Spanish Judge Keeps Bush Torture Prosecutions Alive!
By CSPANJunkie Sunday Apr 19, 2009 5:00amApril 17, 2009 CNN
Transcript from CNN:
BLITZER: Waiting to hear from the president of the United States. We'll go there as soon as he starts speaking. He's expected to respond to Raul Castro. The latest overture is going back and forth between the U.S. and Cuban governments. Stand by for that.
Images of hooded detainees we've seen this before but secret memos just released are giving America and the world a whole new look at some interrogation tactics okayed by the Bush administration. Techniques some consider torture and now there's new fallout from the decision to make the documents public. We asked CNN's Brian Todd to take a closer look at these unfolding developments. Brian?
BRIAN TODD, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Wolf, the images presented in these memos are still reverberating. For example, the sanction of waterboarding where Bush administration lawyers outline how to pour water on a suspect's face to create the sensation of drowning, rules which according to the memos released were often broken by using larger volumes of water than allowed. Sleep deprivation where a suspect is shackled standing up sometimes for almost 11 days straight, all designed to get information from terror suspects. But now the release of these memos is turning into one of President Obama's most scrutinized moves.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
TODD (voice-over): Much of the push back comes from those who served on President Bush's security team, who say his successor is tying his own hands in the future fight against terror. Former CIA director Michael Hayden and former attorney general Michael Mukasey write in the "Wall Street Journal", "The release of the opinions on interrogations will invite the kind of institutional timidity and fear of recrimination that weakened intelligence gathering in the past. And that we came to sorely regret on September 11." They and former homeland security adviser Fran Townsend, a CNN analyst, also argue that methods like cramped confinement for a limited time used against al Qaeda suspect Abu Zubaydah worked in locating the 9/11 mastermind.
FRANCES TOWNSEND, FORMER BUSH HOMELAND SECURITY ADVISER: The use and technique led to the ultimate capture of Khalid Sheikh Muhammad. So there is an argument to be made that in limited circumstances these techniques can be effective in preventing terrorist attacks.
TODD: But techniques that were not as harsh have worked just as well says a former army lawyer who's now a human rights advocate.
BRIG. GE. JAMES P. CULLEN (RET.), HUMAN RIGHTS FIRST: We got the top guy in al Qaeda and Mesopotamia by using techniques that army military intelligence used in accordance with the manual and we got excellent information.
TODD: Another key question moving forward, consequences for those involved in the use of these techniques. The Obama administration says CIA officials won't be prosecuted. But what about Bush administration lawyers who wrote that methods like stress positions and sleep deprivation were legal, like top Justice Department officials Jay Bybee and Steven Bradbury.
DAVID GERGEN, CNN SR. POLITICAL ANALYST: We need to know the facts, but we don't need a witch hunt. I don't think that's appropriate for the people who are working in the agency. I also don't think it's something that Barack Obama needs in his presidency right now.
(END OF VIDEOTAPE)
TODD: Still Senator Patrick Leahy and Congressman John Conyers, democrats who head the judiciary committees in congress are both calling for independent commissions outside congress to investigate the drafting of these memos. When we pressed them, aides to Leahy and Conyers would not say whether they would want Jay Bybee and Steven Bradbury specifically called before those commissions. Wolf?
BLITZER: Brian, there's still very much the possibility that officials elsewhere around the world, especially in Spain could not only investigate but charge some of these Bush administration officials.
TODD: That is possible. A Spanish judge just today went against recommendations of prosecutors and kept alive an investigation into whether Jay Bybee, also former attorney general Alberto Gonzales and other Bush administration officials broke international law when writing some of these interrogation guidelines. So those possibilities still technically exist.
BLITZER: Brian Todd, thanks very much for that. Let's get back to our CNN political contributors, the democratic strategist James Carville, the republican strategist Ed Rollins. Do you think the president may have made a mistake in releasing these Bush administration documents?
CARVILLE: I don't think so. What struck me about the whole thing is how crude it was. It aided the legal opinions. I never was much of a lawyer but they didn't seem like much to me. You know, these are all like putting an insect in a cell, waterboarding we put Japanese to death, that's torture. The whole thing, like they can't think of something else? I would think by this time the CIA would have more creative ways to get information than that, but what do I know?
BLITZER: A lot of this stuff, as you know, Ed, was pretty much out there in the news media and in the public domain, but it's different once the U.S. government formally releases the actual documents, the legal opinions.
