President George W. Bush’s comment to ABC News -- that
he approved discussions that his top aides held about harsh
interrogation techniques -- adds credence to claims from senior
FBI agents in Iraq in 2004 that Bush had signed an executive
order approving the use of military dogs, sleep deprivation
and other tactics to intimidate Iraqi detainees.
When the American Civil Liberties Union released the FBI
e-mail in December 2004 -- after obtaining it through a Freedom
of Information Act lawsuit -- the White House emphatically
denied that any such presidential executive order existed,
calling the unnamed FBI official who wrote the e-mail “mistaken.”
President Bush and his representatives also have denied repeatedly
that the administration condones “torture,” although
senior administration officials have acknowledged subjecting
“high-value” terror suspects to aggressive interrogation
techniques, including the “waterboarding” -- or
simulated drowning -- of three al-Qaeda detainees.
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But the emerging public evidence suggests that Bush’s
denials about “torture” amount to a semantic argument,
with the administration applying a narrow definition that
contradicts widely accepted standards contained in international
law, including Geneva and other human rights conventions.
The FBI e-mail -- dated May 22, 2004 -- followed disclosures
about abuse of Iraqi detainees at Abu Ghraib prison and sought
guidance on whether FBI agents in Iraq were obligated to report
the U.S. military’s harsh interrogation of inmates when
that treatment violated FBI standards but fit within the guidelines
of a presidential executive order.
According to the e-mail, Bush’s executive order authorized
interrogators to use military dogs, “stress positions,”
sleep “management,” loud music and “sensory
deprivation through the use of hoods, etc.” to extract
information from detainees in Iraq.
The FBI e-mail was put into a new light by news reports last
week that senior White House officials -- including Vice President
Dick Cheney and then-National Security Adviser Condoleezza
Rice -- did meet secretly to discuss specific interrogation
methods that could be used against detainees.
“The most senior Bush administration officials repeatedly
discussed and approved specific details of exactly how high-value
al-Qaeda suspects would be interrogated by the CIA,”
ABC News reported, citing unnamed sources.
“The high-level discussions about these ‘enhanced
interrogation techniques’ were so detailed, these sources
said, some of the interrogation sessions were almost choreographed
-- down to the number of times CIA agents could use a specific
tactic.
“These top advisers signed off on how the CIA would
interrogate top al-Qaeda suspects -- whether they would be
slapped, pushed, deprived of sleep or subjected to simulated
drowning, called waterboarding, sources told ABC News.”
Last Friday, President Bush confirmed the report, stating
matter-of-factly: “I'm aware our national security team
met on this issue. And I approved."
FBI e-mail
The May 2004 FBI e-mail stated that the FBI interrogation
team in Iraq understood that despite revisions in the executive
order that occurred after the furor over the Abu Ghraib abuses,
the presidential sanctioning of harsh interrogation tactics
had not been rescinded.
"I have been told that all interrogation techniques
previously authorized by the executive order are still on
the table but that certain techniques can only be used if
very high-level authority is granted,” the author of
the FBI e-mail said.
“We have also instructed our personnel not to participate
in interrogations by military personnel which might include
techniques authorized by executive order but [are] beyond
the bounds of FBI practices.''
One month after the e-mail was sent to FBI counterterrorism
officials in Washington, then-White House counsel Alberto
Gonzales held a news conference in an attempt to contain the
fallout from the Abu Ghraib scandal.
Gonzales told reporters that the abuses, which included sexual
humiliation of Iraqi men, were isolated to some rogue U.S.
soldiers who acted on their own and not as result of orders
being handed down from high-level officials inside the Bush
administration.
“The president has not directed the use of specific
interrogation techniques,” Gonzales said on June 22,
2004. “There has been no presidential determination
necessity or self-defense that would allow conduct that constitutes
torture.
“There has been no presidential determination that
circumstances warrant the use of torture to protect the mass
security of the United States.”
Prior to the news conference, the White House selectively
declassified and released documents to reporters, including
one dated Feb. 7, 2002, and signed by President Bush, that
cited the Geneva Convention’s rules about humane treatment
of prisoners during conflicts.
