THINK PROGRESS
The Progress Report
HUMAN RIGHTS
Torture Turf Wars
On Tuesday, the Department of Justice (DOJ) Inspector General
released a report,
three-and-a-half years in the making, that offers "the clearest and most
definitive account to date of the key tactics used
by the government against suspected terrorists." These methods include
"use of
strobe lights in conjunction with loud rock music, twisting of thumbs
backward, and exposure of detainees to extreme temperatures,
threatening dogs, pornography and sexual taunting." On the same day, a
former Guantanamo Bay detainee, German resident
Murat Kurnaz, told Congress he
was tortured
while held by the U.S. military. Kurnaz said he underwent "water
treatment," similar to the more notorious practice of
waterboarding. "There was a bucket of water. And they stick my head in
it and at
the same time, punch me into my stomach," he said. Though the CIA
has admitted
waterboarding
three detainees, it is unclear how many more suffered
"water treatment." Yet Washington insiders seem ready to ignore this
latest piece of evidence about the Bush torture policy. "Barely
half a dozen lawmakers came to listen to the former detainee, and
most were unable to remember his name, with one even calling him 'Mr.
Karzai.," AFP reported. Following
a pattern
of ignoring new accounts of torture, the White House press corps did
not ask Press Secretary Dana Perino about the DOJ report or Kurnaz's
testimony until the
last question of Tuesday's briefing. She replied that she had not
seen it yet; no
one followed up to ask her about it the next day.
TRENCH WARFARE: The DOJ report
details the "trench warfare" between the FBI and the military over
harsh
interrogations, which FBI agents objected to, going "so far as to
collect allegations of abuse in what they labeled a
'war
crimes file.'" "The report says that the
F.B.I. agents took their concerns to
higher-ups, but that
their concerns often fell on deaf ears: officials
at senior levels at the F.B.I., the Justice Department, the Defense
Department and the National Security Council were all made aware of the
F.B.I. agents’ complaints, but little appears to have been done
as a result." "Beyond any doubt, what they are doing (and I don't know
the extent of it) would be unlawful were these enemy prisoners of
war," wrote Spike Bowman, then head of national security law unit at
FBI, in an e-mail to top FBI officials in July 2003. The DOJ
report concludes that "the FBI should be
credited
for its conduct and professionalism" in interrogations, but it also
finds that "the DOD [Department of Defense] made the decisions
regarding which
interrogation techniques could be used" -- regardless of FBI
complaints. Indeed, though the FBI decided not to participate in any
abusive interrogations in 2003, "the bureau
appears to have done nothing to end the abuse. It certainly never
told Congress or the American people."
A CASE STUDY -- ABU ZUBAYDAH: The report's account of the
interrogation of Abu Zubaydah, an al Qaeda suspect, provides
a window into the fight between the CIA and the FBI and demonstrates
the White
House's approval of
torture. In 2002, the FBI used "relationship-building
techniques with Zubaydah and succeeded in getting Zubaydah to admit his
identity." Later, he "identified a photograph of Khalid Sheik
Muhammad," the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, to his FBI interrogator.
Soon,
however, the CIA stepped in, arguing it "needed to diminish his
capacity to resist." The CIA's specific methods are redacted from the
DOJ report, but the FBI agent "raised
objections to the techniques to the CIA and told the CIA
it was 'borderline torture'" (a former CIA official testified last
December that the CIA had
waterboarded Zubaydah). When a more senior-level FBI official
raised these objections with
Michael Chertoff, then Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal
Division, and other DOJ officials, he learned that the CIA had obtained
"a legal opinion from DOJ that certain techniques could legally be
used, including [redacted]." Chertoff "made it clear that the CIA had
requested the legal opinion from Attorney General Ashcroft." Thus the
account of Zubaydah's
interrogation both proves the effectiveness
of the safe and legal rapport-building method
of interrogation and, more importantly, indicates that the
CIA's "borderline torture" techniques were explicitly condoned by a DOJ
legal opinion.
