Community | May 18, 2009 | 17 comments

The 13 people who made torture possible

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bansheewail
May 18, 2009 | On April 16, the Obama administration released four memos that were used to authorize torture in interrogations during the Bush administration. When President Obama released the memos, he said, "It is our intention to assure those who carried out their duties relying in good faith upon legal advice from the Department of Justice that they will not be subject to prosecution."

Yet 13 key people in the Bush administration cannot claim they relied on the memos from the DOJ's Office of Legal Counsel. Some of the 13 manipulated the federal bureaucracy and the legal process to "preauthorize" torture in the days after 9/11. Others helped implement torture, and still others helped write the memos that provided the Bush administration with a legal fig leaf after torture had already begun.

The Torture 13 exploited the federal bureaucracy to establish a torture regime in two ways. First, they based the enhanced interrogation techniques on techniques used in the U.S. military's Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape (SERE) program. The program -- which subjects volunteers from the armed services to simulated hostile capture situations -- trains servicemen and -women to withstand coercion well enough to avoid making false confessions if captured. Two retired SERE psychologists contracted with the government to "reverse-engineer" these techniques to use in detainee interrogations.

The Torture 13 also abused the legal review process in the Department of Justice in order to provide permission for torture. The DOJ's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) played a crucial role. OLC provides interpretations on how laws apply to the executive branch. On issues where the law is unclear, like national security, OLC opinions can set the boundary for "legal" activity for executive branch employees. As Jack Goldsmith, OLC head from 2003 to 2004, explains it, "One consequence of [OLC's] power to interpret the law is the power to bestow on government officials what is effectively an advance pardon for actions taken at the edges of vague criminal statutes." OLC has the power, Goldsmith continues, to dispense "get-out-of-jail-free cards." The Torture 13 exploited this power by collaborating on a series of OLC opinions that repeatedly gave U.S. officials such a "get-out-of-jail-free card" for torturing.

Between 9/11 and the end of 2002, the Torture 13 decided to torture, then reverse-engineered the techniques, and then crafted the legal cover. Here's who they are and what they did:(details of the actions of each at the link to full article)

1. Dick Cheney, vice president (2001-2009)
2. David Addington, counsel to the vice president (2001-2005), chief of staff to the vice president (2005-2009)
3. Alberto Gonzales, White House counsel (2001-2005), and attorney general (2005-2008)
4. James Mitchell, consultant
5. George Tenet, director of Central Intelligence (1997-2004)
6. Condoleezza Rice, national security advisor (2001-2005), secretary of state (2005-2008)
7. John Yoo, deputy assistant attorney general, Office of Legal Counsel (2001-2003)
8. Jay Bybee, assistant attorney general, Office of Legal Counsel (2001-2003)
9. William "Jim" Haynes, Defense Department general counsel (2001-2008)
10. Donald Rumsfeld, secretary of defense (2001-2006)
11. John Rizzo, CIA deputy general counsel (2002-2004), acting general counsel of the Central Intelligence Agency (2001-2002, 2004-present)
12. Steven Bradbury, principal deputy assistant attorney general, OLC (2004), acting assistant attorney general, OLC (2005-2009)
13. George W. Bush, president (2001-2009

Okay, now what?
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17 comments // The 13 people who made torture possible

  • twitterbot
    • 0
      twitterbot  
    • @WarLordwrites on twitter says "Salon: The 13 people who made torture possible Crimes by those in power that made us less safe #warcrimes"

    • 2 years ago
  • Nazzareno
  • Ragan
  • Kepano
  • tommytripper
    • 0
      tommytripper  
    • they will walk because obama and the dems who knew about this crap are to scared to face the music, and admit they did it.

      just look at the bumbling fool the speaker of the house has become, she knew... she knew full well, and because to bring justice and the rule of law to pass she would be exposing her lying self to these same charges

      there are people on both sides who are guilty, and because of this there will be no justice

    • 2 years ago
  • Nazzareno
  • kennymotown
  • artemis6
    • 0
      artemis6  
    • I whole heartedly agree with bansheewail . America will loose any self respect for its collective itself if these people go free . Our country was not meant to be lead by evil tyrants . We must take it back , and make a memorable example of those who betrayed our sacred trust . Either that , or admit to the world , to being a nation of bloodthirsty sadists .

    • 2 years ago
  • GoodGodGuy
  • Highr0ller
  • Highr0ller
  • stopnoise
  • Liberal_Extinction
    • 0
      Liberal_Extinction  
    • Now what? Nothing, it's just another left wing fishing expedition trying to politicize tactics that are merely questionable AT BEST. Keep trying you hankie twisting sob sister pansies. It's war, and taking the hell out of war only reduces it's effectiveness.

    • 2 years ago
  • ocanada
    • 0
      ocanada  
    • waterboarding was outlawed in the conventions against torture, as an executive agency the power of the office of the OLC was barred from changing and act of Congress, nor is it an appealate court or member of the judiciary, its overuling of the Geneva Convention, and the U.N. resolution banning the user of torture is in itself an extraconstitutional action and in doing so violated both the constitutional protection barring cruel and unusual punishment and the seperation of powers. Everyone agrees its legal justifications were roughshod and not practical legal arguments. Thier justification is also clearly outlawed in the U.N. conventions against torture. At Nuhremberg we put such individuals on trail and sentenced them to death or life inprissonment.

    • 1 year ago
  • pjacobs51
  • bansheewail
    • 0
      bansheewail  
    • We are a country of laws not of men. That's what makes America so great. There is no excuse for breaking the law. No one is above the law. The law protects the common man from tyranny. We can't lead the world, if we hold tightly to a history based in hypocracy and lies. If we tortured those men and boys to get them to lie about the link between Iraq and Al Qaeda, then all #13 of these administration officials are guilty of conspiracy to commit treason. They authorized torture to cover up Bush's lies about why we invaded Iraq. For that, they should burn. They don't represent the America I love. They don't represent me.

    • 2 years ago
  • Mikeysfake1
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