U.S.
Shields Its Torturers and War Criminals, Now
Officially Honors Them
By Glenn
Greenwald
December 07, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
Intercept" -
As vice
president, Dick Cheney was a prime architect of
the worldwide torture regime implemented by the
U.S. government (which
extended far beyond waterboarding), as well
as the invasion and destruction of Iraq, which
caused the deaths of
at least 500,000 people and
more likely over a million. As such, he is
one of the planet’s most notorious war
criminals.
President Obama
made the decision in early 2009 to
block the Justice Department from criminally
investigating and prosecuting Cheney and his
fellow torturers, as well as to
protect them from
foreign investigations and
even civil liability sought by torture
victims. Obama did that notwithstanding a
campaign decree that even top Bush officials
are subject to the rule of law and, more
importantly, notwithstanding
a treaty signed in 1984 by Ronald Reagan
requiring that all signatory states criminally
prosecute their own torturers. Obama’s
immunizing Bush-era torturers converted torture
from a global taboo and decades-old crime into
a reasonable, debatable policy question, which
is why
so many
GOP candidates
are now
openly suggesting
its
use.
But now,
the Obama administration has moved from legally
protecting Bush-era war criminals to honoring
and gushing over them in public. Yesterday, the
House of Representatives
unveiled a marble bust of former Vice
President Cheney, which — until a person of
conscience vandalizes or destroys it — will
reside in Emancipation Hall of the U.S. Capitol.
At the
unveiling ceremony, Cheney was, in
the playful words of NPR, “lightly roasted”
— as though he’s some sort of grumpy though
beloved avuncular stand-up comic. Along
with George W. Bush, one of the speakers in
attendance was Vice President Joe Biden, who
spoke movingly of Cheney’s kind and generous
soul:
As
I look around this room and up on the
platform, I want to say thank you for
letting me crash your family reunion. I’m
afraid I’ve blown his cover. I actually like
Dick Cheney. … I can say without fear of
contradiction, there’s never one single time
been a harsh word, not one single time in
our entire relationship.
Leading
American news outlets
got in on the fun, as they always do, using
the joviality of the event to promote their news
accounts and generate visits to their sites: