<http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-rivkin20jun20,0,321171
2,print.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions>
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-rivkin20jun20,0,3211712
,print.story?coll=la-news-comment-opinions 
 

The ACLU's tortured logic on Gitmo

Bush critics won't accept that detainee abuse is the exception, not the
rule.
By David B. Rivkin Jr. and Lee A. Casey, DAVID B. RIVKIN JR. and LEE A.
CASEY are partners in a Washington law firm and served in the Justice
Department under presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush.
June 20, 2006 

THE "GOTCHA" crowd has fallen on its face again.

In an effort to show that on the Bush administration's evil watch the U.S.
military has been systematically mistreating prisoners in Iraq and
Afghanistan with tacit approval or even outright encouragement from its
civilian superiors, the American Civil Liberties Union has been demanding
the release of dozens of internal military investigative reports. But the
two reports on U.S. detainee policy just released in response to an ACLU
lawsuit paint a picture quite the opposite of what the ACLU expected.

 
Though heavily redacted to remove operational details, the reports (by Brig.
Gens. Richard Formica and Charles Jacoby) show a Pentagon open to criticism
and change, and determined to guarantee detainees the humane treatment
promised by President Bush when the war on terror began. 

Genuine instances of abuse are noted, but these are very much the exception
and not the rule. The reports indicate that many allegations of abuse simply
are unsubstantiated - or that the "victim's" story changes once carefully
examined. The most serious criticism is that the administration's detainee
policies were not adequately communicated down the chain of command,
resulting in confusion on the ground about what treatment was permissible.
In addition, there was a lack of training on detainee handling. These points
have been corrected.

Predictably, the ACLU has cried "whitewash." But what we are seeing is the
refusal by administration critics to see anything other than the "torture
narrative" they have constructed.

That "narrative" goes like this: Bush and his war Cabinet opened the door to
detainee abuse, first by refusing to accord captured Al Qaeda and Taliban
members Geneva Convention rights, and second, by permitting the use of
aggressive interrogation techniques. Therefore, says the human rights crowd,
Bush and other senior officials are morally - and some say legally -
responsible for all of the abuses that have taken place since Sept. 11,
2001. Although this story has become holy writ in liberal circles, it is
legally preposterous and logically flawed.

As a matter of law, guilt for war crimes can be imposed up the chain of
command only when superiors have ordered the offending conduct or have
failed to take appropriate disciplinary measures once they become aware that
abusive conduct is taking place. But as these reports demonstrate,
allegations of wrongdoing by U.S. forces have been thoroughly investigated
and punished when called for. There simply is no rule of "strict liability"
that would support the punishment of either military or civilian superior
officers or officials without evidence that they ordered or condoned abuses.

The narrative is also flawed because Bush has from the beginning made clear
that all individuals captured in the war on terror must be treated humanely.
This is the case regardless of their legal status or where they were
captured. To the extent that abuses have taken place, there is no reason to
believe that granting the detainees prisoner-of-war status would have made a
difference. The abuse of inmates at Abu Ghraib occurred because the prison
was dysfunctional, not because the inmates were denied classification as
POWs. 

The same is true with respect to interrogation methods - clearly the most
controversial aspect of the administration's detainee policy. None of the
methods authorized by administration officials over time - including
standing for long periods, dietary manipulation and sleep interruption - are
inherently torture or inhumane treatment. All could, if taken to a
sufficient extreme, cross the line. The only way to guarantee that the line
is never crossed would be to eschew any method of interrogation that could,
in the wrong hands, be taken too far. 

However, the only way to protect civilians against a terrorist attack is to
obtain intelligence about the enemy's capabilities and plans, so that U.S.
forces can act first. Although many experts believe that noncoercive
interrogation methods do work (and that harsher methods do not), these
experts tend to be vague when it comes to timelines - and it's the timing
that matters. This is why U.S. officials turned to stressful interrogation
methods in the first place.

To avoid future excesses, the Pentagon has considered scores of
recommendations, and most of them have been implemented. All of this
compares favorably with actions taken in past conflicts. Americans can
justly take pride in their fighting men and women and in the Pentagon's
civilian leadership. If the ACLU was hoping to prove otherwise, it failed.

 


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