Vanity Fair: How Torture At Guantanamo Began -- And How It Spread

Vanity Fair has a lengthy article by Phillippe Sands that examines the decision to allow the U.S. military to begin using coercive interrogations at Guantanamo. He wrote:
The Bush administration has always taken refuge behind a “trickle up” explanation: that is, the decision [to use coercive interrogations] was generated by military commanders and interrogators on the ground. This explanation is false. The origins lie in actions taken at the very highest levels of the administration—by some of the most senior personal advisers to the president, the vice president, and the secretary of defense. At the heart of the matter stand several political appointees—lawyers—who, it can be argued, broke their ethical codes of conduct and took themselves into a zone of international criminality, where formal investigation is now a very real option. This is the story of how the torture at Guantánamo began, and how it spread.
Sands reached the following conclusions:
The Geneva [Convention] decision was not a case of following the logic of the law but rather was designed to give effect to a prior decision to take the gloves off and allow coercive interrogation; it deliberately created a legal black hole into which the detainees were meant to fall. The new interrogation techniques did not arise spontaneously from the field but came about as a direct result of intense pressure and input from Rumsfeld’s office. The Yoo-Bybee Memo was not simply some theoretical document, an academic exercise in blue-sky hypothesizing, but rather played a crucial role in giving those at the top the confidence to put pressure on those at the bottom. And the practices employed at Guantánamo led to abuses at Abu Ghraib.

The fingerprints of the most senior lawyers in the administration were all over the design and implementation of the abusive interrogation policies. Addington, Bybee, Gonzales, Haynes, and Yoo became, in effect, a torture team of lawyers, freeing the administration from the constraints of all international rules prohibiting abuse.


Written By:dora wolden On April 3, 2008 10:58 PM

WHY have there been no impeachments in this administration? Do they plan on waiting until Bush's cabinet all die to bring out all of the vile things they have committed?

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