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No Torture. No Exceptions.

No Torture No Exceptions

Please join a great effort by Reject Torture to include planks in the Republican and Democratic party platforms. You can help by calling each candidate (helpful talking points) and joining their broad coalition of people opposed to torture.

Read more about the launch via Scott Horton’s blog at Harper’s.

“No Torture. No Exceptions.” means:

  • reaffirming America’s commitment to existing federal laws and international treaties that ban torture and cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment under all circumstances.
  • renouncing all legal interpretations and executive orders that redefine torture and permit such acts as sensory and sleep deprivation, stress positions, sexual humiliation, and mock executions.
  • enforcing full transparency of information about how America treats any and all detainees held by our personnel and those in our employ anywhere in the world.
  • rejecting and abolishing the practice of rendering detainees abroad.
  • establishing a single standard of interrogation procedures to apply to all persons held in U.S. custody or by those under U.S. control, whether C.I.A., military, or civilian.
  • treating our detainees as we would have others treat detained Americans.

Justice Scalia on 60 Minutes

Justice Antonin Scalia was interviewed by Lesley Stahl on 60 Minutes last week (part 1, part 2). Stahl asked if brutal treatment of those in custody could be considered cruel and unusual punishment:

Justice Scalia: I don’t like torture, although defining is going to be a nice trick. But, I mean, who’s in favor of it? Nobody. And we have a law against torture. But everything that is hateful and odious is not covered by some provision of the Constitution.

Stahl: If someone’s in custody, as in Abu Ghraib, and they are brutalized by a law enforcement person, if you listen to the expression “cruel and unusual punishment,” doesn’t that apply?

Scalia: No. No. To the contrary. Has anybody ever referred to torture as punishment? I don’t think so.

Stahl: Well I think if you’re in custody, and you have a policeman who’s taken you into custody…

Scalia: And you say he’s punishing you? What’s he punishing you for? You punish somebody…

Stahl: Sure. Well, because he assumes you one, either committed a crime, or that you know something that he wants to know.

Scalia: Ah, it’s the latter. And when he’s hurting you in order to get information from you, you don’t say he’s punishing you. What’s he punishing you for?

Stahl: Because he thinks you’re a terrorist and he’s gonna beat the you-know-what out of you.

Scalia: Anyway that’s my view and it happens to be correct. (smile)

2003 memo justified harsh interrogation

A newly-declassified 2003 Justice Department memorandum systematically removes any possible legal boundary around harsh interrogations by the military. The 81-page memo (part 1 and part 2) by John Yoo was reversed in 2004 December 2003 by Jack Goldsmith and February 2005 by Daniel Levin, but subsequent still-secret memos written in 2005 remain in effect. Yoo argued that “In wartime, it is for the President alone to decide what methods to use to best prevail against the enemy,” and even if techniques were found to be illegal, “necessity or self-defense could provide justifications for any criminal liability.” The memo was obtained by the ACLU under the Freedom of Information Act. (Washington Post) (New York Times)

Excerpts (updated):

Alien enemy combatants

The Fifth and Eighth Amendments, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, do not extend to alien enemy combatants held abroad. (p. 1)

There are two criminal prohibitions that apply to the conduct of U.S. persons outside the United States: the War Crimes Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2441, and the prohibition against torture, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2340-2340A. We conclude that the War Crimes Act does not apply to the interrogation of al Qaeda and Taliban detainees because, as illegal belligerents, they do not qualify for the legal protections under the Geneva or Hague Conventions that section 2441 enforces. In regard to section 2340, we conclude that the statute, by its terms, does not apply to interrogations conducted within the territorial United States or on permanent military bases outside the territory of the United States. Nonetheless, we identify the relevant substantive standards regarding the prohibition on torture should interrogations occur outside that jurisdictional limit. (p. 32)

Commander-in-Chief authority

Federal criminal laws of general applicability do not apply to properly-authorized interrogations of enemy combatants, undertaken by military personnel in the course of an armed conflict. Such criminal statutes, if they were misconstrued to apply to the interrogation of enemy combatants, would conflict with the Constitution’s grant of the Commander in Chief power solely to the President. (p. 1)

In wartime, it is for the President alone to decide what methods to use to best prevail against the enemy. (p. 5)

In our view, Congress may no more regulate the President’s ability to detain and interrogate enemy combatants than it may regulate his ability to direct troop movements on the battlefield. In fact, the general applicability of these statutes belies any argument that these statutes apply to persons under the direction of the President in the conduct of war. (p. 13)

