America
Revisits the Dark Side
Candidates Compete to Promise the Most Torture and
Slaughter
By Rebecca Gordon
January 07,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Tom
Dispatch"-
They’re back!
From the
look of the presidential campaign, war crimes are
back on the American agenda. We really shouldn’t be
surprised, because American officials got away with
it last time -- and in the case of the drone wars
continue to get away with it today. Still,
there’s nothing like the heady combination of a
“populist” Republican race for the presidency and a
national hysteria over terrorism to make Americans
want to reach for those “enhanced interrogation
techniques.” That, as critics have long argued, is
what usually happens if war crimes aren’t
prosecuted.
In August
2014, when President Obama finally
admitted that “we tortured some folks,” he added
a warning. The recent history of U.S. torture, he
said, “needs to be understood and accepted. We have
to as a country take responsibility for that so
hopefully we don’t do it again in the future.” By
pinning the responsibility for torture on all of us
“as a country,” Obama avoided holding any of the
actual perpetrators to account.
Unfortunately, “hope” alone will not stymie a serial
war criminal -- and the president did not even heed
his own warning. For seven years his administration
has done everything except help the country “take
responsibility” for torture and other war crimes. It
looked the other way when it comes to holding
accountable those who set up and ran the CIA’s
large-scale torture operations at its “black
sites” around the world. It never brought
charges against
those who ordered torture at Guantánamo. It
prosecuted no one, above all not the top officials
of the Bush administration.
Now, in the
endless run-up to the 2016 presidential elections,
we’ve been treated to some pretty strange
gladiatorial extravaganzas, with more to come in
2016. In these peculiarly American spectacles,
Republican candidates hurl themselves at one another
in a frenzied effort to be seen as the candidate
most likely to ignore the president’s wan hope and
instead “do it again in the future.” As a result,
they are promising to commit a whole range of
crimes, from torture to the slaughter of civilians,
for which the leaders of some nations would find
themselves hauled into international court as war
criminals. But “war criminal” is a label reserved
purely for people we loathe, not for us. To
paraphrase former President Richard Nixon, if
the United States does it, it’s not a crime.
In the wake
of the brutal attacks in Paris and San Bernardino,
the promises being openly made to commit future
crimes have only grown more forthright. A few
examples from the presidential campaign trail should
suffice to make the point:
* Ted Cruz
guarantees that “we” will “utterly destroy
ISIS.” How will we do it? “We will
carpet bomb them into oblivion” -- that is, “we”
will saturate an area with munitions in such a way
that everything and everyone on the ground is
obliterated. Of such a bombing campaign against the
Islamic State, he told a cheering crowd at the
Rising Tide Summit, “I don’t know if sand can
glow in the dark, but we’re going to find out.”
(It’s hard not to take this as a reference to the
use of nuclear weapons, though in the bravado
atmosphere of the present Republican campaign a lot
of detailed thought is undoubtedly not going into
any such proposals.)
* Kindly
retired pediatric neurosurgeon Ben Carson evidently
has similar thoughts. When
pressed by CNN co-moderator Hugh Hewitt in the
most recent Republican debate on whether he was
“tough” enough to be “okay with the deaths of
thousands of innocent children and civilian[s],”
Carson replied, “You got it. You got it.” He even
presented a future campaign against the Islamic
State in which “thousands” of children might die as
an example of the same kind of tough love a surgeon
sometimes exhibits when facing a difficult case.
It’s like telling a child, he assured Hewitt, that
“we’re going to have to open your head up and take
out this tumor. They’re not happy about it, believe
me. And they don’t like me very much at that point.
But later on, they love me.” So, presumably, will
those “dead innocent children” in Syria -- once they
get over the shock of being dead.
* Jeb
Bush’s approach
brought what, in Republican circles, passes for
nuance to the discussion of future war crimes
policy. What Washington needs, he argued, is “a
strategy” and what stands in the way of the Obama
administration developing one is an excessive
concern with the niceties of international law. As
he put it, “We need to get the lawyers off the back
of the warfighters. Right now under President
Obama, we’ve created... this standard that is so
high that it’s impossible to be successful in
fighting ISIS.” Meanwhile, Jeb has
surrounded himself with a familiar clique of
neocon “advisers” -- people like George W. Bush’s
former Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz
and his former Deputy National Security Advisor
Stephen Hadley, who planned for and advocated the
illegal U.S. war against Iraq, which touched off a
regional war with
devastating human
consequences.
