On the 9th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington D.C. on September 11, 2001 that prompted the launch of the Bush administration's "War on Terror," the closure of Guantanamo and calls for accountability for those who instigated torture and established secret prisons and imprisonment without charge or trial remain as important as ever.
This is especially true because, on this particular anniversary, the crimes and injustices initiated by the Bush administration are, arguably, less in the public eye than at any time in the last six years. In 2004, after the Abu Ghraib scandal first alerted US citizens to a culture of torture and abuse that was sanctioned at the highest levels of government (however much the administration tried to brush it off as the work of "a few bad apples"), the US Supreme Court intervened, in Rasul v. Bush, to raise awareness of the lawless plight of the prisoners at Guantanamo by granting them habeas corpus rights, allowing lawyers to visit the men and to begin to puncture the veil of secrecy in which Guantanamo had been shrouded for the first two and a half years of its existence.
From then until the end of Bush's presidency, the administration and Congress did their best to ignore the Supreme Court's ruling, with Congress reiterating its support for the President's malign policies through the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005 and the Military Commissions Act of 2006, both of which purported to strip the prisoners of their habeas rights. Nevertheless, awareness of the injustice of Guantanamo grew steadily. During his second term, President Bush was obliged to pull back from various excesses, effectively closing his global network of secret prisons in September 2006, when he moved 14 "high-value detainees" from secret CIA prisons to Guantanamo, after the Supreme Court had forcefully inserted the Geneva Conventions' obligation to treat prisoners humanely into his calculations in another important ruling in June 2006, Hamdan v. Rumsfeld.
In Boumediene v. Bush, a third ruling in June 2008, the Supreme Court reiterated that the Guantanamo prisoners had habeas corpus rights, ruling that the legislation passed by Congress that purported to strip the prisoners of their habeas rights was unconstitutional, and paving the way for a succession of habeas petitions to reach the US courts — 54 so far, of which 38 have been won by the prisoners.
When Barack Obama came to power, there was a sudden wave of interest in Guantanamo, and in President Bush's legacy of torture and secret detention, but nine years on from 9/11, eight years and eight months since Guantanamo opened, and 20 months into Obama's presidency, it is clear that, far from closing Guantanamo, as he promised in an executive order on his second day in office, President Obama now oversees a culture of indifference with regard to the fate of the Guantanamo prisoners, those held in the US prison at Bagram airbase, and others subjected to the CIA's program of "extraordinary rendition" and secret prisons, many of whom are still unaccounted for.
No justice at Guantanamo
At Guantanamo, 176 prisoners await justice. Of these men, 93 have been cleared for release by the President's interagency Guantanamo Review Task Force, but they remain held either for two particular reasons. The first — in the cases of men from countries including China, Libya, Syria and Tunisia, who cannot safely be repatriated — is because of difficulties in securing third countries that will take them and because the Obama administration challenged a judge's ruling that they should be resettled in the US, and also stamped out internal efforts to do so that were initiated by former White House Counsel Greg Craig (who lost his job as a result).
The second reason is because 58 of the 93 men are Yemenis, and, in January, the President established an open-ended moratorium on releasing any Yemenis (even those cleared by his Task Force, or even — with one embarrassing exception — by the US courts) after a hysterical response to the news that the failed Christmas Day plane bomber, Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, had been recruited in Yemen. The fact that this constitutes "guilt by nationality" appears to trouble no one.
Of the other 83 men, 48 have been designated by the Task Force as men who should continue to be held indefinitely without charge or trial, even though this policy was at the heart of President Bush's disturbing post-9/11 innovations, and another 32 are scheduled to face trials of some sort. However, as recent reports have shown, the administration does not appear to have the appetite to pursue cases either in federal court or in the revamped version of the Military Commissions that Obama revived with the aid of Congress (and in the face of sustained criticism from legal experts) last summer.
No appetite for trials
Capitulating to hysterical criticism, President Obama has backed down from Attorney General Eric Holder's announcement in November 2009 that five men, including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, would face federal court trials in New York for their alleged involvement in the 9/11 attacks, and also appears to have backed down from Holder's proposal to try five other men by Military Commission.
