Author
|
Topic: If an article about Bushit is "pernicious and troubling", what is torture? (Read 463 times) |
|
Hermit
Archon     
Posts: 4289 Reputation: 8.50 Rate Hermit

Prime example of a practically perfect person
|
 |
If an article about Bushit is "pernicious and troubling", what is torture?
« on: 2007-12-20 14:32:54 » |
|
White House asks NYT to remove sub-headline from CIA tape story
[ Hermit : This story clearly reflects knowledge of content to the extent of effective editorial control of the New York Times by the Whitehouse, even to the extent of sub-headlines - which are the last thing to be added to a story after the page mark-up is complete and the size allocation is finalized. Why is nobody asking the liars in chief and their cronies - including those at the New York Times - how this came to be the case? ]
By Klaus Marre 2007-12-19
The White House on Wednesday took the rare step of publicly asking The New York Times to change the sub-headline of a story on the destruction of CIA tapes showing the interrogations of suspected terrorists.
At issue is the story's sub-headline that stated: "White House Role Was Wider Than It Said." The White House called this sub-headline inaccurate and demanded that it be corrected.
"Under direction from the White House General Counsel while the Department of Justice and the CIA Inspector General conduct a preliminary inquiry, we have not publicly commented on facts relating to this issue, except to note President Bush's immediate reaction upon being briefed on the matter," stated White House Press Secretary Dana Perino.
"Furthermore, we have not described - neither to highlight, nor to minimize -- the role or deliberations of White House officials in this matter."
The White House argues that the newspaper article implies that "there is an effort to mislead" in this matter, adding that such a conclusion is "pernicious and troubling."
Catherine Mathis, senior vice president of corporate communications for the newspaper, stated that the sub-headline has been changed, adding that a correction would be printed. However, Mathis also pointed out that the White House did not challenge the contents of the article.
|
With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion. - Steven Weinberg, 1999
|
|
|
Hermit
Archon     
Posts: 4289 Reputation: 8.50 Rate Hermit

Prime example of a practically perfect person
|
 |
Re:If an article about Bushit is "pernicious and troubling", what is torture?
« Reply #1 on: 2007-12-20 14:59:34 » |
|
'Black Site' Survivor Relates Horrific Tale Source: Inter Press Service Authors: William Fisher (Writer Inter Press Service) Dated: 2007-12-20
External References:
- Surviving the Darkness: Testimony from the U.S. "Black Sites" (63-page pdf)
- More documents relating to Bashmilah's case
- Salon's article: Inside the CIA's notorious "black sites"
- Transcript of Democracy Now Radio Program
As human right lawyers sought to block US government efforts to stop a lawsuit against a Boeing subsidiary accused of flying detainees to "black sites" where they were tortured, a legal advocacy group published the first testimony of a victim of the Central Intelligence Agency's "enhanced interrogation" program.
In the first-ever report of its kind, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice (CHRGJ) at New York University School of Law released a firsthand account of a survivor of enforced disappearance and torture at several CIA "black sites." The 63-page report, "Surviving the Darkness: Testimony from the US 'Black Sites,'" is an in-depth account of a former CIA detainee's experience in his own words.
The bone-chilling narrative tells the story of Mohammed Farag Ahmad Bashmilah, a Yemeni national who spent more than a year and a half in the CIA's secret detention program. He was never charged with a terrorism-related crime.
The CHRGJ charges that Bashmilah was "illegally detained by the Jordanian intelligence service in October 2003, tortured into signing a false confession, and then handed over to an American rendition team."
The group says he spent the next 18 months in the US secret detention network – in sites believed to be in Afghanistan and possibly Eastern Europe. In May 2005, he was transferred to the custody of the Yemen government, which held him in proxy detention at the behest of the US until he was put on trial and finally released in March 2006.
Bashmilah's story was made public as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed legal papers opposing the CIA's attempt to throw out a lawsuit against Boeing subsidiary Jeppesen Dataplan, Inc. for its participation in the CIA's "extraordinary rendition" program.
The ACLU charged that the US government is improperly invoking the "state secrets" privilege to avoid judicial scrutiny of this unlawful policy.
Steven Watt, an attorney with the ACLU's Human Rights Program, told IPS, "Five men have been brutally abused with the help of a US corporation, and they are entitled to their day in court."
"Jeppesen must not be given a free pass for its profitable participation in a torture program," he said. "And the government should not be allowed to use the national security defense as a way to cover up its mistakes or, worse, its egregious abuses of human rights."
The ACLU filing comes in a lawsuit brought on behalf of five victims of the rendition program. who were kidnapped and secretly transferred by the CIA to US-run overseas prisons or foreign intelligence agencies where they were interrogated and tortured.
According to the lawsuit, Jeppesen knowingly provided flight planning and essential logistical support to aircraft and crew used by the CIA for the clandestine rendition flights.
After the lawsuit was filed, the US government intervened to seek its dismissal, contending that further litigation of the case would be harmful to national security. But the ACLU contends that the information needed to pursue this lawsuit, including details about the rendition program., is already in the public domain.
It adds, "Jeppesen's involvement in the program. is also a matter of public record. It has been confirmed by extensive documentary evidence and eyewitness testimony, including the sworn declaration of a former senior Jeppesen employee, which was submitted in support of the ACLU filing."
In recent years, the government has asserted the once-rare "state secrets" claim with increasing regularity in an attempt to throw out lawsuits and justify withholding information from the public not only about the rendition program, but also about illegal wiretapping, torture, and other breaches of US and international law.
It has been 50 years since the United States Supreme Court last reviewed the use of the "state secrets" privilege. The Supreme Court recently refused to review the "state secrets" privilege in a lawsuit brought by Khaled El-Masri, a German citizen also represented by the ACLU, who was kidnapped and rendered to detention, interrogation, and torture in a CIA "black site" prison in Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, more than 250 people once held in Iraqi prisons, including Abu Ghraib, have filed suit against a US military contractor for alleged torture of detainees. The Center for Constitutional Rights filed the lawsuit seeking millions of dollars in compensatory and punitive damages against CACI International Inc. of Arlington, Virginia.
The complaint alleges that CACI interrogators who were sent to Iraqi prisons directed and engaged in torture between 2003 and 2004. The lawsuit charges that the detainees were repeatedly beaten, sodomized, threatened with rape, kept naked in their cells, subjected to electric shock and attacked by unmuzzled dogs, among other humiliations.
The court action also names two CACI employees – Stephen Stefanowski, known as "Big Steve," and Daniel Johnson, known as "DJ" – accusing them of participating in the abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib. The suit alleges that the two CACI contractors directed Corporal Charles Graner and Sergeant Ivan Frederick. Graner was sentenced to 10 years in prison for this role in the Abu Ghraib scandal; Frederick is serving an eight-year jail term.
"These corporate guys worked in a conspiracy with those military guys to torture people," said Susan Burke, the lead attorney in the case. "And now the military have been held accountable, but the company guys and the company have not been," she said.
The legal status of US private contractors in Iraq and elsewhere abroad remains cloudy. The Iraqi government says they should be subject to Iraqi law, a position rejected by the US. It remains unclear whether they are subject to US law. No US court has yet decided a relevant case, though lawsuits have been brought against a number of contractors, including Blackwater, whose employees are accused of killing 17 unarmed Iraqi civilians in a shooting incident in September.
In the CACI case, to the surprise of some legal observers, the government did not intervene on behalf of the contractors and the court ruled that the litigation could go forward. In a related development, the New York Times reported Wednesday that Pakistan's military and intelligence agencies, "apparently trying to avoid acknowledging an elaborate secret detention system, have quietly set free nearly 100 men suspected of links to terrorism, few of whom were charged."
Human rights groups in Pakistan say those released are some of the nearly 500 Pakistanis presumed to have disappeared into the hands of the Pakistani intelligence agencies cooperating with Washington's fight against terrorism since 2001.
The Times reported that no official reason has been given for the releases. But it quoted Pakistani sources as saying that as pressure has mounted to bring the cases into the courts, "the government has decided to jettison some suspects and spare itself the embarrassment of having to reveal that people have been held on flimsy evidence in the secret system."
Among those pressing to bring the cases into court was the chief justice of Pakistan's Supreme Court, Iftikhar Muhammad Chaudhry. He was dismissed by President Pervez Musharraf and remains in detention, although Musharraf last Saturday lifted the state of emergency he imposed in November.
The Times reported that the prisoner releases were "particularly galling to lawyers" because Musharraf had accused the courts of being soft on terrorists, and had used that claim as one justification for imposing emergency rule.
|
With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion. - Steven Weinberg, 1999
|
|
|
Hermit
Archon     
Posts: 4289 Reputation: 8.50 Rate Hermit

