global scoundrel.”
Not amused by the U.S.
government’s we’re-above-the-law arrogance,
North Korea’s U.N. ambassador has called on
the world body to investigate the CIA for
subjecting captured al-Qaeda operatives to
“brutal, medieval” forms of torture. (No,
that is not a joke. North Korea is lecturing
Washington on barbaric behavior.) It seems
clear that the damage done by the CIA’s
officially sanctioned torture and – equally
important – Obama’s decision to hold the
torturers harmless, leave an incalculably
large, indelible stain on the U.S.
reputation for defending human rights.
Crossing Our
Delaware
So what happens next,
after America now acknowledges
having crossed the Rubicon into the practice
of torture a decade ago? What to do after
these abhorrent “techniques,” such as
waterboarding and “rectal rehydration,” have
been exposed in a redacted
Senate Intelligence Committee report
based on CIA cables, emails and other
original documents? (I find myself
wondering whether even more sadistic
outrages would be detailed in the
un-redacted text of the Senate report.)
The question remains: Will
the top torture criminals and their obedient
lackeys – from George W. Bush and Dick
Cheney down to those CIA personnel and
contractors “just following orders” in the
CIA’s secret prisons – continue to escape
accountability? As things now stand, the sad
answer seems to be, “Yes, unless.”
At this point, those
responsible will continue to enjoy de facto
immunity unless (1) they travel abroad and
are apprehended and brought to justice under
the principle of “universal jurisdiction” by
governments more committed to enforcing
international law than our own; or (2)
unless we citizens summon the kind of
courage shown by the “winter soldiers” of
George Washington’s army who crossed the
Delaware and turned the tide of battle at
Christmastime 1776, leading – four cold
Christmases later – to American freedom from
British rule.
Worth noting in this
connection is that Gen. George Washington
imposed strong strictures against abuse of
captured British and Hessian prisoners,
strictures not observed by the English
forces who deemed the American soldiers
“traitors” and often confined them to
appalling conditions aboard prison ships and
in other unsanitary locations where more
than 10,000 died of neglect.
Thomas Paine, one of the
stalwart soldiers in Washington’s army,
famously wrote during that difficult winter
of 1776-77: “The summer soldier and the
sunshine patriot will, in this crisis,
shrink from the service of their country;
but he that stands it now, deserves the love
and thanks of all men and women.”
It might well be said of
us that “Now is the winter of our
discontent,” a time when rock-ribbed
American ideals have been trampled beneath
the boot of thuggish behavior and all that
seems left is a swaggering haughtiness more
fitting the British officer corps than our
courageous “rabble in arms.”
Today’s question is
whether we will be discontented enough to
expose ourselves to the elements, as those
“winter soldiers” were exposed, albeit
“elements” of a different kind, risks to our
reputations, impositions on our time,
commitment of our talents and resources. But
it may be our turn to repay the debt to
those soldiers who overcame great odds and
great hardships to create a nation based on
the rule of law, not the whim of men.
Though the Founders were
flawed individuals themselves – and the
early United States should not be idealized
as a place without grave injustices – there
was wisdom in many of their principles,
including a prohibition against “cruel and
unusual punishments” in the Eighth Amendment
to the U.S. Constitution.
They also made wise
observations about America’s proper place in
the world – as a beacon of liberty, not as
the world’s policeman. Recognizing the
dangers and corruption that could come from
excessive involvement in foreign conflicts,
the first three presidents – George
Washington, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson
– all warned against “entangling alliances.”
And years later, President John Quincy
Adams, who had watched the new nation from
its birth, warned that America “goes not
abroad seeking monsters to destroy.”
In my view, we dishonor
the memory of those courageous patriots if
we leave it to other countries to do our
justice for us regarding the torturers so
vividly depicted in the CIA cables revealed
by the Senate report. Rather, our generation
is being called on to rise up against the
practice of torture and other abuses – drone
killings, for example – in such a way as to
force a timid President to stop calling
felons “patriots” and, instead, do his duty
in holding them accountable. Stern
enforcement of both U.S. and international
law is the only deterrent against this kind
of unconscionable abuse happening again.
During the Watergate
scandal, senior officials went to jail for
lying and obstructing justice. Many other
politicians have faced stiff prison time for
relatively petty corruption. So why should
government leaders and their subordinates
get a walk on such a severe crime of state
as torture?
