The Scum at the Top
Commentary on the Rats in Washington
Bush Confesses to War Crimes
By Nicolas J S Davies
Online Journal
© September 11, 2006
George W. Bush's speech on September 6 amounted
to a public confession to criminal violations of
the 1996 War Crimes Act. He implicitly admitted
authorizing disappearances, extrajudicial imprisonment,
torture, transporting prisoners between countries
and denying the International Committee of the Red
Cross access to prisoners.
These are all serious violations of the Geneva
Conventions. The War Crimes Act makes grave
breaches of the Geneva Conventions and all
violations of Common Article 3 punishable by
fines, imprisonment or, if death results to the
victim, the death penalty.
At the same time, Bush asked Congress to amend
the War Crimes Act in order to retroactively
protect him and other U.S. officials from
prosecution for these crimes, and from civil
lawsuits arising from them. He justified this
on the basis that "our military and intelligence
personnel involved in capturing and questioning
terrorists could now be at risk of prosecution
under the War Crimes Act . . . ," and insisted
that “passing this legislation ought to be the
top priority” for Congress between now and the
election in November.
His profession of concern for military and
intelligence personnel was utterly misleading.
Military personnel charged with war crimes have
always been, and continue to be, prosecuted under
the Universal Code of Military Justice rather
than the War Crimes Act; and the likelihood of
CIA interrogators being identified and prosecuted
under the act is remote -- they are protected by
the secrecy that surrounds all CIA operations.
The only real beneficiaries of such amendments
to the War Crimes Act would be Bush himself and
other civilian officials who have assisted him
in these crimes -- Rumsfeld, Cheney, Gonzales,
Rice, Cambone, Tenet, Goss, Negroponte and an
unfortunately long list of their deputies and
advisors.
Bush asked Congress to do three things in these
amendments. “First, I am asking Congress to list
the specific recognizable offenses that would be
considered crimes under the War Crimes Act so our
personnel can know clearly what is prohibited in
the handling of terrorist enemies.”
One prong of the U.S. government’s attack on the
Geneva Conventions has been the assertion that
they do not provide a laundry list of what
techniques of treatment and interrogation are
permitted or prohibited. This is, of course,
because the Geneva Conventions instead contain
blanket prohibitions on torture, cruelty and
humiliation. It has only been the efforts of U.S.
officials to encroach on these prohibitions that
may have raised doubt among U.S. personnel as to
what is and is not permitted.
Captain Ian Fishback, the military interrogator
who blew the whistle on Camp Nama (Nasty Assed
Military Area) in Iraq, has contrasted his orders
in Iraq with the rules he had been taught, "My
feelings were that it clearly violated what I had
learned as the appropriate way to treat detainees
at West Point. . . . You don't force them to give
you any information other than name, rank, and
serial number. That's the gist of the Geneva
Conventions." Captain Fishback’s account of the
war crimes he was involved in at Camp Nama is in
the latest edition of Esquire magazine.
Bush continued, “Second, I’m asking that Congress
make explicit that by following the standards of
the Detainee Treatment Act, our personnel are
fulfilling America’s obligations under Common
Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions.”
This is the crucial change that Bush wants in
the law. The War Crimes Act currently criminalizes
murder, mutilation, cruel treatment, torture,
humiliating and degrading treatment, and arbitrary
punishment of prisoners, based on the prohibitions
in Common Article 3 of the Geneva conventions. Bush
is asking Congress to replace the straightforward
prohibitions in Common Article 3 with the provisions
of the 2005 Detainee Treatment Act, which includes
extraordinary protections for U.S. officials.
These protections are clearly designed to
undermine the Geneva Conventions, the War
Crimes Act and even the Nuremberg Principles.
Section 1004(a) of the Detainee Treatment Act
states that, in the case of “operational
practices . . . that were officially authorized
and determined to be lawful at the time they
were conducted, it shall be a defense that such
officer, employee, member of the Armed Forces or
other agent did not know that the practices were
unlawful and a person of ordinary good sense and
understanding would not know the practices were
unlawful.”
This would shift the legal standard from the clear
one defined by the Geneva Conventions and the War
Crimes Act as it is presently written to one of
who knew what when, requiring courts to conclude
beyond reasonable doubt that the perpetrator knew
his actions were unlawful. Even if opinions written
by Alberto Gonzales, John Yoo, Jack Goldsmith and
David Addington were found to have no legal basis
at all, they could suffice to cast doubt on Bush
and his colleagues’ knowledge of their crimes,
which would be crucial under the amended law.
“Third," Bush said, "I’m asking that Congress make
it clear that captured terrorists cannot use the
Geneva Conventions as a basis to sue our personnel
in courts, in U.S. courts. The men and the women
who protect us should not have to fear lawsuits
filed by terrorists because they’re doing their jobs.”
This would protect U.S. officials from civil
liability for human rights violations. Prisoners
released from Guantanamo have already filed such
lawsuits against the U.S. government, Bush, Rumsfeld
and other officials, which might help to explain why
these amendments are Bush’s “top priority.”
The central myth of the War on Terror is that the
world faces an unprecedented threat from terrorism
that renders obsolete the existing laws of war and
international behavior.
Bush framed his justification of torture in a classic
use of this mistaken logic: “And in this new war, the
most important source of information on where the
terrorists are hiding and what they are planning is
the terrorists themselves. Captured terrorists have
unique knowledge about how terrorist networks operate.
They have knowledge of where their operatives are
deployed and knowledge about what plots are under
way. This is intelligence that cannot be found any
other place. And our security depends on getting this
kind of information. To win the war on terror, we
must be able to detain, question and, when appropriate,
prosecute terrorists captured here in America and on
the battlefields around the world.”
The context Bush did not provide is that this applies
equally to all prisoners of war. Captured soldiers
usually do possess information that would be valuable
to their captors, and the Geneva Conventions do
constrain the ability to extract this information
from them, but this is by design. Based on bitter
experience, the people and governments of the world
have decided that torture is so abhorrent that it
must be completely outlawed, even though this results
in the loss of information that might save lives or
even alert captors to an existential threat to their
country.
The purpose of the Hague and Geneva Conventions
is to provide all people with certain protections
in times of war, to place some limits on the otherwise
limitless human suffering that war inflicts. Arguably,
governments have agreed to rules of war precisely so
that they can continue to wage limited war without
plunging their societies into the total chaos that
would result from unrestricted use of increasingly
destructive modern weapons against entire populations.
The Geneva Conventions afford different status to
different classes of people, giving rise to different
protections for combatants, prisoners of war and
civilians. However the notion that certain classes
of people fall entirely beyond the protection of
these Conventions is not a serious interpretation,
unless one is talking of something other than human
beings.
For five years, U.S. government officials have
justified unlawful actions with political arguments
that have no legal merit. Now that the political
tide is turning, Bush and his associates are behaving
like other war criminals throughout history,
marshalling what power they have left to shield
themselves from the legitimate consequences of their
actions.
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