www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bal-op.torture09jul09,0,7416253.story
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Torture must be punished
Justice requires hearings, prosecutions at the highest levels against those who sullied our nation's cherished values
By Susan Goering
July 9, 2009
Ongoing revelations of the
This issue is still very much with us. Just last week, the government announced it will not release an Office of the Inspector General report on the CIA's interrogation and detention program before Aug. 31 - this after promising a judge to the release the report and then reneging three times. It fits a pattern of obfuscation and delay that has, depressingly, carried over from the Bush administration to the Obama administration.
But even without full access to that report, we already know much about what went so horribly wrong. Bush administration officials at the highest levels authorized widespread and systematic torture and abuse of
The ACLU's Freedom of Information Act lawsuit has produced hundreds of thousands of pages of revealing government documents, including the now infamous Justice Department memos laying out the allegedly legal framework for the Bush administration's torture policies. And right now, there are thousands of photographs depicting detainee abuse in oversees prisons that President Barack Obama's administration continues to refuse to release. The images would serve to confirm the pervasive and orchestrated nature of these crimes.
The question is no longer whether these acts were torture but how we will respond to them. Susan Crawford, the Bush-appointed head of the
Yet, to date, nearly all of the people prosecuted for detainee abuse and torture have been privates and sergeants. Indeed, only one civilian has been prosecuted for torture or abuse crimes. Those at the highest levels who cynically manipulated the law to authorize torture have yet to be held to account. Rather, the Obama administration continues to shield implicated officials by resisting disclosure of torture photographs, refusing to give the courts evidence of torture and rendition programs, and asking for suppression of significant portions of the CIA inspector general report.
What should be done to bring integrity back to our constitutional democracy?
First, the public has a right to know what took place in its name. Rule of law means that no one is above the law. The ACLU is calling on Attorney General Eric Holder to appoint an independent prosecutor to investigate and pursue appropriate prosecutions. And Congress needs to play its proper oversight role, appointing a select committee (consisting of members of Congress and their staff) to study current and past national security practices, to identify and correct abuses and to enact legislative reform. There is a bill in the House that would create such a committee.
The effect of these remedial steps would not be, as some have suggested, to criminalize politics. On the contrary, to attempt to "move on" while standing on a foundation of unacknowledged criminality would be to politicize criminal conduct.
Finally, the ACLU calls on all Americans to join us in restoring the rule of law. As a nation of laws, we must hold ourselves accountable to the laws - the only way to prevent a dark legacy of torture from casting a long shadow on a bright future for democracy.
Susan Goering is executive director of the ACLU of Maryland. Her e-mail is goering@aclu-md.org. Information available at www.aclu.org/accountability.
Copyright © 2009, The Baltimore Sun
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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