Presidential
Timidity
Left to his own devices,
President Obama is likely to keep putting
the White House stamp on the
stay-out-of-jail-free cards that he issued
to the torturers when he came into office
six years ago, wanting to “look forward, not
backward.”
I believed then – as I do
now – that it was because he feared for his
own hide (physically as well as politically)
that he carved out an exemption for the
torturers. So much for discharging his
Constitutional duty to “take care that the
laws are faithfully executed.”
Righting this wrong will
require the kind of moral courage Obama
seems to lack. True, his politically risky
rapprochement with Cuba announced earlier
this week provided a glimmer of hope that he
can finally be his own man. But let’s take
him at his word that his brand of leadership
comes into play only when we citizens light
a fire under him. Let us gather the
kindling, start the fire, and respond to his
challenge to make him do the right thing.
As is painfully obvious by
this stage, the battle will be uphill,
largely because our supine media provide
such thin gruel that, as a result, most
Americans are malnourished on the truth. I
suppose one can get used to virtually any
indignity. Nonetheless, for me it remains
highly disturbing to watch “mainstream
media” give the lion’s share of air time to
charlatans like Dick Cheney who, 13 years
after 9/11, continue to play on the trauma
of that fateful day to elicit the kind of
vengeful spirit that can in far too many
minds justify the unspeakable.
No matter that ethicists
have traditionally placed torture, like rape
or slavery, in the moral category of
intrinsic evil – always wrong – a premise
embedded in the UN Convention Against
Torture to which the United States is a
signatory. No matter that torture does not
yield reliable intelligence. No matter that
CIA documents show how CIA directors Michael
Hayden and Leon Panetta lied when they told
us that information from “enhanced
interrogation techniques” led to the finding
and killing of Osama bin Laden. [See Gareth
Porter’s “How
the CIA Covered Up Its Lie on Torture and
bin Laden.”]
The first (and, so far as
I know, the last) time Obama showed any
spine dealing with the CIA was just before
he became president in January 2009, when he
demonstrably dissed then-CIA Director
Michael Hayden. Hayden had been going around
town telling folks that he warned the
president-elect “personally and forcefully”
that if Obama authorized an investigation
into controversial activities like
waterboarding, “no one in Langley will ever
take a risk again.” (My source for this is
what we former intelligence officers used to
call an “A-1 source” – completely reliable
with excellent access to the information).
Consequently, Hayden did
not merit a mention on Jan. 9, 2009, when
President-elect Obama formally introduced
Leon Panetta as his choice to replace Hayden
as CIA director and Dennis Blair as director
of national intelligence. Obama did announce
that Mike McConnell, whom Blair replaced,
had been given a sinecure/consolation prize
— a seat on the President’s Foreign
Intelligence Advisory Board. McConnell got
the obligatory thank you; but not Hayden.
It was not only cheeky,
but more than a little disingenuous that
Hayden should think to advise Obama
“personally and forcefully” against
investigating the illegal activities
authorized by President George W. Bush,
since Hayden’s role in torture was already
clear from
publicly available information.
Hayden had loudly defended
what he liked to call “high-end”
interrogation techniques like
waterboarding. (And last week, just three
days after the Senate report was released,
Georgetown law professor David Cole
drew from it to recount “just three
examples” of false and unsupported
testimony” by Hayden.)
It was for services
rendered that Bush and Cheney picked Hayden
to head the CIA. As Director of NSA (1999 to
2005) he saluted sharply when Cheney told
him to
redact the words “probable cause” from
the Fourth Amendment.
In sum, Hayden’s
transgressions are book-length, but – as
with Professor Cole’s article – space
limitations prevent anything close to a
complete rendering, so to speak. Apparently
fearful of going beyond sending Hayden to
the showers, Obama hired Leon Panetta to
replace Hayden to be nominally CIA director
but, in actuality, its well-connected
protector.
Initially, with Panetta
there seemed to be reason to expect hope and
change; that expectation was short-lived. A
year before Obama picked him, Panetta had
written:
“We cannot simply suspend
[American ideals of human rights] in the
name of national security. Those who support
torture may believe that we can abuse
captives in certain select circumstances and
still be true to our values. But that is a
false compromise.
