By Steven Jonas, MD, MPH
As the world that is interested in
such matters knows, the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee finally released the
(heavily redacted) 524-page Executive Summary of its 6000-page report on torture and the CIA.
It is entitled: “Panel Faults C.I.A. Over Brutality and Deceit in Terrorism
Interrogations.” But even just the Executive Summary presents a huge amount of
horrifying detail about the program. (I need not detail it here; it and a huge
amount of commentary has already appeared in The Times and many other news sources, print,
electronic and other. A particularly useful historical
analysis has appeared on The Greanville Post.)
It happens that a good deal of the
information contained in the report has been known, in relative bits and
pieces, for quite some time. What the Senate Committee has done is
assemble a huge amount of material in one place, and then put their imprimatur
on the information, which it has been collecting in sometimes gruesome detail
over the past six years. The most important conclusion to come away with
in examining the Report is the Senate Intelligence Committee’s major finding
about the CIA’s torture program: that is was bad because it didn’t
work. And they produced huge mountains of evidence to support that
claim.
No so-called civilized nation can claim
that torture is permissible because “it works.”
The Republicans, who for some time
refused to participate in the work of the Committee have reacted in horror, not
at the details of the torture itself and the catalog of CIA cover-ups,
incompetence, disorganization, amateurism, and what-have-you, but at the fact
that they have all been made public. Most importantly, despite the fact
that the Senate Committee assembled an overwhelming amount of evidence, and
despite the fact that the Republicans did not avail themselves of it, they
claimed that torture does work, in intelligence gathering, and then on,
as they so often do, to try to change the subject. Consider: “Many
Republicans have said that the report is an attempt to smear both the C.I.A.
and the Bush White House, and that the report cherry-picked information to
support a claim that the C.I.A.’s detention program yielded no valuable
information. Former C.I.A. officials quickly began a well-prepared and vigorous
public campaign to dispute the report’s findings.”
Of course the torturer-in-chief, Dick
Cheney, went bananas over the report’s
release. He argues both that torture works and then
(oops!) that what was done wasn’t torture anyway. So he, and
all of his GOP and other cheerleaders, first try to deny reality (just as they
do on so many issues, from global warming to racism) and then if that doesn’t
work, get the argument onto definitions.
Cheney has also famously said that
whatever what was done is or isn’t torture, a), he would authorize it all over
again, and b) even if innocent people were picked up and put into the program,
that really didn’t matter in the pursuit of its overall goals.
Interestingly enough, I did not hear of anyone asking him, if what the Senate
Committee defined as torture wasn’t, what would he define as torture and
would he authorize its use if he thought circumstances warranted that
intervention.
Demonstrating his complete lack of
knowledge of human anatomy and physiology, Cheney even claimed that “rectal
feeding” was OK, if done for “medical reasons.” Note to the former
Vice-President: the colon a) is not a digestive organ, b) as a physician for
over 50 years, I have never heard forced ramming of food into the rectum
described as a medical therapy. Of course if Yoo and Bybee (who defined what
the CIA was doing as not torture) were quack physicians instead of quack
lawyers they might well have defined “rectal feeding” as a “medical
therapy.” Andy Borowitz tells us
(WARNING, satire) that to, in his terms, properly deal with the subject, Cheney
has even called for an international ban on the issuance of reports on the use
of torture. Nevertheless, despite what Cheney and his fellow
cheer-leaders have said, we know that the CIA has done some very bad things
(bad, that is, if you think that torture is bad), fully justified by the Bush
Administration. Indeed, even though the Committee said that it wasn’t, we
know, as directly confirmed by Cheney himself, that the program was fully
authorized by the Bush Administration.
However, and it’s a big however,
the Senate Committee’s whole premise is that: the program was bad because it
didn’t work. Which raises the question: would they have concluded
that torture was OK if it had produced useful intelligence? Uh-oh and
Oh my. If Cheney et al were/are right about the utility of torture, at
least as practiced by the CIA, then the Committee’s whole argument against it
collapses in a heap. Indeed by focusing primarily on “torture doesn’t
work” for its primary criticism of the program, the Senate Intelligence
Committee has let the Republicans and the numerous complicit corporate
Democrats and the Right-wing generally off the hook. For they can simply
come back, as they are, as noted, doing vociferously, saying “yes it does.”
The argument should have been based on
“it’s wrong,” more importantly, that it violates both domestic and
international law, and, most importantly, violates the U.S. Constitution.
The use of torture by U.S. agencies is clearly prohibited by various
Federal statutes. But the central issue here is the violation
of Constitutional law. The use of torture by any signatory to them
is found in the Geneva Conventions and the UN Convention Against Torture.
The United States is a party to both, and both are signed and ratified U.S.
international treaties. But before considering the Constitutional
question, let us consider just what “torture” is, in anybody’s terms other than
Cheney’s et al.
The authors of the Geneva Conventions
just assumed that everyone “knows” what torture is; they didn’t bother to
define it any detail. The UN Convention defines it in general terms as
“Any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is
intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or
a third person information or a confession . . .” By exclusion, the U.S. Army Field Manual is rather
explicit about it. The Bush Administration’s quack law firm, Bybee and Yoo, tried
to define their way out of the quagmire, that “finding” being what
Cheney (who probably dictated it to them, or perhaps it was his hatchet man
Addington) falls back on. But no one outside of themselves and the US
Right would agree that what was done to numbers of prisoners of the US was not
torture. And the Senate Committee has certainly concluded that it was and
uses the term “torture” over-and-over again.
But then comes the truly inconvenient
truth that the use of torture by US authorities is simply unconstitutional.
Under article VI of the U.S. Constitution, as treaties signed and ratified by
the U.S. government, both Conventions are part of “the supreme law of the land
and [further] the judges of every state shall be bound by them.” This,
and its illegality under various U.S. statutes and Codes, are the only
arguments that one can make against the use of torture by US agencies that can
withstand the “but it works” argument, even if the latter were true. Thus,
torture both doesn’t work and is unconstitutional as well as
illegal.
The CIA surely knew the first: they
haven’t been able to come up with even one provable example of its
effectiveness. (Further, it should be noted that during the Clinton
Administration two attempted terrorist attacks that would have produce much
larger death tolls even than 9/11 were thwarted, presumably through the use of
conventional intelligence/interrogation techniques. The first was the 1998 “25
airliners” plot and the second was “Millennium Bomb Plot” against Los Angeles
International Airport. This was done apparently without using one
torturous twitch.) But the bottom line is that the use of torture by any
U.S. agency is unconstitutional, and that, not “it doesn’t work,” is where the
argument against such use should start. Indeed, “it doesn’t work” just
doesn’t work in the battle to ban the use of torture by the US government,
which, as it happens, may well be renewed if the next President is a
Republican.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Senior Editor Steve Jonas is a physician, a writer (author of scores of
books and hundreds of articles), and a political analyst with a focus on the
vices of capitalism and the construction of a genuine democratic alternative.
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