WHITE HOUSE OFFICIALS DISMISS FBI
COMPLAINTS: Indeed,
the Bush administration seems to have ignored FBI complaints
completely. "The report said several senior Justice Department Criminal
Division officials raised
concerns with the National Security Council in
2003 about the military's treatment of detainees but saw no
changes as a result." As was recently revealed, this same
council
-- which included Vice President Cheney, Condoleezza Rice, Donald
Rumsfeld, Colin
Powell, George Tenet, and John Ashcroft -- specifically choreographed
abusive interrogations
that included slapping, pushing, sleep deprivation, and waterboarding.
The DOJ report "reveals that top government officials in the Defense
Department, CIA and even
as high as the White House turned a blind eye
to torture and abuse and failed to act aggressively to end it," said
Anthony Romero, Executive Director of the ACLU. Despite administration
efforts to dismiss the report as "nothing
new," the Washington Post's Dan Froomkin emphasized the importance
of these
revelations: "[K]nowing that the nation's top law-enforcement officials
put senior White House aides on notice that the interrogation tactics
they had approved were potentially illegal adds
a key element to the portrait of complicity in what could someday
be prosecuted as violations of U.S. torture statutes or even war
crimes."
Under the Radar
ENVIRONMENT -- REPORT: INTERIOR DEPARTMENT OFFICIALS POLITICIZED ENDANGERED SPECIES DECISIONS: In May 2007, Julie MacDonald, deputy assistant secretary for fish, wildlife and parks at the Interior Department, abruptly resigned just one week before Congress was to examine her political interference in endangered species decisions. MacDonald had a long history of rejecting scientists' recommendations to politicize the Interior Department. Yesterday, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) reported that the politicization of the Interior Department stretches MacDonald. Robin Nazzaro, a GAO investigator, told the House that four other officials "may have put political pressure on lower-ranking employees who were deciding endangered species cases." Last November, the Fish and Wildlife Service "reversed seven rulings that denied endangered species increased protection, after an investigation found the actions were tainted by political pressure from" MacDonald. But Nazzaro said that that investigation had been too narrow, as it focused only on MacDonald. Rep. Nick J. Rahall (D-WV) said that after MacDonald's resignation, the agency "merely swept it under a rug." He called the Service's review "a boondoggle" that was "fixing nothing." "It was too narrow, too fast, and too sloppy," said Rahall.
ADMINISTRATION -- METHODIST MINISTERS LAUNCH PR CAMPAIGN TO STOP BUSH LIBRARY AT SMU: Earlier this month, at the United Methodist Church's (UMC) Quadrennial General Conference, the UMCs governing body voted overwhelmingly -- 844 to 20 -- to refer a petition to its South Central Jurisdiction urging it to reject President Bush's presidential library, which is housed at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. The library has received significant criticism because of an attached institute -- independent of the university) that will sponsor programs designed to "promote the vision of the president" and "celebrate" Bush's presidency. The South Central Jurisdiction, which owns the university property where the library will be built, is set to vote on the petition this July. But some Methodist ministers are launching a public relations campaign ahead of the vote with the goal of "informing people about the partisan think tank" and Bush administration polices, such as the Iraq war and torture of military prisoners, "that some Methodists feel conflict with church teachings." Rev. Andrew Weaver of Brooklyn "organized a petition drive that has garnered about 12,000 signatures from those opposing the library at SMU" but said, "This is really about the partisan institute, which will do the most damage over time."Think Fast
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled yesterday that "the military cannot automatically discharge people because they're gay." The court "did not strike down the military's 'don't ask, don't tell' policy" but reinstated a lawsuit from a "decorated flight nurse who sued the Air Force over her dismissal."