We have even greater concerns with respect to prosecutions arising out of the exercise of the President’s express authority as Commander in Chief than we do with prosecutions arising out of the assertion of executive privilege. Any effort by Congress to regulate the interrogation of enemy combatants would violate the Constitution’s sole vesting of the Commander-in-Chief authority in the President. There can be little doubt that intelligence operations, such as the detention and interrogation of enemy combatants and leaders, are both necessary and proper for the effective conduct of a military campaign. Indeed, such operations may be of more importance in a war with an international terrorist organization than one with the conventional armed forces of a nation-state, due to the former’s emphasis on covert operations and surprise attacks against civilians. It may be the case that only successful interrogations can provide the information necessary to prevent future attacks upon the United States and its citizens. Congress can no more interfere with the President’s conduct of the interrogation of enemy combatants than it can dictate strategic or tactical decisions on the battlefield. Just as statutes that order the President to conduct warfare in a certain manner or for specific goals would be unconstitutional, so too are laws that would prevent the President from gaining the intelligence he believes necessary to prevent attacks upon the United States. (p. 19)

The Fourth Amendment

Indeed, drawing in part on the reasoning of Verdugo-Urquidez, as well as the Supreme Court’s treatment of the destruction of property for the purposes of military necessity, our Office recently concluded that the Fourth Amendment had no application to domestic military operations. See Memorandum for Alberto R. Gonzales, Counsel to the President, and William J. Haynes, II, General Counsel, Department of Defense, from John C. Yoo,
Deputy Assistant Attorney General and Robert J. Delahunty, Special Counsel, Re: Authority for Use of Military Force to Combat Terrorist Activities Within the United States at 25 (Oct 23, 2001). (p. 8 note 10)

Obligations under international law

We conclude that based on its reservation [upon ratification of the U.N. Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment], the United States’ obligation extends only to conduct that is “cruel and unusual” within the meaning of the Eighth Amendment or otherwise “shocks the conscience” under the Due Process Clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. (p. 1-2)

Customary international law is not federal law and that the President is free to override it at his discretion. (p. 2)

Defense if prosecuted
We discuss defenses to an allegation that an interrogation method might violate any of the various criminal prohibitions discussed in Part II. We believe that necessity or self-defense could provide defenses to a prosecution. (p. 2)

Jurisdiction

So, for example, a federal, non-military officer who is conducting interrogations in a foreign location, one that is not on a permanent U.S. military base or diplomatic establishment, would not be subject to the federal criminal laws applicable in the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction. (p. 21)

Definition of torture

Although these statutes address a substantially different subject from section 2340, they are nonetheless helpful for understanding what constitutes severe physical pain. They treat severe pain as an indicator of ailments that are likely to result in permanent and serious physical damage in the absence of immediate medical treatment. Such damage must rise to the level of death, organ failure, or the permanent, impairment of a significant body function. These statutes suggest that to constitute torture “severe pain” must rise to a similarly high level - the level that would ordinarily be associated with a physical condition or injury sufficiently serious that it would result in death, organ failure, or selious impairment of body functions. (p. 39)

Section 2340’s definition of torture must be read as a sum of these component parts. […] Each component of the definition emphasizes that torture is not the mere infliction of pain or suffering on another, but is instead a step well removed. The victim must experience intense pain or suffering of the kind that is equivalent to the pain that would be associated with serious physical injury so severe that death, organ failure, or permanent damage resulting in a loss of significant body function will likely result. If that pain or suffering is psychological, that suffering must result from one of the acts set forth in the statute. In addition, these acts must cause long-term mental harm. Indeed, this view of the criminal act of torture is consistent with the term’s common meaning. Torture is generally understood to involve “intense pain” or “excruciating pain,” or put another way, “extreme anguish of body or mind.” […] In short, reading the definition of torture as a whole, it is plain that the term encompasses only extreme acts. (p. 44-45)

Mental harm

Not only must the mental harm be prolonged to amount to severe mental pain and suffering, but also it must be caused by or result from one of the acts listed in the statute. (p. 40)