ROLLINS: I have two thoughts. The first thought being it's against our law. It's against our constitution, it's against international treaties that we signed. Torture is not something we're supposed to use though it separates us from everybody else. In the weeks and days after 9/11 when we had 3,000 Americans murdered obviously you do things because you're scared. As you had more time to think about it the practices should not have been used.
My concern today is obviously there are people in the CIA including Leon Panetta that argued against the release and I think to a certain extent this is now this president's team. These CIA guys are his team, Leon Panetta is his man and so I think to a certain extent they have to be very careful how they move forward here and certainly by not bringing anybody or letting anybody be charged here I think is very important.
BLITZER: And he did make that decision, the president of the United States, that no one would be prosecuted. None of the CIA officers who actually implemented these techniques.
CARVILLE: And no one would have been convicted. No jury in America would have convicted these guys for something that they did. The only thing that struck me is we get all of this -- sloppy lawyering and sloppy intelligence. I mean it looks like they didn't have some kind of truth serum or something? I don't know. And now? We did this -- everybody knew that we were doing it. And this just confirmed what everyone knew. This is not a very glorious chapter in our history. But you know what, we're a great country and we'll get over this too.
BLITZER: The United States has gotten over a lot worse.
CARVILLE: A lot worse, yes.
ROLLINS: We still haven't caught the 6'6" man running around with the kidney machine with all the torture and all the rest of it that obviously has got to be our target.
CARVILLE: Hopefully we get him. It just seemed very -- very -- not very creative and not very smart to me.
BLITZER: All right, guys. Thanks very much.






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If we don't prosecute people responsible for this, does that mean the International Courts we are apart of will be made to release Serbians, Liberians and all the others convicted of torturing people?
Is this the new precedent?
I am not sure we are apart of international criminal courts, Bush didn't join or withdrew the United States.
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/wideangle/uncategoriz...
its just that the neocons, and idiots like the FOX audience, made light of it. You know, we talk about the rule of law only when it suits us politically but cut down the rest of the world when the "Cowboy" mentality cuts in.
Now, before those commenters jump all over my use of Cowboy, they should know that I am from the Southwest, I dress, when not at work, like...well a Cowboy. My culture is the basis of Cowboy.
Vaquero means...Cowboy.
And Bush and Cheney are fake Cowboys. Salazar's white hat signals a true Cowboy, who will work to protect the western national land treasures from being raped by big oil.
We were apart of the courts that convicted the Serbians, and we led the investigation of Liberian war crimes... Does that count?
Former CIA/NSA director Hayden is on FnS right now suggesting release of the "Torture techniques Memo" by Obama has put agents lives at risk... to Wallace's delight, I'm sure.
being leaked, of course.
Yeh, like Cheney's assination squad. Look out folks, the creature behind that curtain is not human!! Of course, the whole network of people that Bush's little temper-tantrum put at risk. Let's talk about that in great detail.
The Republicans say they are against an international court because, of course, to protect the American soldier from false prosecution. Why they are really against it has nothing to do with the troops and everything to do with protecting themselves from being haul before a world body to answer for their war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Eventually Bush must pay for attacking an innocent country. The torture investigations and prosecutions will be just the beginning of justice for the 21st century's biggest war crime of Iraq and insanely arrogant wars which can no longer occur with impunity. Hopefully this will start in Spain but if they quit then it must move to another country that will do what is necessary until bushco is brought to justice.
Hey Blitzen---er,
Some people do not consider these techniques torture. ALL people with any sense of humanity know that these techniques are torture. If you remember(Just like other neocons your memory is very selective)the United States successfully prosecuted the Japanese for using the same techniques on Americans.
"Some people consider" my ass. These creeps authorized and ordered torture to be committed in your name and my name. Maybe you don't care that people torture in your name but I sure as hell do!
to this day, don't see the hypocrisy of the Nuremberg trials, and the joke of punishing that Axis of Evil. People were brought to justice for crimes against humanity by people from other nations that did the exact same crimes. It was beyond hypocrisy.
Besides, American history shows that those who commit these type of crimes, using speeches of democracy and US "interests", are never punished. Who in history has used torture plus WMD on more than one occasion?
This entire justice charade is over. Nobody is going to be prosecuted for anything. Good guys vs bad guys and US politicians are always the good guys.
