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Urgent Alert!Don't Let the President Legalize Torture
Too late, it is a done deal...
Tell your Senators that America doesn’t support torture.  
Contact Elected Officials


TORTURED LOGIC -- the new video we released last week -- is the latest example of that persistence. It's our newest approach to keeping the pressure on for an independent investigation of the Bush torture program -- one that follows the evidence wherever it leads.

In this week's issue of ACLU Online, you can also read about how the ACLU is standing against injustice and fighting for the most vulnerable across the country. In Maryland, the ACLU is challenging a policy that bans friends and relatives from a housing project even if they are invited guests. And we just released a report about corporal punishment used against the most vulnerable in our schools -- the disabled. Injustices like these occur in every corner of the country and, with your help, the ACLU is there to stand up against them.

So, take a minute to read about how the ACLU is fighting against injustice -- and shore yourself up for more tough-minded ACLU action in the weeks ahead.

Keep standing strong.


You Weren’t Meant to Hear This


Oliver Stone, Rosie Perez, Philip Glass and a host of talented performers have come together to expose something our government tried to keep secret from the American people.

The Bush torture memos brought to light by the ACLU reveal a systematic program of torture so appalling that it would be a moral outrage to let those who authorized it escape a criminal investigation.

The chilling and clinical nature of these memos really sinks in when you hear them read aloud. These memos shamefully contorted the law to justify the crime of torture, and now it’s time for those responsible for this dark episode in our history to be held accountable to the American people.

The video’s release comes amid recent news reports suggesting that U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder is considering appointing a prosecutor to investigate torture. However, press reports indicate that Holder envisions an investigation narrow in scope that would focus only on low-level interrogators and contract employees.

There is ample evidence already in the public domain that the widespread and systemic torture of detainees was authorized at the highest levels of the Bush administration. We cannot move forward confidently knowing that the abuses of the past will not be repeated by future administrations as long as everyone knows that the powerful people who perpetrated and enabled these serious crimes got off scot free. The attorney general should appoint a special prosecutor who will follow the facts where they lead, whether it be to prisons overseas or to the halls of power at home.

>>Watch Tortured Logic now. 
Then send it to Attorney General Eric Holder and ask that he appoint an independent prosecutor.
Take Action: Ask the Justice Department to Investigate Torture 

New information from a leaked report by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) concludes that the treatment of detainees being held by American personnel constituted torture, as well as cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment in violation of both U.S. and international law. The ICRC report is based on harrowing accounts from detainees about the treatment to which they were subjected.

The revelations in the ICRC report confirm and expand on the details of torture and abuse that are in the more than 100,000 pages of government documents that were already made public as the result of an ACLU lawsuit.

These stunning revelations -- along with news earlier this month that the CIA destroyed 92 tapes of harsh interrogation methods -- only underscore the need for an independent prosecutor. With mounting evidence of deliberate and widespread use of torture and abuse, we deserve to have the assurance that torture will stop and never happen again.

Join the ACLU and thousands of others to demand the truth and an end to torture.

>> Take Action: Ask Attorney General Holder to appoint an independent prosecutor.

Visit this link for the rest of the story...  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/28/AR2008112802242.html

By Matthew Alexander
Sunday, November 30, 2008; Page B01
I should have felt triumphant when I returned from Iraq in August 2006. Instead, I was worried and exhausted. My team of interrogators had successfully hunted down one of the most notorious mass murderers of our generation, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the leader of al-Qaeda in Iraq and the mastermind of the campaign of suicide bombings that had helped plunge Iraq into civil war. But instead of celebrating our success, my mind was consumed with the unfinished business of our mission: fixing the deeply flawed, ineffective and un-American way the U.S. military conducts interrogations in Iraq. I'm still alarmed about that today.

