No Associated Press content was harmed in the writing of this post
Mark Danner’s coverage of the International Committee of the Red Cross report on the CIA’s treatment of detainees is maybe the most important addition to our body of knowledge on the Bush administration’s torture program since The Dark Side. He goes through the problems torture creates in the pursuit of justice ("If the ‘coercive’ and ‘abusive’ interrogation of [twentieth 9/11 hijacker Mohammed al-]Qahtani makes trying him impossible, one may doubt that any of the fourteen ‘high-value detainees’ whose accounts are given in this report will ever be tried and sentenced in an internationally recognized and sanctioned legal proceeding"). He also documents the organized cruelty in sickening detail, once again elaborates the practical limitations of it, and draws a series of unflinching conclusions ("Beginning in the spring of 2002 the United States government began to torture prisoners…The most senior officers of the US government, President George W. Bush first among them, repeatedly and explicitly lied about this, both in reports to international institutions and directly to the public").
This story had the misfortune of breaking on the same day as that of the $165 million in taxpayer money paid to the same AIGeniuses who wrecked their company in the first place. Both have something in common, though: the reluctance of president Obama to address either head on. Miles Mogulescu quipped that Obama "sen[t] out Tim Geithner, Austan Goolsbee, and Larry Summers to lamely express fake anger" over the payments. Instead of confronting and fighting back against AIG’s looting – Mogulescu has some excellent suggestions – the administration seems content to adopt the clever strategy pioneered by John Boehner: criticize it vehemently but go along with it anyway. At the moment he still seems committed to the strategy of funneling huge sums of money to troubled Wall Street firms but leaving their demonstrably untalented leaders in place.
As for war crimes, the story of the Obama Justice Department is that of the dog that didn’t bark. Last month he said Justice would investigate if there were "clear instances of wrongdoing," and Danner’s report is the latest unambiguous indication of just that. It is hard to take Obama at his word at this point; what would be sufficiently clear? The most obvious explanation for the continued inaction is that he wanted to mouth the right words for public consumption but make no effort to follow through.
Both of these may produce a very happy unintended consequence, though: prompting others to find ways around presidential obstinacy. We may have become too accustomed to expecting national-level changes to originate in the White House. There has been plenty of talk about resurrecting the spirit of the New Deal and looking for an energetic president to lead with a bold set of policies and programs. There have also been numerous mentions of the exchange between FDR and progressive activists, where after hearing their demands he said "I agree with you, I want to do it, now make me do it." (In the current case it is more than a bit frustrating to anticipate having to lobby for a Democratic president act like a Democrat. My response to the "make me do it" argument is, if we’d have wanted to need to force the president to do it we’d have voted Republican.)
However, not everyone seems content to go that route. George Bush made news this week when his trip to Canada encountered some turbulence in the form of the group Lawyers Against the War, who filed a suit to bar his entry by citing his suspicion on war crimes. It may be tempting to dismiss it as political grandstanding, but since it happened on his first post-presidency trip abroad it might also be foreshadowing. Lawsuits and protests may follow him wherever he goes, which only increases the chances of an arrest warrant or war crimes indictment. Meaning, among other things, that international law will grapple with this even if the president will not. How will it reflect on him if the case against Bush begins to be assembled and the rest of the world sees Obama as his protector?
Domestically, Andrew Cuomo has subpoenaed AIG executives to drag out the information that the president’s Treasury secretary is unwilling to insist on. Lawyers are taking action against the architects of Bush’s torture team, and there are renewed rumblings against doctors who assisted torturers as well. All of it sends the same message: We will go around you if need be, Mr. President. Considering how central the presidency has become to our sense of how things get done in America it is hard to think of that as a bad thing.



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” The Central Intelligence Agency disclosed Friday that it has 3,000 summaries, transcripts, reconstructions and memoranda relating to 92 interrogation videotapes that were destroyed by the agency, the American Civil Liberties Union revealed Friday evening.