When Gen. David Petraeus and Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno testify before the Senate Armed Services Committee today they will defend a pause in troop reductions in Iraq, saying that "the U.S. must be careful not to withdraw forces from Iraq too quickly because security gains could be lost." Petraeus has been nominated to be chief of U.S. Central Command, and Odierno has been nominated to replace Petraeus in Iraq.
Today, the New York Times's Helene Cooper writes that the "Bush administration’s own policies appear to be at odds" with the President's recent pronouncement that talking to enemies is "appeasement." Many State Department officials "concede that the United States does not hew to one policy on engaging its enemies. 'I'd rather be right than consistent,'" a senior Bush administration official said.
Career FBI agent Bassem Youssef told Congress yesterday that "counter-terrorism agents and managers at FBI headquarters often lack basic knowledge about Middle Eastern culture, language and terrorists' ideology." "The FBI counter-terrorism division is ill-equipped to handle the terrorist threat we are facing," Youssef told the House Judiciary Committee.
Mohammed Kamin, an Afghan detainee, "joined a growing detainee boycott of the war-crimes trials at the Guantanamo Bay." Kamin was "dragged from his cell to his first pretrial hearing at Guantanamo Wednesday, then refused to participate, telling the judge he felt 'helpless.'"
Department of Veterans Affairs officials yesterday said that they oppose much of Sen. Patty Murray's (D-WA) bill to "improve care for female veterans even as the number of women seeking VA medical services is expected to double within the next five years." Some of the objectionable provisions include special training on how to care for "female victims of military sexual trauma and post traumatic stress disorder."
The Energy Information Administration reports that "U.S. carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels increased by 1.6 percent in 2007. ... Factors that drove the emissions increase included...a higher carbon intensity of electricity supply." Climate Progress notes that CO2 emissions would have grown faster under Bush if not for "two economic slowdowns, 9/11...and a rapidly growing trade deficit with China."
And finally: At a hearing with EPA administrator Stephen Johnson this week, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) went over his allotted time while grilling Johnson. Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) angrily accused Waxman of breaking the rules, but as chairman, Waxman "banged the gavel six times in Issa's face." Yesterday, House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-OH) called Waxman and complained about his "outrageous threats and intimidation." Waxman, however, is laughing about "Boehner's suggestion that he was a threatening force." "Just look at me," he said. “How can you not quake in my presence?"
Good News
President Bush "signed into law an anti-discrimination measure that drew enormous support in Congress," forbidding "employers and insurance companies from denying employment, promotions or health coverage to people" on the basis of genetic testing.
State Watch
ALASKA: "The State of Alaska will sue to challenge the recent listing of polar bears as a threatened species, Gov. Sarah Palin (R) said Wednesday. "
LOUISIANA: "Despite more than $22 million in repairs, a levee that broke with catastrophic effect during Hurricane Katrina is leaking again because of the mushy ground on which New Orleans was built."
CALIFORNIA: San Francisco will "impose fees on businesses that pump some of the highest levels of carbon dioxide into the air each year."
Blog Watch
THINK
PROGRESS: Furman University
faculty may protest President Bush's upcoming commencement speech.
ATTACKERMAN:
The top commander at Guantanamo Bay claims Americans don't know the
real Guantanamo Bay.
EDITOR
& PUBLISHER: The New
York Times is forced to issue multiple
corrections for the latest columns by David Brooks and Bill Kristol.
THE
BLOTTER: U.S. personnel at
Guantanamo Bay did "dirty work" for
Chinese interrogators.
Daily Grill
"When you hear the name VFW [Veterans of Foreign Wars], you know
a certain type of work is being done -- honorable, decent, and faithful
to the nation's highest ideals."
-- President Bush, 8/22/05
VERSUS
"On Wednesday, Mr. Bush even found himself in opposition to the
Veterans of Foreign Wars, a group that has generally supported him. The
group's national commander, George Lisicki, emerged from a meeting with
the president expressing strong support for the [21st Century GI Bill]."
-- New York Times, 5/22/08
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