What was so "hypocritical" about prosecuting the whole cadre of nazis, uh?
How old are you? You don't seem to have a grasp on history. Wrong books in school? Or just typical American history brainwashing?
Nazis were prosecuted for crimes against humanity, by people that did the EXACT SAME crimes against humanity. Nazis bombed civilians, so did England and the US. Nazis targetted water, sewers, etc. So did the Allies. The only diff was the treatment of the Jews. But then, we had our own little torture chambers with the Japanese instead. It's all the damn same.
A murderer cannot be the judge of another murderer. It's that simple. And no war is black and white, good vs. evil. Never happened.
Perhaps as you get older you'll understand. Or maybe ask someone that has been around and through it.
I suggest some real history. You'll be shocked when the truth is exposed to you.
you are a condescending jackass to boot.
Basically fighting against fascism in WWII in your feeble mind is equal to gassing 10 million people. And please, remind me how many Japanese civilians were killed in the internment camps. The treatment of Japanese-American citizens in WWII was appalling, but in no way shape or form it was similar to the nazi death camps.
So the question begs to be asked, do you even believe half of the bullshit your spew. Or you simply have nothing better to do with your seemingly infinite free time.
I take all those Canadians who died in WWII were not that different from their nazi counterparts, eh?
Killed by the US Atomic Bombs:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_II_cas...
20 Millions soviets died in WW II:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_War_II_cas...
and that does't give them the right to murder others that have nothing to do with it. Like your loving ISRAEL is doing in GAZA and the palestinians for far long.
Just because you are backed by the US Neocons. You murder the Gazan like the Nazis did in the WARSAW GHETTO.
wether these techniques work or not. If you keep talking about them, they will be used on US troops in the future.
Will we be getting a Sunday thread?
I'm watching FnS right now, and have plenty to report.
So it takes a Spanish judge to do what the US Gov't is afraid to do. How pathetic.
Sad! - no - Pathetic!
The country that took the lead in prosecuting war crimes after World War II spawns dreck like John Yu, Dick Cheney and weasels like Mukasey who parse the unparsable.
The Nuremberg defense - I was following orders - is NOT valid. In fact, under the military code it is illegal to follow an illegal order. Still, we excused Calley at My Lai and countless others in countless other situations.
BUT, those who gave gave the orders, those who justified them in legal opinions, should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. If found guilty, they should be sentenced to prison and serve their sentence - elected officials alongside their appointees.
There is no doubt in my mind that a Democratic administration would be held to that level of accounting by a Republican administration that followed. Why the fear? I would consider it an honor to be labeled unpatriotic by Ann Coulter.
Dont the rightwing fucktard mouth breathing idiots get it ? Torture is ILLEGAL. Like the GOP. this is another turd they will attempt to spin and polish, but it will still be shiney shit when finished. Investigate,Indict,Prosecute and send them all to jail.
dear president obama,
i would think you know this, but, it's not your decision to determine who and what gets prosecuted. also, you should probably do away with the whole "presidential pardons" process. what a mockery of justice.
thank you.
There are always the David Gergens at the ready in the press to tell us what "we" need. And is his mind what we need is a country where the highest government official are able to do anything they want without any repercussions. In other words, the laws only apply to the "little people" who might have one or two victims, but not to the perpetrators who left behind a whole nation of victims. How the f**k does a moron like that rise to the position he's been given at CNN?
One doesn't rise to a position at CNN, one descends to it.
I totally LOVE activist judges!!! Love them!! PUKIES, we gonna get Bush.............and oh my! It seems like Paraguay has instututed extradition. LOVE IT!!
Cut thru all the crap, and you have these nuggets:
(1) Obama graduated J.D., magna cum laude from Harvard Law School in 1991.
(2) During the Nuremberg trials, "just following orders" was not a valid defense.
(3) The political landscape in the U.S. today consists of progressives, liberals, centrists, and traditional Republicans on one side, and a small, loud mix of FOX and Limbaugh-fed misanthropes who will at all times attack Obama for all things on the other side.
So what does a smart president do? Set the parameters so that public rage forces the government to do what it cannot effectively do by itself in this landscape: prosecute the bastards.
truth in what you are saying.
So if we all "keep on keeping on", we could help intensify the rage. Too many non-political people don't really understand the issues or ramifications; ie., they watch FOX, CNN, whatever, and get the nooze pre-digested.