The agency, however, says they won’t make them public or provide them to the civil rights group. The disclosure came as part of a lawsuit. “
http://rawstory.com/news/2008/….._0320.html
It wasn’t grandstanding. The same group of lawyers tried to get him in 2004. Harper broke Canadian law by allowing Bush to speak in Calgary on March 17th. Cute trick..the evidence of Bush’s war crimes was presented and the government simply choose not to consider the evidence. No surprise there; Harper was Bush’s boy when he was president and now he is Obama’s. Bush spoke to right winger oil people; the tar sand profiteers that are killing the environment and sickening our native population. Obama said little when he came to Canada other than a vague message that a way needs to be found to lessen the impact of extracting the oil. Obama needs our oil to keep the wars going, so there it is. Laws? What laws do the majority of politicians care about when obtaining oil is the goal? Not many…sigh. May the day come when some country arrests him. Until then, protesters will likely greet him everywhere he travels.
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” December 6, 2004
Canada blocks torture charges against Bush
” The Canadian government used a claim of diplomatic immunity Monday to block torture charges laid under the Canadian Criminal Code against President George W. Bush. The charges had been laid by Gail Davidson of LAW [Lawyers against the War] on the occasion of Bush’s visit to Canada on November 30. They concerned the well-known abuses at Abu Ghraib prison, photos of which shocked the world earlier this year, as well as similar abuses at Guantánamo Bay that have emerged more recently. On behalf of LAW, Davidson was seeking to fix a date for a hearing into the charges and came armed with evidence, but Judge William Kitchen acceded to the Attorney General’s objections and declared the charges ‘a nullity’. “
http://www.lawyersagainstthewar.org/press.html
WTF? George Bush is allowed in, but not George Galloway? AIPAC rules here, too, I suspect. Payback for his aid convoy to Gaza?
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” Anti-war MP George Galloway has been banned from Canada, it emerged today.
A Canadian spokesman confirmed that the Respect MP had been deemed inadmissible on national security grounds and would not be allowed into the country.
Galloway today branded the ban “idiotic” and vowed to fight the ruling with “all means” at his disposal. He is due to give a speech in Toronto on 30 March.
Earlier today the Sun said border security officials had declared Galloway, 54, “inadmissible” because of his views on Afghanistan and the presence of Canadian troops there and would be turned away if he attempted to enter the country. “
http://www.guardian.co.uk/poli…..ned-canada
Thanks, bluebutterfly. I don’t think it was grandstanding either; I was just trying to address an anticipated criticism.
Thanks for the links too.
Here is the answer to the Galloway banning from Canada. It takes a strong stomach to watch this video. The JDL spokesman gives a whole new meaning to the words ’shifty eyed’. Going to be interesting to see what happens with this situation. The FBI calls the JDL a terrorist organization, so I want to know why the Canadian government allows this guy’s threatening hate speech and why, if he is to be believed, his group has any sway with the Canadian government. I didn’t think that you did. I was preempting the criticism that you anticipated..’g’.
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” Canada ban: Galloway faces his accusers a Jewish Defence League (JDL) “Terrorist” “
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fAm7rfHKSyY
Thanks for the links, bluebutterfly. The neocons/Bushies in Canada may be swept away; George Galloway is a Scot; Canada was initially settled by a huge number of Scots immigrants.
For my 2 cents, I wish George Galloway was head of the UN General Assembly. The true humans left in this world would then have a spokesman and a champion.
[good to ’see’ you again, blue]
Nice to see you, too.
Yes it was and there are many Scottish people living here; around a fifth of our population, perhaps more. We did funny things with birth registrations years ago..no longer keep track of nationalities. My daughter’s father is Scottish, but you can’t tell by her Vital Statistics Registration. Hmm..that might be just in BC..too lazy to research all province and territory rules.
Cala-ghearridh..became Calgary. Founded by brave immigrants and now home to visiting US war criminals. First Bush and, apparently, Condi arrives in May.
As Canada is still part of the Commonwealth, maybe Galloway can get dual citizenship and become a Canadian politician..hahaha. He’d shake up all of our Zionist worshipping politicians and our MSM dependent ill informed citizens.