* And then
there is Donald Trump. Where to start? As a simple
baseline for his future commander-in-chiefdom, he
stated without a blink that he would bring back
torture. “Would I approve waterboarding?” he
told a cheering crowd at a November rally in
Columbus, Ohio. “You bet your ass I would -- in a
heartbeat.” And for Trump, that would only be the
beginning. He assured his listeners vaguely but
emphatically that he “would approve more than that,”
leaving to their imaginations whether he was
thinking of excruciating “stress positions,”
relentless exposure to loud noise, sleep
deprivation, the straightforward
killing of prisoners, or what the CIA used to
delicately
refer to as “rectal rehydration.” Meanwhile, he
just hammers on when it comes to torture. “Don't kid
yourself, folks. It works, okay? It works. Only a
stupid person would say it doesn't work.”
Only a
stupid person -- like, perhaps, one of the
members of the Senate Intelligence Committee who
carefully studied the CIA’s grim torture documents
for years, despite the Agency’s foot-dragging,
opposition, and outright interference (including
computer hacking) --
would say that. But why even bother to argue
about whether torture works? The point, Trump
claimed, was that the very existence of the Islamic
State means that someone needs to be tortured. “If
it doesn’t work,” he told that Ohio crowd, “they
deserve it anyway.”
Only a few
days later, he triumphantly sallied even further
into war criminal territory. He declared himself
ready to truly hit the Islamic State where it hurts.
“The other thing with the terrorists,” he
told Fox News, “is you have to take out their
families, when you get these terrorists, you have to
take out their families. They care about their
lives, don't kid yourself. When they say they don't
care about their lives, you have to take out their
families.” Because it’s a well-known fact -- in
Trumpland at least -- that nothing makes people less
likely to behave violently than murdering their
parents and children. And it certainly doesn’t
matter, when Trump advocates it, that murder is a
crime.
The
Problem with Impunity
Not that
you’d know it in this country, but the common thread
in all of these proposed responses to the Islamic
State isn’t just the usual Republican hawkishness.
Each one represents a serious violation of U.S.
laws, international laws of war, and/or treaties and
conventions that the United States has signed and
ratified under Republican as well as Democratic
presidents. Most campaign trail discussions of plans
-- both Republican and
Democratic -- to defeat ISIS have focused only
on instrumental questions: Would carpet bombing,
torture, or making sand glow in the dark work?
Candidates
and reporters alike have ignored the obvious larger
point -- if, that is, we weren’t living in a country
that had given itself a blanket pass on the issue of
war crimes. Carpet-bombing cities, torturing
prisoners, and rendering lands uninhabitable are all
against the law. They are, in fact, grave crimes.
That even critics of these comments will not
identify such potential acts as war crimes can
undoubtedly be attributed, at least in part, to the
fact that no one -- other than a
few low-level
military personnel and a
CIA whistleblower who spoke publicly about the
Agency’s torture agenda -- has been prosecuted in
the U.S. for the startling array of crimes already
committed in the so-called War on Terror.
President
Obama set the stage for this failure as early as
January 2009, just before his first inauguration.
He
told ABC’s George Stephanopoulos that, when it
came to the possible prosecution of CIA officials
for U.S. torture policies, “We need to look forward
as opposed to looking backwards.” He didn’t, he
assured Stephanopoulos, want the “extraordinarily
talented people” at the Agency “who are working very
hard to keep Americans safe… to suddenly feel like
they've got to spend all their time looking over
their shoulders and lawyering up.” As it turned out,
lawyering up was never a problem. In the end,
Attorney General Eric Holder
declined to charge any CIA personnel, closing
the only two cases the Justice Department had even
opened. Nor did any of the top officials
responsible for the “enhanced interrogation”
program, including President George W. Bush, Vice
President Dick Cheney, Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld, or CIA Director George Tenet,
need to waste a cent on a lawyer. Instead, they’re
now
happily
publishing
their
memoirs. Or, in the cases of Jay Bybee and John
Yoo, the Justice Department
authors of some of the more infamous “torture
memos,”
serving as a federal judge or
occupying an endowed chair at the University of
California, Berkeley, School of Law, respectively.