Only two of these cases have proceeded to trial — that of Omar Khadr, a former child prisoner, whose trial (halted by his lawyer's illness last month) is scheduled to resume next month, despite fierce international criticism, and that of Ibrahim al-Qosi, a cook for Osama bin Laden's entourage, whose trial was conveniently sidestepped when he accepted a secretive plea deal in July. (Another man, Ali Hamza al-Bahlul, is serving a life sentence after a one-sided trial in October 2008, in which he refused to mount a defense, and another, Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, was transferred to New York in May 2009, before the backlash against federal court trials began, and his trial is scheduled to begin next week).
Why Obama's detention policy in unjust — and encourages inertia
As with the prisoners in general, the administration has settled into a cosy rut, content to rely on the legislation passed by Congress the week after the 9/11 attacks — the Authorization for Use of Military Force — as its justification for holding prisoners indefinitely, with occasional interruptions for their habeas petitions, or for trials by Military Commission. What no one wants to discuss is that the AUMF is, essentially, the founding document of the Bush administration's indefinite detention program, used as the justification for holding prisoners neither as prisoners of war, according to the Geneva Conventions, or as criminal suspects to be tried in federal courts.
The fact that the Obama administration publicly declared an end to the coercive interrogations and torture practices that were also part of President Bush's program does not compensate for the fact that the detention policy itself remains fatally flawed, authorizing the detention of the Guantanamo prisoners as a unique category of human being, even if they are no longer referred to as "enemy combatants." Moreover, in maintaining this woeful state of affairs, the administration, Congress and the judiciary are all implicated.
As well as justifying inertia at the heart of the administration, this reliance on the AUMF has also infected the habeas legislation. Although 38 prisoners have won their habeas corpus petitions over the last two years — providing the most sustained, high-level critique of endemic faults in the government's supposed evidence, including a regular reliance on torture and unreliable witnesses — the majority of the 16 men who have lost their habeas petitions have done so not because they were involved with terrorism, but because they were foot soldiers for the Taliban (or, in two cases, a medic and a cook). The AUMF not only fails to distinguish between al-Qaeda (a terrorist group) and the Taliban (at the time of the US-led invasion, a government with an army, however reviled internationally), but consigns both to ongoing indefinite detention if the judges in the District Court in Washington D.C. conclude that the government has established, "by a preponderance of the evidence," that they were involved with either al-Qaeda or the Taliban.
No justice at Bagram
While this fundamental problem needs tackling (but is thoroughly ignored in the mainstream media), the Obama administration's record is even worse in Afghanistan. In March 2009, three foreign prisoners rendered to Bagram up to seven years previously won their habeas petitions, when Judge John D. Bates ruled that their situation was, essentially, no different from that of the prisoners at Guantanamo, and that the habeas rights extended to the Guantanamo prisoners by the Supreme Court in Boumediene v. Bush should extend to them as well.
However, rather than accepting Judge Bates' ruling, the Obama administration appealed, winning in May this year, and thereby demonstrating that, unlike Guantanamo, Bagram would remain a genuine Bush-era legal black hole. A new appeal on behalf of these three men was submitted last week — including new evidence, which I first reported in 2007, in my book The Guantanamo Files, confirming that one of the men, Fadi al-Maqaleh, a Yemeni, was transferred to the notorious Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, before being rendered back to Bagram — but it would be unwise to assume that this appeal will be successful.
No accountability for torture
On torture, rendition and accountability, Bagram also features prominently as an example of President Obama hiding exceptions to the absolute ban on torture that he announced in an executive order on his second day in office, with numerous reports of a secret prison within Bagram, and of temporary holding facilities throughout Afghanistan that are also beyond the law.
In addition, in February, the President failed to prevent a notorious Justice Department "fixer," David Margolis, from rewriting the conclusion to a damning internal investigation into the conduct of two lawyers in the Office of Legal Counsel who wrote and approved the notorious "torture memos" in August 2002, which purported to redefine torture so that it could be used by the CIA.
In writing and approving the memos, the two lawyers — John Yoo and Jay S. Bybee — twisted the law out of shape to provide the Bush administration with the phoney legal cover it required, and, along the way, besmirched the reputation of the OLC, which is obliged to provide impartial legal advice to the Executive branch. However, although the internal investigation found both men guilty of "professional misconduct," Margolis insisted that they had only exercised "poor judgment," thereby shutting the door firmly on calls for the two men (and those in the White House who were directing them) to be held accountable for their actions.
