Bland Monster Jeb Bush “Proud” of His Brother’s
Torturing People
By Jon Schwarz
August 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "The
Intercept" -
Maybe you’ve seen that Jeb Bush has refused
to rule out more torture if he’s elected president. But what’s
gone unnoticed — perhaps because Bush is so dreary it’s hard to
listen to him without losing consciousness — is he actually said
he’s “proud” of his brother’s torture policies.
BUSH: I do think, in general, that torture is not
appropriate. It’s not as effective, uh, and the change
of policy that my brother did and was then put into executive
order form by the president was the proper thing to do.
I also would say that right after 9/11, I mean, we were attacked,
and, uh, my presid — my brother — and I’m not saying this
because I’m a Bush, I’m saying this because I love this country
just like everybody in this room —
I’m proud of what he
did to create a secure environment for our country.
Here are just a few of the things that Jeb Bush is
“proud” of:
• The torture of people who were victims of
mistaken identity. This included
Khalid el-Masri, a German citizen, who was picked up in
Macedonia while on vacation and then flown to Afghanistan’s “Salt
Pit” black site, where the CIA proudly tortured him. When the CIA
realized they had the wrong person, they flew him to Albania and
proudly dumped him on the side of the road. The Senate Intelligence
Committee’s report on torture made a “conservative calculation” that
22 percent of the CIA detainees were cases of proud, mistaken
identity.
• Around
100 U.S. prisoners died during interrogations. A CIA
interrogator proudly told a detainee he would never go on trial
because “we can never let the world know what I have done to you.”
• The proud tradition of waterboarding, proudly
embraced by his brother, was also a favorite torture method of
Imperial Japan during World War II, Latin American dictatorships,
and Cambodia’s genocidal Khmer Rouge. The U.S. convicted a Japanese
officer of war crimes for using it. Many of the torture techniques
used by the CIA and the military were proudly
modeled
on Chinese Communist techniques used during the Korean War to obtain
false confessions from American prisoners.
• The CIA proudly subjected at least five
prisoners to “rectal rehydration” or “rectal feeding.” According to
the Senate report, one prisoner’s lunch of “hummus, pasta with
sauce, nuts, and raisins was ‘pureed’ and rectally infused,” thus
creating a secure environment for our country.
• An FBI interrogator
explained in 2008 that U.S. torture policies had proudly “helped
to recruit a new generation of jihadist martyrs” and predicted that
“a day of reckoning will come.” Cherif Kouachi, one of the two
brothers who killed the staff of Charlie Hebdo, was
motivated to become a jihadist by the U.S. torture of
prisoners at Abu Ghraib.
Despite all this, it should not go unnoticed that
during Bush’s pro-torture remarks he was wearing a very nice,
understated tie.
Jeb Bush, Hosted By Defense Contractor-Backed
Group, Calls Iraq War “A Pretty Good Deal”
By Lee Fang
August 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
- Republican presidential candidate
Jeb Bush said today that the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq to
topple Saddam Hussein was a “pretty good deal.”
Bush was speaking at an event
sponsored by Americans for Peace, Prosperity and
Security (APPS), a group formed and backed by a number
of people associated with major defense contractors.
Video of Bush’s remark was
posted online by an attendee of the event:
According to journalist Alan He, Bush also
criticized efforts to reform the National Security
Agency’s dragnet metadata surveillance program, telling the
audience that it was a “mistake to repeal the metadata
provisions of the Patriot Act.”
As The Intercept previously
reported, the APPS is advised by Raytheon’s Stephen
Hadley, BAE Systems’ Rich Ashooh, former SAIC chief
executive Walt Havenstein, among other defense contractors
and defense industry
lobbyists. APPS was formed earlier this year as a
pressure group to “help elect a president who supports
American engagement and a strong foreign policy.”
APPS, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, does not
disclose its donor information. The chairman of the group,
former House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Mike
Rogers, R-Mich., a hawkish politician who has called for
greater U.S. military involvement in a number of conflicts
around the world, now works for a number of private
interests, though he has
refused to disclose them.
Costs associated with the war in Iraq,
including medical treatment for war veterans, could grow to
more than
$6 trillion over the next decade, according to a study
by the Watson Institute for International Studies at Brown
University. The war killed at least 134,000 Iraqi civillians,
as well as nearly 8,000 U.S. forces and contractors,
according to the
study.
The period following 9/11, including the
war in Iraq, has been a boon for the defense contracting
industry. From 2001 through 2010, the stock prices of major
defense firms surged
67 percent as the U.S. increased defense spending to
manage the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as well new
homeland security spending.
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