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” Scots formed the vanguard of the movement of Europeans across the continent. In more modern times, emigrants from Scotland have played a leading role in the social, political and economic history of Canada, being prominent in banking, labour unions, and politics.
The first documented source of Scots in what would become Canada comes from the Saga of Eric the Red and the Viking expedition of 1010 AD to Vinland (literally, the land of wine), which is now the island of Newfoundland. The Viking prince Thorfinn Karlsefni led an expedition to Vinland and took with him 160 Viking men, three ships, and two Scottish slaves, a man named Haki and a woman named Hekja, who were reputed to be as swift as deer. “
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canadian_Scots
So very interesting, blue. I knew of the Vinland expedition, but not about the 2 Scottish slaves.
Some of my very ancient clansmen emigrated to Canada around early 1600s. My maiden name was Cockburn (pronounced Ko-burn, long o; yeah, same like that @#$% senator from Oklahoma). Earliest written record I’ve found of that clan name in Scotland was 1061.
I hope Spring is coming to your part of the world.
Within the past week..finally..the snow is gone. Not a moment too soon to save my sanity…’g’.
Only 19 per million of your maiden name in Canada now, but that still ranks as the 4th highest world concentration. Check out any surname here.
http://publicprofiler.org/worldnames/Main.aspx
” The Canadian immigration minister Jason Kenney gazetted in the Sun yesterday morning that I was to be excluded from his country because of my views on Afghanistan. That’s the way the rightwing, last-ditch dead-enders of Bushism in Ottawa conduct their business.
Kenney is quite a card. A quick trawl establishes he’s a gay-baiter, gung-ho armchair warrior, with an odd habit of exceeding his immigration brief. Three years ago he attacked the pro-western Lebanese prime minister, Fuad Siniora, for being ungrateful to Canada for its support of Israeli bombardment of his country. Most curiously of all, in 2006 he addressed a rally of the so-called People’s Mujahideen of Iran, a Waco-style cult, banned in the European Union as a terrorist organisation. On one level being banned by such a man is like being told to sit up straight by the hunchback of Notre Dame or being lectured on due diligence by Conrad Black. On another, for a Scotsman to be excluded from Canada is like being turned away from the family home.
To ban a five-times elected British MP from addressing public events or keeping appointments with television and radio programmes is a serious matter. Kenney’s “spokesman” told the Sun, “Galloway’s not coming in … end of story.” Alas for him, it’s not. Canada remains a free country governed by law and my friends are even now seeking a judicial review. And there are other ways I can address those Canadians who wish to hear me. “
http://www.warcriminalsout.com…..loway.html
This sums up Kenney. His proudest moment isn’t Canada’s.
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” Kenney said he is an “unapologetic supporter” of Israel.
He says the proudest moment in his career as immigration minister was when he withdrew Canada from next month’s United Nations-sponsored Durban II conference in Geneva. “
http://atheonews.blogspot.com/…..g-off.html
DIGG IS OPEN — and recommended. Thanks, danps, for keeping this on the front page.
Thanks acquarius74!
“We may have become too accustomed to expecting national-level changes to originate in the White House. “—absolutely NO DOUBT, not a ‘may have become’.
And ‘diplomatic immunity’ re Canada?; once a President leaves office, he is a private citizen with NO claim to diplomatic immunity !!
Exactly..which is why he should have been either banned from Canada, or arrested in Canada.
” Over objections from the U.S. intelligence community, the White House is moving to declassify—and publicly release—three internal memos that will lay out, for the first time, details of the “enhanced” interrogation techniques approved by the Bush administration for use against “high value” Qaeda detainees. The memos, written by Justice Department lawyers in May 2005, provide the legal rationale for waterboarding, head slapping and other rough tactics used by the CIA. One senior Obama official, who like others interviewed for this story requested anonymity because of the issue’s sensitivity, said the memos were “ugly” and could embarrass the CIA. Other officials predicted they would fuel demands for a “truth commission” on torture. “
http://www.newsweek.com/id/190362