“We either believe in the
dignity of the individual, the rule of law,
and the prohibition of cruel and unusual
punishment, or we don’t. There is no middle
ground. We cannot and we must not use
torture under any circumstances. We are
better than that.”
Sadly, it turns out we
were not, in fact, “better than that” – and
neither was Panetta. For his part, Panetta
discharged his assigned role to defend CIA
torturers with enthusiasm – even
overreaching in making false claims about
the efficacy of “enhanced interrogation
techniques.”
On that key issue, CIA
Director John Brennan, speaking on Dec. 11,
2014, was more cautious, claiming the
effectiveness of “enhanced interrogation
techniques” was “unknowable.” At which point
Sen. Feinstein moved immediately to set the
record straight, tweeting that, on the
contrary, it was well known that the useful
intelligence from interrogation was gained
from traditional interrogation approaches,
well BEFORE “enhancements” were applied.
On the day after the
Senate Intelligence Community report was
released, lame-duck committee member Mark
Udall sharply criticized Brennan for “lying”
about the efficacy of torture. Udall’s
parting shot was to decry the President for
his permissive attitude toward Brennan and
the CIA and for “making no effort at all to
rein it in.”
This appraisal has been
seconded by Sen. Carl Levin, D-Michigan, who
openly complained last Saturday that
“Brennan has gotten away with frustrating
congressional oversight. He shouldn’t have
gotten away with it, but so far he has.”
Obama Agonistes
Will the President
continue to do his best to hold harmless
those involved in torture? I expect he will
– out of the fear for the consequences if he
tried to “rein in” the CIA. In other words,
although Obama came into office determined
not to allow himself to be intimidated by
Hayden, he nonetheless seem to have taken
Hayden’s threat seriously.
Whether Obama’s fateful
decision only to “look forward” on the issue
of torture was the result of simple
cowardice or a naïve calculation that
shoving torture under the rug would help him
work out a modus vivendi with Republican
leaders is, at this point, academic.
The reality is that Obama
blew his chance to deal with this profoundly
moral, as well as legal, issue of torture at
a time when this was widely expected of him.
As for the Republicans whose cooperation he
so patently craved, they appear to have seen
in his unmistakable reluctance to expose and
pursue the major crimes of Bush and Cheney a
welcome sign of weakness.
Now, despite his
transparent attempts to keep his distance
from the horrid disclosures in the Senate
committee report, Obama is now enmeshed in a
wide web of consequential lies. He is, ipso
facto, part of a cover-up that is poisoning
the minds of too-trusting Americans, while
putting a big hole in what’s left of
America’s reputation as a force for good in
the world. He could not do this without the
help of an enabling media.
What are we to make of the
media? Decades ago, in an unusual moment of
candor, former CIA Director William Colby
was quoted as saying the CIA “owns everyone
of any significance in the major media?” How
much truth continues to lie beneath Colby’s
hyperbole? Why is it so easy to simply
mention 9/11 to evoke an attitude of
vengeance? Why does that include
acquiescence in horrid torture techniques,
and a predisposition to believe Cheney’s
lies, rather than accept the reality that
our leaders ordered and conducted heinous
crimes?
In my view, the polls show
an acceptance on the part of most Americans
for torture mostly because so many Americans
simply do not read. And this is precisely
why Sen. Feinstein and Sen. John McCain both
appealed plaintively for us to “just read
the report.”
In her trademark
perceptive way, the New Yorker’s Jane Mayer
laments that, when the awful facts about CIA
torture came out last week, President Obama
shied away from the chance given him to set
the record straight. She explained it this
way:
“It appeared that Obama
and Brennan had a single purpose, which was
to not ‘lose Langley,’ … meaning that they
didn’t want to alienate those still working
at the C.I.A. This calculation – that C.I.A.
officers … are too fragile for criticism,
too valuable to fire, and too patriotic to
prosecute – somehow tied the Obama
Administration in knots.” Mayer might have
added that CIA operatives seem to be, in
Obama’s ken, “too dangerous to get crosswise
with.”
Similar insights jump out
of a Dec. 15
article by Peter Baker and Mark Mazzetti
of the New York Times. They write that when
Brennan was working at the White House,
neither Obama nor Brennan was eager to take
on the C.I.A. very often. “The C.I.A. gets
what it needs,” Obama declared at one early
meeting, according to people there. “He
didn’t want them to feel like he was an
enemy,” said a former aide.