...
"Torture and abuse are against my moral fabric. The cliche still bears repeating:
Such outrages are inconsistent with American principles. And then there's the pragmatic side:
Torture and abuse cost American lives."
  
 www.WritingResource.info/tortureupdate.html

I learned in Iraq that the No. 1 reason foreign fighters flocked there to fight were the abuses carried out at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo. Our policy of torture was directly and swiftly recruiting fighters for al-Qaeda in Iraq. The large majority of suicide bombings in Iraq are still carried out by these foreigners. They are also involved in most of the attacks on U.S. and coalition forces in Iraq. It's no exaggeration to say that at least half of our losses and casualties in that country have come at the hands of foreigners who joined the fray because of our program of detainee abuse. The number of U.S. soldiers who have died because of our torture policy will never be definitively known, but it is fair to say that it is close to the number of lives lost on Sept. 11, 2001. How anyone can say that torture keeps Americans safe is beyond me -- unless you don't count American soldiers as Americans.

...Americans, including officers like myself, must fight to protect our values not only from al-Qaeda but also from those within our own country who would erode them. Other interrogators are also speaking out, including some former members of the military, the FBI and the CIA who met last summer to condemn torture and have spoken before Congress -- at considerable personal risk.

We're told that our only options are to persist in carrying out torture or to face another terrorist attack. But there truly is a better way to carry out interrogations -- and a way to get out of this false choice between torture and terror.

I'm actually quite optimistic these days, in no small measure because President-elect Barack Obama has promised to outlaw the practice of torture throughout our government. But until we renounce the sorts of abuses that have stained our national honor, al-Qaeda will be winning. Zarqawi is dead, but he has still forced us to show the world that we do not adhere to the principles we say we cherish. We're better than that. We're smarter, too.

howtobreakaterrorist@gmail.com   

Matthew Alexander led an interrogations team assigned to a Special Operations task force in Iraq in 2006. He is the author of "How to Break a Terrorist: The U.S. Interrogators Who Used Brains, Not Brutality, to Take Down the Deadliest Man in Iraq." He is writing under a pseudonym for security reasons.

Worries About War Crimes Heat up in the White House

 

Worries About War Crimes Heat up in the White House
By Frank Rich, The New York Times
Top Bush hands are starting to get sweaty about where they left their fingerprints on U.S. torture policies. Read more »

Lawmakers Urge Special Counsel Probe of Harsh Interrogation Tactics
http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2008/06/09/9506/

Paul Verhaeghen: We Are Not Immune to History. History Is Not Immune to Us.

By Paul Verhaeghen, author, Omega Minor

It used to be so simple.

Even five years ago there was no room for moral ambiguity.

Here is President Bush, in his 2003 State of the Union:

"Iraqi refugees tell us how forced confessions are obtainedby torturing children while their parents are made to watch. International human rights groups have catalogued other methods used in the torture chambers of Iraq: electric shock, burning with hot irons, dripping acid on the skin, mutilation with electric drills, cutting out tongues, and rape. If this is not evil, then evil has no meaning."

At this point, the transcript mentions an outbreak of (Applause.)

 
Torture and America

Not that long ago, then, we were not only opposed to torture inflicted upon Americans (such as the kicking, clubbing, burning with cigarettes and waterboarding of American POWs as practiced by Japanese soldiers; they received between 15 and 25 years of hard labor for their transgressions): We were also quite opposed to torture inflicted upon Iraqis for the mere purpose of extracting from them what we then called "forced confessions".

It used to be simple.

And then all this, within a year of this rousing denunciation of the practice of torture:  2003: Naem Sadoon Hatab, strangled to death at the Whitehorse detainment facility in Nasiriyah; 2003: Hemdan El Gashame, shot to death while imprisoned in Nasiriyah; 2003: Manadel Jamadi, beaten to death during interrogation at Abu Ghraib; 2004: Farhad Mohamed, cut and beaten to death in Mosul.

Such is the "enhancement" of our "interrogations."

What happened?

It is simple.

Now it is we who do the beating.

We are Good, you see, and we fight Evil, and by the very nature of our Goodness, all we do, no matter what it is, is both permitted and justified, for it is done for Goodness’s sake. Invading a country that never posed a threat, killing at least 83,000 of its civilians, detaining 25,000 of them, building cages on faraway shores for prisoners who will never get justice and at most a verdict, mock executions, beatings, electrical shocks, forced nakedness, sexual humiliation, the infliction of hypothermia and heat injuries, waterboarding, accidental killings? It’s all Good.

