A Senate Mystery Keeps Torture Alive - and Its Practitioners Free
By Jeff Stein
Congressional Quarterly
Wednesday 22 November 2006
With all the lawsuits over kidnapping and torture marching toward the Bush administration, you might think the top officials running the global war on terror would be worried just a little about the prospect that some day they might end up in court - if not having nightmares about getting measured for orange jumpsuits at Danbury Federal Prison.
Alas, no. Thanks to the legerdemain of Bush administration lawyers, a provision quietly tucked into the Military Commissions Act (PL 109-366) just before it was passed by Congress and signed into law by President Bush on Oct. 17, would ease any worries they might've had. It not only redefines torture upward, removing the harshest, most controversial techniques from the definition of war crimes, it also exempts the perpetrators - interrogators and their bosses - from punishment all the way back to Nov. 1997.
The deft wording is the Bush administration's attempt at bringing the United States' criteria for defining a war crime into line with the Geneva Convention's interpretation of torture.
Read the complete story at:
A Senate Mystery Keeps Torture Alive - and Its Practitioners Free
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