And finally, just two days ago, the Obama administration prevailed in further attempts to shield Bush administration officials from accountability, in a case against a Boeing subsidiary, Jeppesen Dataplan Inc., which provided logistical support for the CIA's "extraordinary rendition" program. The lawsuit was filed on behalf of five victims of the program, including Binyam Mohamed, the British resident who was rendered by the CIA to Morocco, where he was reportedly tortured for 18 months.
Last May, a panel of judges in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals took exception to the Obama administration's reliance on the state secrets doctrine — a little used shield preventing judicial scrutiny of government actions, which was favored by President Bush — to prevent the case from proceeding. However, on Wednesday, by six votes to five, the full court upheld the government's appeal, preventing the plaintiffs from having even a single day in court to tell the world what happened to them.
The use of the state secrets doctrine was clearly cynical, and serves only to demonstrate not only how far President Obama has strayed from his pre-election promises of transparent government, but also how closely he has clung to key aspects of President Bush's belief in unfettered executive power.
The case may now proceed to the Supreme Court, but on the 9th anniversary of 9/11, as an insignificant pastor's plan to burn copies of the Qur'an dominates headlines worldwide, the bleaker truth is that, when pushed, President Obama has chosen to insult Muslims far more deeply, essentially supporting legal maneuvering designed to ensure that Bush administration officials who authorized the torture of Muslims will not be held accountable, no matter how much the victims of these horrendous policies wish to present evidence of their torture in a US court.
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Why, Obama, "the Muslim," would be seen by the good red blooded
murican, God-fearin, brown-people-hatin Christians as being
soft on turrists if he showed any mercy toward those evil A-rab Muslim folks who are locked up for just being where they were in their own country when we invaded it.
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This prisoner torture debacle has done more harm to the United States of America than 100 terrorist attacks. In this case, the line from Pogo or Charlie Sheen in Platoon is very correct.
"We looked at the enemy and it was us."
The US nation is in a state of suspended surrealism in the minds of other developed nations around the world.
The US nation is seen as a fearful and unwelcome place by a great many of its own citizens nowadays.
A great unease, like a dark fog, is settling across the US landscape. This is not the welcoming "land where our father's died and land that we love" that I learned to respect and love as a child during the 1940s and 1950s.
This is not the nation that so inspired the world during WWII and after to put itself back together and build a better future.
Folks,we can never go back to being any of those things until the Bush administration torturer leaders are prosecuted and punished for war crimes.
Somebody must be thrown under the bus for these crimes or they will never go away on their own, and our nation will never recover its national self-respect around the world.
This must happen, or we will continue to be viewed as a pariah nation in the eyes of the entire world.
The entire world knows who the torture leaders are and throwing some soldiers or CIA or military intelligence guys under the bus will only make the US look even worse. The torture leaders at the highest levels, must be prosecuted, tried and convicted, and punished, preferably by an international tribunal before the US can again renew its self respect in the eyes of the world.
Now, Washington is closed off from the world in many ways, and this allows them to delude themselves as to how the world sees them.
At some point, the light will seep in and this realization will have to take hold.
These few torturers and apologists for torture will have to face the world.
The US is too important a nation in the world to be allowed to be destroyed by the few evil psychopaths who ruled supreme in during the Bush years, and the people of the Obama administration who are fearful of being found out for their complicity in wrongdoing during that time.
The US war criminal wrongdoers are just like the Nazi war criminals hiding around the world. They will work hard to delay their inevitable date with justice, but it is doubtful if they can delay their day of reckoning long enough to escape justice on this one.
The sooner, the nation gets to prosecuting these guys, the sooner we can heal and get on with the business of being a nation our citizens can be proud of, a nation the world can again respect.












We must close all the rendition prisons down world wide
Not just Guantanamo which is the "eye" into the otherwise closed prison system. Gaghram AFB in Afghanistan is enlarging to hold more prisoners rendered by the USA from across the world. No proof of guilt is required, just a general bounty.
_______NIGHT GAUNTS
"...rubbery things,
Black, horned, & slender with membranous wings,
They come in legions in the north wind's swell
With obscene clutch that titillates and stings,
Snatching me off on monstrous voyagings..."
HPL