A defendant must specifically intend to cause prolonged mental harm for the defendant to have committed torture. […] A defendant could negate a showing of specific intent to cause severe mental pain or suffering by showing that he had acted in good faith that his conduct would not amount to the acts prohibited by the statute. Thus,if a defendant has a good faith belief that his actions will not result in prolonged mental harm, he lacks the mental state necessary for his actions to constitute torture. A defendant could show that he acted in good faith by taking such steps as surveying professional literature, consulting with experts, or reviewing evidence gained from past experience. (p. 40-41)

Use of drugs

Thus, the pairing of mind-altering substances with procedures calculated to disrupt profoundly the senses or personality and the use of “other” to modify “procedures” shows that the use of such substances must also cause a profound disruption of the senses or personality. For drugs or procedures to rise to the level of “disrupt[ing] profoundly the senses or personality,” they must produce an extreme effect. And by requiring that they be “calculated” to produce such an effect, the statute requires that the defendant has consciously designed the acts to produce such an effect. (p. 42)

UK apologizes for death of detainee

The UK admitted breaching the human rights of Baha Mousa, a Basra hotel receptionist, who died in custody in September 2003.  Mousa and eight other Iraqi civilians had been “conditioned” to make them more likely to answer questions.  They were handcuffed, hooded, forced into stress positions, deprived of sleep and subjected to 36 hours of assaults, during which they were kicked, punched and beaten.  Mousa died in four days with 93 external injuries.

Defense Secretary Des Browne apologized to the families.  No one has been held responsible for Mousa’s death.  One soldier, Cpl Donald Payne, admitted inhumane treatment of the detainees and was the first British soldier convicted of a war crime.  Other soldiers were acquited.

Last June in a landmark judgment, the House of Lords ruled that Iraqi civilians arrested and detained by British soldiers can rely on the protection of the Human Rights Act which covers the UK’s obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights.

Don’t ask, don’t tell

In the news this week

Destroyed CIA tapes cause more problems

The government is fighting off several claims that it destroyed evidence when the CIA destroyed interrogation tapes of detainees.  (March 28)

President Bush refuses to withdraw Bradbury

The Senate is blocking key nominations and judgeships until President Bush withdraws the nomination of Steven Bradbury to head the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC).  Bradbury has been serving as acting head of the OLC since June 2005.  He approved two still-secret legal memos in 2005 authorizing the use of waterboarding, and in February justified the CIA’s use of waterboarding.  Human Rights Watch opposes his nomination.

Habeas corpus cases look bleak

The Supreme Court heard arguments for two U.S. citizens being detained in Iraq, Mohammad Munaf and Shawqi Omar, but the arguments “turned a rather clear-cut case into a roller derby.”  Slate has a good article explaining why you should care (they have American families; Omar served in the Minnesota National Guard), and Scotusblog serves up the transcripts and blow-by-blow account.

The question is whether federal courts have jurisdiction to consider a habeas petition of a U.S. citizen detained by U.S.-led coalition forces in Iraq pending a transfer to Iraqi authorities following a conviction in an Iraqi criminal court. The two men are Sunni Muslims, and both fear torture if they are transferred to Iraqi officials.

Psychological impact of torture

Dr. Richard Miller attacks Senator Lieberman’s support of waterboarding.  Lieberman said “It is not like putting burning coals on people’s bodies. The person is in no real danger. The impact is psychological.”  Miller has been medical director of Khmer Health Advocates in West Hartford, Connecticut, for 25 years, and witnesses the psychological damage of torture firsthand.

If Sen. Lieberman minimizes the psychological impact of torture, what will he say to U.S. soldiers returning from Iraq who have post-traumatic stress and depression? Will he tell them that their suffering is “only psychological?”

Read his editorial, Torture’s Scars Run Deep.

Close Guantanamo

Five former U.S. secretaries of State said that the next president should move quickly to close the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.  That single act would improve America’s dismal reputation in the world immediately, agreed Henry Kissinger, James Baker, Warren Christopher, Madeleine Albright and Colin Powell at a University of Georgia roundtable discussion.  (March 27)

How did I get Iraq wrong?

Andrew Sullivan reflected on his initial support of the Iraq War and wondered “How Did I Get Iraq Wrong?“  Here’s part of his Slate essay (March 21):

I certainly never believed that a war I supported for the sake of freedom would actually use as its central weapon the deepest antithesis of freedom—the destruction of human autonomy and dignity and will that is torture. To distort this by shredding the English language, by engaging in newspeak that I had long associated with totalitarian regimes, was a further insult.