Describing the contents of the Feb. 7, 2002, memo, Gonzales
said, “This is the only formal, written directive from
the president regarding treatment of detainees. The president
determined that Geneva does not apply with respect to our
conflict with al-Qaeda. Geneva applies with respect to our
conflict with the Taliban. Neither the Taliban or [sic] al
Qaeda are entitled to POW protections.”
Gonzales added: “But the president also determined
-- and this is quoting from the actual document, paragraph
3; this is very important -- he said, ‘Of course, our
values as a nation, values that we share with many nations
in the world, call for us to treat detainees humanely, including
those who are not legally entitled to such treatment. Our
nation has been, and will continue to be, a strong supporter
of Geneva and its principles. As a matter of policy, the Armed
Forces are to treat detainees humanely, and to the extent
appropriate and consistent with military necessity, in a manner
consistent with the principles of Geneva.’”
But the FBI e-mail’s reference to an executive order
describing specific harsh interrogation techniques, allegedly
approved by President Bush, appeared to contradict Gonzales’s
assertions.
Yoo’s memo
The issue surrounding U.S. interrogation methods and whether
they amount to torture resurfaced two weeks ago when the Defense
Department released an 81-page document in response to the
ACLU’s ongoing FOIA lawsuit.
John Yoo, then a deputy in the Justice Department’s
Office of Legal Counsel, drafted the document, dated March
14, 2003. It essentially provided military interrogators with
legal cover if they resorted to brutal and violent methods
to extract information from prisoners.
"If a government defendant were to harm an enemy combatant
during an interrogation in a manner that might arguably violate
a criminal prohibition, he would be doing so in order to prevent
further attacks on the United States by the al-Qaeda terrorist
network," Yoo wrote.
"In that case, we believe that he could argue that the
Executive Branch's constitutional authority to protect the
nation from attack justified his actions."
The legal opinion for military interrogators was virtually
identical to an earlier memo that Yoo had written in August
2002 for CIA interrogators. Widely called the “Torture
Memo,” it provided CIA interrogators with the legal
authority to use long outlawed tactics, such as waterboarding,
when interrogating so-called high-level terrorist suspects.
In declaring that the United States does not engage in torture,
Bush administration officials appear to be relying on a narrower
U.S. definition of torture than that is accepted under international
law, such as the 1984 Convention Against Torture that was
signed by the Reagan administration in 1988 and ratified by
the U.S. Senate in 1994.
“The threshold for torture is lower under international
law: acts that do not amount to torture under U.S. law may
do so under international law,” wrote Philippe Sands,
law professor at University College London, in a column published
in the Dec. 9, 2005, edition of The Financial Times.
“Waterboarding -- strapping a detainee to a board and
dunking him under water so he believes that he might drown
-- plainly constitutes torture under international law, even
if it may not do so under U.S. law. . . .
“When the U.S. joined the 1984 convention it entered
an ‘understanding’ on the definition of torture,
to the effect that the international definition was to be
read as being consistent with the U.S. definition The administration
relies on the ‘understanding.’
“So, when Ms. Rice says the U.S. does not do torture
or render people to countries that practice torture, she does
not rely on the international definition. That is wrong: the
convention does not allow each country to adopt its own definition,
otherwise the convention's obligations would become meaningless.
That is why other governments believe the U.S. ‘understanding’
cannot affect U.S. obligations under the convention.”
At the June 22, 2004, news conference, Gonzales said the
White House defined torture as a “a specific intent
to inflict severe physical or mental harm or suffering. That's
the definition that Congress has given us and that's the definition
that we use.”
However, on March 8, 2008, President Bush vetoed congressional
legislation that called for a specific ban on waterboarding
and other abusive interrogation techniques, including stripping
prisoners naked, subjecting them to extreme cold and staging
mock executions.
"This is no time for Congress to abandon practices that
have a proven track record of keeping America safe,"
the president said in a radio address explaining his veto.
"We created alternative procedures to question the most
dangerous al-Qaeda operatives, particularly those who might
have knowledge of attacks planned on our homeland." Bush
said. "If we were to shut down this program and restrict
the CIA to methods in the [Army] field manual, we could lose
vital information from senior al-Qaeda terrorists, and that
could cost American lives."