On December
1, 2015, perhaps driven to frustration by the Obama
administration’s ultimate failure to act, Human
Rights Watch (HRW)
released a 153-page report titled “No More
Excuses.” In it, the organization detailed the
specific crimes relating to that CIA torture program
for which a dozen high-level officials of the Bush
administration could have been brought to trial and
called for their prosecution. HRW pointed out that
such prosecutions are not, in fact, a matter of
choice. They are required by international law (even
if the alleged criminals have run the planet’s last
superpower). For example, the
United Nations Convention against Torture, a key
treaty that the United States signed in 1988 (under
President Ronald Reagan) and finally ratified in
1994 (under President Bill Clinton), specifically
requires our nation to take “effective legislative,
administrative, judicial, or other measures to
prevent acts of torture in any territory under its
jurisdiction.”
It doesn’t
matter if there’s a war on, or if there’s internal
unrest. The Convention says, “No exceptional
circumstances whatsoever, whether a state of war or
a threat of war, internal political instability or
any other public emergency, may be invoked as a
justification of torture.”
Whenever
torture is used, it’s a violation of that treaty,
and that makes it a crime. When it’s used against
prisoners of war, it’s also a violation of the 1949
Geneva Conventions and therefore a war crime. No
exceptions.
But when
Obama acknowledged that “we tortured some folks,” he
claimed an exception for American torture. He
cautioned us against overreacting. “It’s important
for us not to feel too sanctimonious in retrospect
about the tough job that those folks had,” he said,
referring to the CIA’s corps of torturers. He
pointed to American fear -- of the very sort we’re
seeing again over San Bernardino -- as an
exculpatory factor, reminding us of just how
frightened all of us, including CIA operatives, were
in the days after 9/11.
As it
happens, whatever the former constitutional law
professor in the White House or hotel-builder Donald
Trump may believe, torture remains illegal. It makes
no difference how frightened people may be of
potential terrorists. After all, it’s partly because
people do wicked things when they are afraid that we
make laws in the first place -- so that, when fear
clouds our minds, we can be reminded of what we
decided was right in less frightening times. That’s
why the Convention against Torture says “no
exceptional circumstances whatsoever” excuse such
acts.
But the
U.N. Convention is just a treaty, right? It’s not
really a law. In fact, when the United
States ratifies a treaty, it becomes part of
American law under
Article VI of our Constitution, which states
that the Constitution itself and
“… all
treaties made, or which shall be made, under the
authority of the United States, shall be the supreme
law of the land; and the judges in every state shall
be bound thereby, anything in the Constitution or
laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding.”
So even if
torture did work, it would still be illegal.
War
Crimes for the New Year
What about
the other proposals we’ve heard from Republican
candidates? Some of them are certainly war crimes.
“Carpet bombing,” a
metaphor that describes an all-too-real
air-power nightmare (as many Vietnamese, Laotians,
and Cambodians learned during our wars in
Indochina), means the saturation of an entire area
with enough bombs to destroy everything standing
without regard for the lives of anyone who might be
on the ground. It is illegal under the laws of war,
because it makes no distinction between civilians
and combatants.
Because
aerial bombardment hadn’t even been invented in 1907
when the Hague Conventions were signed, they don’t
name carpet bombing specifically in a list of
prohibited “means of injuring the enemy, sieges, and
bombardments.” Nevertheless, at the center of the
Hague Conventions, as with all the laws and customs
of war, lies the crucial distinction between
combatants and civilians. To destroy an entire
populated area in order to eliminate a handful of
fighters violates the long-held and internationally
recognized principle of proportionality.
