This is What Happens When You Go It Alone

Jenny Durkan
Since arriving in power, President Bush's neo-conservative hard-liners
staked out a "go it alone" policy. They convinced the president that we, the
mighty, did not need the rest of the world.
Despite years of painstaking international negotiations, Bush just walked
away from the Kyoto Protocol on global warming and unilaterally abandoned
the Russian missile treaty. America must do what is good for America.
Then came Sept. 11, 2001. Everything changed. We needed the world. Despite
the president's snubs, the world responded.
Huge crowds turned out throughout the world to support America. Countries
everywhere honored our requests to seize assets and make arrests. France and
Germany played pivotal roles in dismantling al-Qaida operations. Germany
remains the only country that actually convicted someone for the Sept. 11
attacks.
All that was forgotten as Bush set his sights on Baghdad. The go-it-aloners
scoffed at the concerns of the world community. Citations of international
law were derisively dismissed. That is "Old Europe." Let them eat Freedom
Fries.
Last week came another sharp reminder of the need for global order. Horrific
pictures of American POWs and dead soldiers were broadcast to the world.
Immediately, the president invoked international law, and called upon the
assistance of an international organization, the Red Cross. The president
made clear: Iraq better not harm our soldiers or subject them to humiliation
or the wrongdoers will be tried as war criminals.
But if the president wants to protect our captured soldiers, he must do more
than utter words. He must show America's unfaltering commitment to the
letter and the spirit of the Geneva Convention, and the Convention Against
Torture.
He must start with prisoners from America's "war on terrorism." Brutal
conditions have been reported in the U.S. prison at the Bagram Air Base in
Afghanistan. Prisoners are forced to sit or kneel naked for hours while
being questioned. They are hooded, doused with ice water, hung from the
ceiling by chains, deprived of sleep, forced to stand for long periods, and
are the target of humiliating verbal abuse by women soldiers.
According to The Wall Street Journal, one U.S. intelligence official
acknowledged they might authorize a "little bit of smacky-face" during
interrogations. Maybe sometimes more. In December, two prisoners at the U.S.
Bagram prison died of beatings. Though the military coroner ruled both as
homicides, no charges have been brought.
One dare not imagine the fate of those we turn over for questioning by
countries we know use "real torture."
Conditions at our military prisons cannot be verified because the Bush
administration has said international law does not apply to these prisoners.
We may be waging a "war on terrorism," but according to the administration,
they are not "prisoners of war" and have no rights under the Geneva
Convention. Thus, despite requests from human-rights groups, no agency like
the Red Cross is allowed into Bagram.
Recently, John Ashcroft's Justice Department successfully argued to a U.S.
judge that no country's laws protect prisoners held in Guant�namo Bay,
because it is not in any country.
Such legal niceties only inflame much of the world. Many distrust our
motives and resent our brash use of power. Others have come to view us
through Al Jazeera's eyes.
It is time to remember that we are the good guys, and act like it. For our
soldiers and our future, we must lead on this issue. The president may not
know all of the details of the Geneva Convention, or the Convention Against
Torture. But surely he remembers a line from his favorite philosopher: "Do
unto others... ."
Jenny Durkan is a Seattle attorney and board member of the Center for Women
and Democracy at the University of Washington. She previously served as an
adjunct professor at the UW School of Law and is a former gubernatorial
executive counsel.
             The Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni Uganda is in Anarchy"
             Le groupe de transmission de Mulindwas
" avec Yoweri Museveni, Ouganda est dans anarchy "

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