Andrew wrote a powerful essay in 2005 which is the best argument I’ve found for opposing torture — unequivocally and absolutely.  It reminds me why I decided to dedicated time to this effort.  Please read The Abolition of Torture: Winning the War on Terrorism Without Sacrificing Freedom.

Don’t ask, don’t tell

The firestorm over Abu Ghraib subsided. Courts-martial were held, and no one higher than a sergeant was convicted. All the rest, the officers who knew what was happening at the prison and said nothing, or the higher-ups in the field and in Washington who suggested indifference, were not touched. In fact, the Bush administration’s position on torture was much like the military’s on gays — don’t ask, don’t tell.

The Ultimate Casualty by Richard Cohen, The Washington Post.

In the news this week

Abu Ghraib’s femmes fatales

Stern interviews Lynndie England, who is sorry the pictures were made public but claims was just following orders (via IHT).

To be honest, the whole time I never really felt guilty because I was following orders and I was doing what I was supposed to do. So I’ve never felt guilty about doing anything that I did there.

Sabrina HarmanMeanwhile, the New Yorker takes an in-depth sympathetic look at Specialist Sabrina Harman in Exposure: The woman behind the camera at Abu Ghraib, by Philip Gourevitch and Errol Morris. March 24.

She faulted herself for not being a more enthusiastic soldier when prisoners on Tier 1A were being given the business. When she was asked how other M.P.s could go at it without apparent inhibition, all she could say was “They’re more patriotic.”

Septicisle, in his blog Obsolete, compares these two articles, and notes “Everyone, regardless of the pressures upon them on that time, is capable of making a choice.”

Detainee trials

The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments tomorrow (March 25) for two U.S. citizens now being detained in Iraq — Munaf v. Geren (06-1666) and Geren v. Omar (07-394). ScotusWiki provides an excellent summary of the cases. The question is whether federal courts have jurisdiction to consider a habeas petition of a U.S. citizen detained by U.S.-led coalition forces in Iraq pending a transfer to Iraqi authorities following a conviction in an Iraqi criminal court. The two men are Sunni Muslims, and both fear torture if they are transferred to Iraqi officials.

The U.S. military has given an interrogator (Army Sgt. Joshua R. Claus) immunity for possible abuses against a Canadian prisoner, Omar Khadr, in exchange for his cooperation with prosecutors. Khadr, who was 15 when he was captured, is accused of hurling a grenade that killed a U.S. Special Forces soldier in Afghanistan. Claus was previously sentenced to five months in prison in 2005 for assaulting an Afghan detainee at Bagram who later died. (CNN March 20))

Andy Worthington expands on this case, describes five others, and explains how “hopelessly blurred the distinctions between military resistance (aka insurgency) and terrorism have become, so that anyone caught fighting US occupation is not engaged in a war (with its own well-established laws) but is automatically part of a global terrorist movement.” (March 21)

CIA Renditions

An Italian judge ordered the continuation of a trial against 26 Americans and several former Italian intelligence officials for the 2003 abduction and rendition of Egyptian cleric Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr. The trial in absentia is the first anywhere over the U.S. practice of extraordinary rendition. (Reuters via the Jurist, March 19)

To protect its agents against litigation for harsh interrogation and extraordinary rendition, the CIA now covers the full cost of legal liability insurance. (AP March 17)

America must be a good role model

John McCain comments in the Financial Times (March18):

We all have to live up to our own high standards of morality and international responsibility. We will fight the terrorists and at the same time defend the rights that are the foundations of our societies. We cannot torture or treat inhumanely the suspected terrorists that we have captured. We must close the detention facility at Guantánamo and come to a common international understanding on the disposition of dangerous detainees under our control.

Popular Culture

Jack BauerNPR’s Pam Fessler investigates why Jack Bauer of 24 is so appealing and attracts fans such as Dick Cheney and Michael Chertoff.

Chertoff says he sees parallels between the difficult choices Jack Bauer has to make and the real fight against the terrorist threat. “He knows sometimes there’s only bad choices, and you’ve got to make the least bad choice,” Chertoff says. “And … he does it, and he takes responsibility for it. And I think that’s in many ways something that the public values, and frankly something that I think is great aspiration.”

In this week’s New Yorker, David Denby reviews Taxi to the Dark Side, and George Saunders defends washboarding of prisoners. That’s right, washboarding.