If this is the work of a few bad apples, their names are Cheney, Rice, Rumsfeld, Powell, Tenet and Ashcroft.

One can argue against torture on utilitarian grounds. Torture begets information, but not all of that information is "reliable". Confessions obtained under torture are not admissible in a court of law; we might have to release some potentially very real terrorists if their confessions are forced (Google Mohammed al-Kahtani, for instance). And torture goes against our word of honor — we did sign the Geneva Convention, we did sign the United Nations Convention against Torture.

Ultimately, there is a deeper precept.

Torture is the ultimate possession. You carve a person’s flesh. Their mind, their identity, their future, their fate rest in your hand, and yours alone. You twist their very soul until it breaks. They are — wholly — yours. Yours to toy with, yours to maim, and yours to kill. You own this human being like a slave-owner owns his slaves. This is not a metaphor. This human being is your slave; he has no recourse, no mercy, no law, than the recourse, the mercy, the law that is you.

This is the twenty-first century. Torture should be as unthinkable as slavery.

In my country, it is not. Here, we consider torture an acceptable form of human intercourse.

We do know this is wrong. We all know it. We brag about precision bombings; we show them on TV. We glorify the surgical precision of our military missions in movies and in novels; we embed reporters in our marches through the desert. But we do not brag about torture. We hide the evidence; we burn the tapes. We do not even want their blood to soil our soil; we outsource the violence to Cuba, to Yemen, to Egypt, to Gambia and Malawi, to Mauritania and Morocco, to Sudan, Zimbabwe, Indonesia and Pakistan, to Bulgaria, Germany, Bosnia, and Romania — and we hope the evidence will never surface. We do know this is wrong. We all know it.

History will not judge us kindly. But just as we are not immune to history, history is not immune to us. Power is not the only truth that matters. We, the people, are better than this. We can speak up. We can refuse to take part in what is done in our name, with our money, in this day and age. We have freedom of expression. We have the right to vote.

I do agree with President Bush: If this is not evil, then evil has no meaning.

Paul Verhaeghen 
What has our nation come to?  Situational Ethics are Un-American
In Italy, trial of CIA agents begins 
Los Angeles Times - CA,USA
Human rights officials accuse the Bush administration of using scores of extraordinary renditions to "outsource" torture, an allegation Washington denies. ...
Italians and Americans on trial over torture claims
Malaysia Sun, Malaysia - 3 hours ago   Twenty-six Americans, most believed to be CIA agents, and six Italians have been accused of kidnapping a terror suspect and sending him to Egypt, ...CIA trial opens ahead of Bush arrival in Italy
 
Committing Torture Wakens Inner Evils -- A Soldier's Tale
 

Committing Torture Wakens Inner Evils -- A Soldier's Tale

Interrogator Tony Lagouranis says he discovered and indulged in his own evil at Abu Ghraib prison, and now fears that it will be his constant companion for the rest of his life.

CACI: Torture in Iraq, Intimidation at Home  

CACI: Torture in Iraq, Intimidation at Home

Dogged by serious allegations of human rights abuses in Iraq, a leading profiteer from the Iraq war engages in intimidation campaigns against journalists in America who seek to expose its practices.

Let's be clear about this. 
What President Bush wanted from Congress was not clarity on the limits to which CIA interrogators might go in trying to get terrorism suspects to talk. He wanted Congress to grant them absolution.
And they did.   
They said they would Fight for our honor.. 

Senators John McCain, John Warner, Lindsey Graham, and Susan Collins claimed that they would
stand up to all the blandishments and pressures of the White House.  They told America they would
say no to torture, to morally flawed trials, to the scrapping of the Geneva Conventions, and to
pressures that threaten the very foundations of what the United States is and should be.
In refusing to go along, they carry on their shoulders the honor of the United States.

But when push came to shove, they surrendered.

But they lied.  The End of Freedom in the USA  October 18, 2006
                                     
                                   Never say it cannot happen here... it already has.

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