Prime example of a practically perfect person
|
 |
Re:If an article about Bushit is "pernicious and troubling", what is torture?
« Reply #2 on: 2007-12-20 15:15:24 » |
|
Constitutional scholar: 'At least six identifiable crimes' possible in CIA tape affair
[ Hermit : Regrettably the spineless Democrats have sufficiently dirty hands not to tread this path. Another reason to strongly consider not providing support to either party.]
Source: The Raw Story Authors: David Edwards, Jason Rhyne Dated: 2007-12-19
White House involvement in the CIA's decision to destroy videotapes documenting severe interrogation techniques of suspected terrorists could constitute as many as six crimes, according to constitutional law expert Jonathan Turley.
Turley appeared on CNN to discuss a new report from the New York Times, which indicates that four White House attorneys, including then-White House counsels Alberto Gonzales and Harriet Miers, participated in discussions with the CIA about whether or not the tapes should be destroyed. The talks also reportedly included David Addington, Vice President Dick Cheney's former counsel and current chief of staff; and former senior National Security Council lawyer John Bellinger.
"Just when you think this scandal can't get worse, it does," the George Washington University Law School professor told CNN's John Roberts. "I mean, this is a very significant development because it shows that this was not just some rogue operator at the CIA that destroyed evidence being sought by Congress and the courts. It shows that this was a planned destruction, that there were meetings, and those meetings extended all the way to the White House."
Turley went on to say that the high-level discussions, particularly those involving Miers and Gonzales, were "a hair's breath away from the president himself."
Asked whether "through inference" the talks might have extended to the Oval Office, Turley suggested the possibility existed.
"I think it's more than an inference at this point, which is one of the reasons there's a call for a special prosecutor," he said. "There are at least six identifiable crimes here, from obstruction of justice to obstruction of Congress, perjury, conspiracy, false statements, and what is often forgotten: the crime of torturing suspects."
Added Turley, "If that crime was committed it was a crime that would conceivably be ordered by the president himself, only the president can order those types of special treatments or interrogation techniques."[/color]
The Times reports that a former senior intelligence official told the paper that there was a "'vigorous sentiment' among some top White House officials to destroy the tapes." Other officials said that there was no White House push for their destruction.
US District Judge Henry Kennedy, who in 2005 ordered that the US preserve "all evidence and information" regarding torture and other abuses, has scheduled a Friday hearing to investigate the destruction of the tapes.
"Judge Kennedy is obviously not taking the advice of the Justice Department, that told him not to interfere," Turley said of the upcoming hearing. "Courts don't understand when the government destroys evidence -- particularly evidence that was sought by Congress and other courts. So it's not going to be a good day for the Justice Department."
|
With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion. - Steven Weinberg, 1999
|
|
|
|