Brennan, for his part, was
protective of CIA interests. When Panetta,
negotiated an agreement with the Senate
Intelligence Committee for an inquiry into
torture, Brennan erupted, “It did not take
long to get ugly,” Panetta recalled in his
memoir. “Brennan and I even exchanged sharp
words.”
Brennan recognized at once
that such an inquiry could well become a
very large fly in the ointment. He was right
about that, but he was unable to renege on
the deal. After becoming CIA director last
year, though, Brennan fought constantly with
Democrats on the committee over the torture
report and attempted to redact it to a
fare-thee-well.
Relations worsened when
senators accused the CIA of penetrating a
computer network designated for the
committee’s use, a charge that Brennan
initially denied. In the end, though, the
CIA inspector general admonished five agency
officers and Brennan apologized. Relations
remained raw; Obama stayed above the fray.
On Saturday, New York
Times
reported that the panel appointed by
Brennan to investigate the CIA’s search of a
computer network used by the Senate staffers
investigating CIA’s use of torture will
(surprise, surprise) return a verdict of not
guilty. Brennan’s panel reportedly has
decided to defend the CIA searchers’ actions
as lawful and, in some cases, done at
Brennan’s behest, in effect reversing the
most significant conclusions of an earlier
investigation by CIA’s own inspector
general.
On the issue of torture’s
effectiveness, according to Baker and
Mazzetti, the President’s advisers doubt
that he believes the interrogation program
yielded useful intelligence, but that he was
unwilling to contradict Brennan.
A Natural Ally in
McCain
Does the fact that Sen.
John McCain was tortured as a POW, after his
aircraft was downed over North Vietnam, give
him unusual credibility on the issue of
torture? You bet it does. Breaking ranks
with fellow Republicans, defensive CIA
directors and a media (including Hollywood)
enamored of “enhanced interrogation
techniques,” McCain followed Sen. Feinstein
to the Senate floor after she introduced and
distributed the report on CIA torture. He
was very supportive.
More in sorrow than in
anger, he conceded, “The truth is sometimes
a hard pill to swallow. It sometimes causes
us difficulties at home and abroad. … But
the American people are entitled to it,
nonetheless. …
“There was considerable
misinformation … about what was and wasn’t
achieved using these [enhanced
interrogation] methods … There was a good
amount of misinformation used in 2011 to
credit the use of these methods with the
death of Osama bin Laden. And there is, I
fear, misinformation being used today to
prevent the release of this report,
disputing its findings and warning about the
security consequences of their public
disclosure. …
“What might come as a
surprise … is how little these practices did
to aid our efforts to bring 9/11 culprits to
justice and to find and prevent terrorist
attacks today and tomorrow. That could be a
real surprise, since it contradicts the many
assurances provided by intelligence
officials on the record and in private that
enhanced interrogation techniques were
indispensable in the war against terrorism.
And I suspect the objection of those same
officials to the release of this report is
really focused on that disclosure –
torture’s ineffectiveness – because we gave
up much in the expectation that torture
would make us safer. Too much.
“Obviously, we need
intelligence to defeat our enemies, but we
need reliable intelligence. Torture produces
more misleading information than actionable
intelligence. And what the advocates of
harsh and cruel interrogation methods have
never established is that we couldn’t have
gathered as good or more reliable
intelligence from using humane methods.
“The most important lead
we got in the search for bin Laden came from
using conventional interrogation methods. I
think it is an insult to the many
intelligence officers who have acquired good
intelligence without hurting or degrading
prisoners to assert we can’t win this war
without such methods. Yes, we can and we
will.”
Thus, Obama would not be
without powerful allies were he to summon
the courage to bring CIA torturers to
account. It appears, however, that the
President still lives in fear of the shady
characters at Langley.
Hence, it is up to us to
mobilize the kind of action needed to change
Obama’s mind. Op-eds, speeches, interviews
are fine, but without action, nothing is
going to happen. We need to figure out how
best to confront this issue and what
action(s) seem appropriate. And then we must
act – like winter soldiers.
Ray McGovern works with Tell
the Word, a publishing arm of the ecumenical
Church of the Saviour in inner-city
Washington. His experience, both as an Army
Infantry/Intelligence officer and as a CIA
analyst spanned 27 years. He now serves on
the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence
Professionals for Sanity (VIPS).