The Hague
Conventions also put into the written international
legal code long-held beliefs about the importance of
distinguishing between civilians and combatants in
war. Ben Carson’s willingness to allow the deaths of
thousands of civilians and children in the pursuit
of ISIS fundamentally violates exactly that
principle.
In another
shameful exception, the United States has never
ratified a 1977 addition to the Geneva Conventions
that specifically outlaws carpet bombing. Additional
Protocol 1 specifically addresses the protection of
civilians during warfare. Apart from such U.S.
allies as Israel and Turkey, 174 countries have
signed Protocol 1, explicitly making carpet bombing
a war crime.
If the
United States has not ratified Protocol 1, does that
mean it is free to violate its provisions? Not
necessarily. When the vast majority of nations agree
to such an accord, it can take on the power of “
international customary law” -- a set of principles
that have the force of law, whether or not they are
written down and ratified. The International
Committee of the Red Cross
maintains a list of these rules of law. One
section of these explicitly states that
“indiscriminate attacks,” including “area
bombardment,” are indeed illegal under customary
law.
Senator
Cruz’s promise to discover whether or not sand glows
in the dark, presumably through the use of nuclear
weapons, would violate the 1907 Hague Convention’s
prohibitions on employing “poison or poisoned
weapons” and on the use of “arms, projectiles, or
material calculated to cause unnecessary suffering.”
It no more matters that the United States ratified
this convention over a century ago than that the
Constitution is more than 200 years old. Jeb Bush’s
suggestion that we get the lawyers “off the back of
the warfighters” notwithstanding, both remain the
law of the land.
That
they don’t appear to have the force of law in the
United States, that the description of possible
future war crimes can rouse crowds to a cheering
frenzy in this political season, represents a
remarkable failure of political will; in particular,
the willingness of the Obama administration to call
a crime a crime and act accordingly. Globally, it
is a failure of power rather than of the law.
Prosecuting a
former African autocrat or
Serbian leader for war crimes is obviously a
very different and far less daunting matter than
bringing to justice top officials of the planet’s
only superpower. That is made all the more difficult
because, under George W. Bush, the United States
informed the world that it would never ratify the
accords that set up the
International Criminal Court.
In
the Glare of San Bernardino
Human
Rights Watch released its report on December 1st.
The next day, a married couple, Syed Rizwan Farook
and Tashfeen Malik,
attacked a holiday party at San Bernardino’s
Department of Public Health, where Farook worked.
They killed 14 people before dying in a police
shootout. It was a horrific crime and it appears
that the two were, at least in part,
inspired by the social media presence of the
Islamic State (even if they were not in any way
directed by that group). Not surprisingly, the HRW
report sank like a stone from public view. With it
went their key recommendations: that a special
prosecutor be appointed to investigate and bring to
trial those responsible for CIA torture practices
and that U.S. torture victims be guaranteed redress
in American courts, something both the Bush and
Obama administrations
have fought fiercely, even though it is a key
requirement of the U.N. Convention against Torture.
As last
year ended, the fear machine had
cranked up once again, and Americans were being
reminded by those who aspire to lead us that no
price is too high to pay for our security -- as long
as it’s paid by
somebody else. Expect more of the same in 2016.
And yet it
is precisely now, when we are most afraid, that our
leaders -- present and future -- should not be
stoking our fears. They should instead be reminding
us that there is something more valuable -- and more
achievable -- than perfect security. They should be
encouraging us not to seek a
cowardly exception from the laws of war, but to
be brave and abide by them. So here’s the challenge:
Will we find the courage to resist the fear machine
this time? Will we find the will to prosecute the
war crimes of the past and prevent the ones our
candidates are screaming for? Or will we allow our
nation to remain what it has become: a terrible and
terrifying exception to the international rule of
law?
Rebecca Gordon, a
TomDispatch regular, teaches in the
philosophy department at the University of San
Francisco. She is the author of
Mainstreaming Torture: Ethical Approaches in the
Post-9/11 United States and the forthcoming
American Nuremberg: The U.S. Officials Who Should
Stand Trial for Post-9/11 War Crimes.
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Copyright
2016 Rebecca Gordon |