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White House Aims to Block Legislation on Detainees

By Josh White and R. Jeffrey Smith
Washington Post Staff Writers
Saturday, July 23, 2005; A01

The Bush administration in recent days has been lobbying to block
legislation supported by Republican senators that would bar the U.S.
military from engaging in "cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment" of
detainees, from hiding prisoners from the Red Cross, and from using
interrogation methods not authorized by a new Army field manual.

Vice President Cheney met Thursday evening with three senior Republican
members of the Senate Armed Services Committee to press the
administration's case that legislation on these matters would usurp the
president's authority and -- in the words of a White House official --
interfere with his ability "to protect Americans effectively from
terrorist attack."

It was the second time that Cheney has met with Senate members to tamp
down what the White House views as an incipient Republican rebellion. The
lawmakers have publicly expressed frustration about what they consider to
be the administration's failure to hold any senior military officials
responsible for notorious detainee abuse in Iraq and the U.S. military
prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

This week's session was attended by Armed Services Chairman John W. Warner
(R-Va.) and committee members John McCain (R-Ariz.) and Lindsey O. Graham
(R-S.C.). Warner and Graham last week chaired hearings that explored
detainee abuse and interrogation tactics at Guantanamo Bay and the
concerns of senior military lawyers that vague administration policies
have left the door open to abuse.

Neither Cheney's office nor the lawmakers would say exactly what was
discussed at the meeting, citing a routine pledge of confidentiality. But
Cheney has long been the administration's chief defender of presidential
prerogatives, and at the meeting he reiterated opposition to congressional
intervention on the topic of detainee interrogations, according to a
source privy to what happened.

The White House, in a further indication of its strong feelings, bluntly
warned in a statement sent to Capitol Hill on Thursday that President
Bush's advisers would urge him to veto the $442 billion defense bill "if
legislation is presented that would restrict the President's authority to
protect Americans effectively from terrorist attack and bring terrorists
to justice."

The threat was a veiled reference to legislation drafted by McCain and
being circulated among at least 10 Republican senators, Senate aides said.
No effort has been made by McCain to cultivate Democratic support,
although his aides predict he could get it easily. John Ullyot, a Warner
spokesman, said that the senator has been working with McCain and Graham
on detainee legislation and that "the matter continues to be studied."

A spokeswoman for McCain, Andrea Jones, said yesterday that McCain plans
to introduce the legislation next week. McCain, who was a prisoner of war
in Vietnam, has criticized the way detainees have been treated by U.S.
forces and is said by aides to want to cut off further abuse by requiring
that the military adhere to its own interrogation rules in all cases.

One McCain amendment would set uniform standards for interrogating anyone
detained by the Defense Department and would limit interrogation
techniques to those listed in the Army field manual on interrogation, now
being revised. Any changes to procedures would require the defense
secretary to appear before Congress.

It would further require that all foreign nationals in the custody or
effective control of the U.S. military must be registered with the
International Committee of the Red Cross -- a provision specifically meant
to block the holding of "ghost detainees" in Iraq, in Afghanistan or
elsewhere. The provision would not apply to detainees in CIA custody at
nonmilitary facilities.

Military investigations into the abuse in 2003 of detainees at the Abu
Ghraib prison near Baghdad disclosed that dozens were held without being
registered at numerous prisons; the administration has said it needed to
do so to conduct interrogations in isolation and to hide the identity of
prisoners from other terrorists.

Another McCain amendment prohibits the "cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment" of anyone in the custody of the U.S. government.
This provision, modeled after wording in the U.N. Convention Against
Torture -- which the United States has already ratified -- is meant to
overturn an administration position that the convention does not apply to
foreigners outside the United States.

Graham, who has been outspoken on the need for Congress to get involved in
the issue of detainee treatment, said in an interview that he intends to
pursue additional amendments that would define the term "enemy combatant"
for purposes of detention and regulate the military trials of detainees
held at Guantanamo Bay.

Graham said he believes that his amendment would strengthen the
president's ability to pursue the war on terror because it would give
congressional support to the process of prosecuting detainees after they
are transferred to Cuba, an issue that has been hotly contested in federal
courts. "Every administration is reluctant to not have as much authority
as possible," Graham said, adding that he has gotten mixed signals from
the White House. "But we need congressional buy-in to Guantanamo."

The Republican effort is intended partly to cut off an effort by Senate
Democrats to attach more stringent demands to the defense bill regarding
detainees. One group, led by Sen. Carl M. Levin (D-Mich.), has proposed an
amendment calling for an independent commission -- similar to the Sept. 11
commission -- to look into administration policies on interrogation and
detainee abuse.

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