In the news

News

The D.C. Circuit Court ruled that federal trial judges still have the authority to stop the government from transferring Guantanamo Bay detainees to countries where they fear torture. Judges may consider pleas to block transfers until the Supreme Court decides the cases of Boumediene v. Bush (06-1195) and Al Odah v. U.S. (06-1196) heard on Dec. 5. A decision by the Justices is expected some time this spring or early summer. (scotusblog, March 14)

The CIA acknowledged secretly detaining a prisoner, Muhammad Rahim, for at least six months beginning last summer. The prisons were emptied in the fall of 2006, but President Bush signed an executive order last July that reiterated the CIA’s authority to use interrogation techniques more coercive than those permitted by the Pentagon. (Mark Mazzetti, The New York Times, March 15)

Director of national intelligence Mike McConnell participated in a symposium at Johns Hopkins University and said that waterboarding is a legal technique that works.

Just to put it in context, probably upwards of a quarter to a third of all the information generated in this period of time came from these three individuals [who were waterboarded]. It’s saved lives… Does it work? Yes, it works.

Reports

Yemeni national Khaled Abdu Ahmed Saleh al-Maqtari was held by the US without charge for 32 months in Abu Ghraib and two secret CIA prisons before being returned to Yemen in 2007. Amnesty International documented his case, corroborates his account with other prisoners, and provides an overview of international and US law. (via Jurist and BBC)

Human Rights First released a new report, Tortured Justice, discussing the problem of coerced evidence. “The introduction of coerced evidence, obtained through the use of official cruelty, into military commission trials at Guantanamo Bay is rapidly contaminating the justice system and jeopardizing the prospects for the successful prosecution of terrorists”

Mother Jones reports the CIA’s extraordinary rendition of Abu Omar from Milan to Egypt. Italy is prosecuting the kidnapping and has indicted 26 American officials. By Peter Bergen, March/April issue). Other articles in the Torture Hits Home issue.

News this week

News

President Bush vetoed a bill to require the CIA to limit interrogation methods to those outlined in the Army manual. Congress failed to override the veto on a party-line vote. Father Jonathan Morris (Fox News) argues that President Bush’s intentions are good, but not his philosophy.

President Bush has referred to these specialized procedures as “efficient,” “necessary,” “legal,” and “safe.” The problem here is that none of his adjectives get to the heart of what’s wrong with torture. Efficiency and necessity are purely pragmatic concepts. Under their banner, the world has witnessed every sort of evil. And legality and safety are equally unconvincing justifications. Does making something legal make it right? And safety? The twisted suggestion that some torture is safe obfuscates the horrid nature of torture, a degradation of human dignity and liberty.

The U.N. investigator on torture, Manfred Nowak, was denied access to U.S.-run jails in Iraq. The British government has agreed to allow him to visit their detainees in Iraq. Reuters, March 11

The Pentagon discovered nearly 50 tapes documenting interrogations of two suspects. The tapes do not appear to reveal any unlawful treatment. The New York Times, March 11

The first U.S. war tribunals since World War II are underway. An Afghan prisoner on trial for throwing a grenade in Afghanistan when he was 16 compared U.S. forces to the Taliban government that imprisoned and killed people without trial. He claims he was tortured. Reuters, March 12

President Bush stripped the independent Intelligence Oversight Board of its authority to refer matters to the Justice Department for a criminal investigation. The Boston Globe, March 14

The week ended with the House holding a rare secret session to discuss non-secret material, and the start of a four-day protest by hundreds of veterans and active-duty soldiers of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars at a gathering called Winter Solder (interview at Democracy Now!).

International

The use of waterboarding by the United States affected a case in Canada against two suspected Al Qaeda operatives. Canada threw out evidence obtained through the CIA’s waterboarding of Abu Zubaydah, stating that “torture is morally repugnant and not particularly reliable” and that Canada “does not knowingly use information which has been obtained through torture.” Tainted Evidence by Michael Isikoff and Mark Hosenball, Newsweek, March 5. NPR interview.

CIA extraordinary rendition jets keep popping up. Four landed at the Shannon airport recently. The Limerick Leader, March 10

Afghan detainees are not covered by Canada’s bill of rights, a Canadian judge ruled. Canadians had halted transfers of Taliban insurgency prisoners to Afghan authorities after evidence of torture. Transfers will resume. International Herald Tribune, March 12

Opinion

Dilawar sketch

The current issue of the Washington Monthly includes 37 essays advocating an end to torture. No More: No Torture. No Exceptions.

Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! interviewed Darius Rejali, author of Torture and Democracy:

“July 21st, a bunch of guys got on buses in London with bombs, and they escaped. The British police got them all in ten days, and the break in the case came when the parents of Muktar Said Ibrahim, loyal British Muslims, turned in their son when they saw the security video. Would they have turned him if they knew their son was going to be tortured? The answer is: obviously not. Right? We know the kinds of things that work in policing. The FBI knows it. This is a standard practice. And the more we torture, the less it is that people will surrender to us.”

Scott Shane wrote in The New York Times about the challenge of bringing scientific rigor to the art of interrogation. (March 9)

William Safire reviewed the history of the word “waterboarding” and reviews the use of the term and technique in U.S. history. (March 9)

Out-of-Context Quote of the Week

“We undertake this work because we believe that every human being bears the image of our maker. That’s why we’re doing this. No one is fit to be a master, and no one deserves to be a slave.” President Bush, speaking to the National Religious Broadcasters convention (March 11)


Bush vetoes bill limiting CIA interrogations

As expected, President Bush vetoed the Intelligence Authorization Act which included a provision to limit the CIA to interrogation techniques included in the Army Field Manual.

New York Times article
Text of radio address

News this week

News

President Bush is expected to veto the Intelligence Authorization Bill which would require the CIA to follow the interrogation guidelines in the Army Field Manual. His radio address this weekend is expected to address this issue. See the New York Times editorial “Horrifying and Unnecessary,” March 2, 2008, which describes the restrictions President Bush opposes.

The PBS show NOW aired an excellent segment tonight (March 7) on torture featuring an interview with Alex Gibney, director of “Taxi to the Dark Side.” The online site has a good overview of the main issues.

Lt. Gen. Michael Maples, the Defense Intelligence Agency director, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that he considers waterboarding to be inhumane, and that the interrogation techniques allowed by the Army Field Manual are effective (YouTube). CIA Director Michael Hayden said in a statement to the Associated Press that interrogation techniques not in the Army Field Manual would be outlawed. Hopefully President Bush will clarify this weekend in his radio address. Pamela Hess, AP via Boston Globe, February 27, 2008

In spite of public assurances to the contrary, the United States and Britain admitted that two planes carrying rendered suspects landed in the British territory of Diego Garcia in 2002. There are claims that a CIA detention center was located on Diego Garcia, and that prisoners were held in prison ships outside Britain’s three-mile territorial zone. See “British island ‘used by US for rendition’” by Jamie Doward, guardian.co.uk, March 2, 2008.

Background

The Water Cure: Debating torture and counterinsurgency—a century ago” by Paul Kramer, The New Yorker, February 25, 2008. (Note: the administration would probably claim that modern-day waterboarding is not the same as described in this article, so the comparison is unfair. The current method of invoking terror by suffocation and simulated drowning does not fill the lungs or stomach with water to the same extent.)

Opinion

“To stand against torture and arbitrary detention is not to be squeamish. It is to be civilized.” From “When We Torture” by Nicholas D. Kristof, The New York Times, February 14, 2008.

“That torture is even a subject of debate in this country is a flabbergasting development. That dozens of America’s most admired military leaders find themselves openly opposing the commander in chief on such a question is equally surprising.” From “Torture shocks” by James Carroll, The Boston Globe, March 3, 2008

“They assert that our enemies are more evil than any previously encountered, and therefore we are justified in jettisoning two centuries of enlightenment in which the United States of America was morally superior to any despotic regime that would stoop to the barbaric practice of torture.” From “Torture just turns us into barbarians” by Tom Decoursey, Wednesday Journal of Oak Park and River Forest, March 4, 2008

International Perspective

Illustration by Andrew Dyson, theage.com.au

“The leader of a democratic country should be a symbol of that country’s values. The US rightly prides itself on the principle of justice for all. What does it say then if Bush condones torture? It says that the principle and the practice have split apart.” From “There is no excuse for torture” by Warwick McFadyen, The Age (Australia), March 7, 2008

The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruled that countries cannot deport foreign nationals to countries where there would be a real risk of torture or ill-treatment. Britain argued to balance the risk of torture against the treat to national security. See “The ban stays absolute” in The Economist, February 28, 2008, or “Legal Opinion: Why governments can’t carry on turning a blind eye to torture” by Robert Verkaik, The Independent (UK), March 5, 2008