June 8, 2004
NATIONAL SECURITY IS JOB ONE:
Pentagon Report Set Framework For Use of Torture: Security or Legal Factors Could Trump Restrictions, Memo to Rumsfeld Argued (Jess Bravin, June 7, 2004, Wall Street Journal)
Bush administration lawyers contended last year that the president wasn't bound by laws prohibiting torture and that government agents who might torture prisoners at his direction couldn't be prosecuted by the Justice Department.The advice was part of a classified report on interrogation methods prepared for Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld after commanders at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, complained in late 2002 that with conventional methods they weren't getting enough information from prisoners.
The report outlined U.S. laws and international treaties forbidding torture, and why those restrictions might be overcome by national-security considerations or legal technicalities. In a March 6, 2003, draft of the report reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, passages were deleted as was an attachment listing specific interrogation techniques and whether Mr. Rumsfeld himself or other officials must grant permission before they could be used. The complete draft document was classified "secret" by Mr. Rumsfeld and scheduled for declassification in 2013.
The draft report, which exceeds 100 pages, deals with a range of legal issues related to interrogations, offering definitions of the degree of pain or psychological manipulation that could be considered lawful. But at its core is an exceptional argument that because nothing is more important than "obtaining intelligence vital to the protection of untold thousands of American citizens," normal strictures on torture might not apply.
The president, despite domestic and international laws constraining the use of torture, has the authority as commander in chief to approve almost any physical or psychological actions during interrogation, up to and including torture, the report argued. Civilian or military personnel accused of torture or other war crimes have several potential defenses, including the "necessity" of using such methods to extract information to head off an attack, or "superior orders," sometimes known as the Nuremberg defense: namely that the accused was acting pursuant to an order and, as the Nuremberg tribunal put it, no "moral choice was in fact possible."
There's a reason we didn't join the ICC. A president of the United States can't not do what needs to be done just because of a prospective prosecution. Posted by Orrin Judd at June 8, 2004 9:01 AM
"The advice was part of a classified report on interrogation methods"
Who leaked this and why? And why isn't he being arrested and thrown in the brig?
Posted by: Robert Schwartz at June 8, 2004 1:00 PMI agree with Robert. This story and the earlier exposure of Abu Gharib via picture's no less, unnecessarily confuse the public. "Whistle-blowers" ?? Squealers? How can an organization run when everyone has to constantly be looking over their shoulders.
Don't everybody jump on me at once.
Posted by: h-man at June 8, 2004 3:02 PM