"These memos are not an honest attempt to set the legal limits on 
interrogations, which was the authors’ statutory obligation. They were written 
to provide legal immunity for acts that are clearly illegal, immoral and a 
violation of this country’s most basic values"
 
The torturers’ manifesto 







It was written to provide legal immunity for acts that are clearly illegal and 
immoral. 





http://www.hindu.com/2009/04/20/stories/2009042051680900.htm
 
To read the four newly released memos on prisoner interrogation written by 
George W. Bush’s Justice Department is to take a journey into depravity. 
Their language is the precise bureaucratese favoured by dungeon masters 
throughout history. They detail how to fashion a collar for slamming a prisoner 
against a wall, exactly how many days he can be kept without sleep (11), and 
what, specifically, he should be told before being locked in a box with an 
insect — all to stop just short of having a jury decide that these acts violate 
the laws against torture and abusive treatment of prisoners. 
In one of the more nauseating passages, Jay Bybee, then an assistant attorney 
general and now a federal judge, wrote admiringly about a contraption for 
waterboarding that would lurch a prisoner upright if he stopped breathing while 
water was poured over his face. He praised the CIA for having doctors ready to 
perform an emergency tracheotomy if necessary. 
These memos are not an honest attempt to set the legal limits on 
interrogations, which was the authors’ statutory obligation. They were written 
to provide legal immunity for acts that are clearly illegal, immoral and a 
violation of this country’s most basic values. 
It sounds like the plot of a mob film, except the lawyers asking how much their 
clients can get away with are from the CIA and the lawyers coaching them on how 
to commit the abuses are from the Justice Department. And it all played out 
with the blessing of the Defence Secretary, the Attorney-General, the 
Intelligence Director and, most likely, President Bush and Vice President Dick 
Cheney. 
The American Civil Liberties Union deserves credit for suing for the memos’ 
release. And President Barack Obama deserves credit for overruling his own CIA 
director and ordering that the memos be made public. It is hard to think of 
another case in which documents stamped “Top Secret” were released with hardly 
any deletions. But this cannot be the end of the scrutiny for these and other 
decisions by the Bush administration. 
Until Americans and their leaders fully understand the rules the Bush 
administration concocted to justify such abuses — and who set the rules and who 
approved them — there is no hope of fixing a profoundly broken system of 
justice and ensuring that that these acts are never repeated. 
The abuses and the dangers do not end with the torture memos. Americans still 
know far too little about Bush’s decision to illegally eavesdrop on Americans — 
a program that has since been given legal cover by Congress. 
Recently, The Times reported that the nation’s intelligence agencies have been 
collecting private e-mail messages and phone calls of Americans on a scale that 
went beyond the broad limits established in legislation last year. The article 
quoted the Justice Department as saying there had been problems in the 
surveillance programme that had been resolved. But Justice did not say what 
those problems were or what the resolution was. 
That is the heart of the matter: Nobody really knows what any of the rules 
were. Mr. Bush never offered the slightest explanation of what he found lacking 
in the 1978 Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act when he decided to ignore the 
law after 9/11 and ordered the warrantless wiretapping of Americans’ overseas 
calls and e-mail. He said he was president and could do what he wanted. 
The Bush administration also never explained how it interpreted laws that were 
later passed to expand the government’s powers to eavesdrop. And the Obama 
administration argued in a recent court filing that everything associated with 
electronic eavesdropping, including what is allowed and what is not, is a state 
secret. 
We do not think Mr. Obama will violate Americans’ rights as Mr. Bush did. But 
if Americans do not know the rules, they cannot judge whether this government 
or any one that follows is abiding by the rules. In the case of detainee abuse, 
Mr. Obama assured CIA operatives that they would not be prosecuted for actions 
that their superiors told them were legal. We have never been comfortable with 
the “only following orders” excuse, especially because Americans still do not 
know what was actually done or who was giving the orders. After all, as far as 
Bush’s lawyers were concerned, it was not really torture unless it involved 
breaking bones, burning flesh or pulling teeth. That, Mr. Bybee kept noting, 
was what the Libyan secret police did to one prisoner. The standard for 
American behaviour should be a lot higher than that of the Libyan secret 
police. 
At least Mr. Obama is not following Mr. Bush’s example of showy trials for the 
small fry — like Lynndie England of Abu Ghraib notoriety. But he has an 
obligation to pursue what is clear evidence of a government policy sanctioning 
the torture and abuse of prisoners — in violation of international law and the 
Constitution. 
That investigation should start with the lawyers who wrote these sickening 
memos, including John Yoo, who now teaches law in California; Steven Bradbury, 
who was job-hunting when we last heard; and Mr. Bybee, who holds the lifetime 
seat on the federal appeals court that Bush rewarded him with. 
These memos make it clear that Mr. Bybee is unfit for a job that requires legal 
judgment and a respect for the Constitution. Congress should impeach him. And 
if the administration will not conduct a thorough investigation of these 
issues, then Congress has a constitutional duty to hold the executive branch 
accountable. If that means putting Donald Rumsfeld and Alberto Gonzales on the 
stand, even Dick Cheney, we are sure Americans can handle it. After eight years 
without transparency or accountability, Mr. Obama promised the American people 
both. His decision to release these memos was another sign of his commitment to 
transparency. We are waiting to see an equal commitment to accountability. — © 
2009 The New York Times News Service 


With Regards 

Abi
 

Knowledge is the best gift, and manner is the best transaction
- Ali


      
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