We have to keep pushing this.
are satisfied at blowing air. What is Jesus' take (not that I am rabid Christian, but I love the idea of him as the first community organizer, radical, and progressive... for which the authorities killed him) on this. God, or what ever ideal you have personified helps those who help themselves.
See sedum below.
The right tend to forget about Jesus when it comes to doing the right thing. They only use him when he serves their purpose.
as a "liberal" just like they would attack the Bill of Rights (except the 2nd and Keith Olbermann illustrated the folly of not supporting the Fourth because it will lead to the demise of the Second but they are too dumb to understand that!)
I think you're very close the truth, nK. Obama has to be very mindful of the political reality in which he operates. IMVHO, I think he's waiting until the call for full-fledged investigations by the American people reaches a loud enough level that he can claim that his hand is being "forced." He is, afterall, a very smart politician!
almost seems like an oxymoron. I prefer to think of the President as a shrewd community organizer, Palin be damned with her executive decisions, which she has shown be very poor at making.
Can we please prosecute these people, specially Cheney, we could try to get back some of the lost money, you know all the war funding money that disappeared ?
Listen Congress/Senate we got your back, just do it, if they kill you we will replace you quickly no need to worry about that, just do your jobs and stop worrying about petty things like living, jeez.
Start yelling at CONGRESS to do their damn job. They need to start the hearings and appoint prosecutors to start the process and get this started. It isn't the Presidents job. He has done all he can. Now it is up to Congress to step up and do their job.
Write your congress person and tell them to get off their duff and get to work. That is what we send them to DC for.
It is time for US to stop sitting back and whining about it and expecting POTUS to do everything and then crying because it isn't getting done... he can't do everything. We have to help him, and by getting CONGRESS to act, by stepping up and MAKING them do their jobs, we can take action and get these things done.
Or do you just want to sit here and bitch about the fact that Pres. Obama didn't do enough to prosecute these guys??
Which is it??
You state that "he can't do everything". Seemingly "he can't do anything". I expect to eventually hear "It's only been four years. Give him a chance"
Bah, humbug!
i think that exclamation mark should be dropped from the title of this thread...
what you express on this site shows your patterns and therefore it is very predictable that you would make this statement.
We will see!
CARVILLE=bafoon
Paraguay now has extradition? But what about Bush's big ranch there he is supposed to hide/retire to?
Bush and co. to the hauge, a nice idea, but it'll never happen.
keeps it alive? But, but, BillO said that HE put a stop to it! He took credit for it being dropped! ROFLMAO!
Guess BillO will have to try again.
of his presence in the future (I doubt BillO has ever set foot in Spain). To which the Spaniards asked back "Bill who?"
Barbarism is strength. That is the message of the Bushies. If you don't torture helpless prisoners, our world full of enemies will conclude that America is weak, and will come here to chop off all our heads.
President Obama's hands are tied...by civilization. Gosh, what a weakness.
No; it's the War Criminals, who have to be careful how they "move forward"
terrorism 1. the use of violence and threats to intimidate or coerce, esp. for political purposes. 2. the state of fear and submission so produced.
Question: How does one torture without using terrorism? It appears to me that your government is a terrorist.
I have that one at home too: the jumbo size. I have Encarta loaded on my computer. Microsoft, no dount during one of it's updates, has changed the definition in my on-line version. Here it is:
ter·ror·ism [térrə rìzzəm]
n
political violence: violence or the threat of violence, especially bombing, kidnapping, and assassination, carried out for political purposes
Microsoft® Encarta® Reference Library 2003. © 1993-2002 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
That is NOT how it read two years ago. It was more akin to the Random House definition. Hang on to your paper-printed dictionaries!!!!!!!!!
So, yes, I totally believe in conspiracies invading our lives/world at every level.
This "you do it, so why do I have to stop?" attitude is morally bankrupt and everybody knows it.
At the end of the day,most of the ppl are tired of the lies.
There is a growing awareness of peoples' responsibilities to each other and to the planet we share. Brute force, no matter how strongly applied, can never subdue the basic human desire for freedom and dignity.-I dont think any of that is too much to ask for….Respect for fundamental human rights is as important to the people of Africa and Asia as it is to those in Europe ,Israel, Hamas, or the US.
All human beings, whatever their cultural or historical background, suffer when they are intimidated, imprisoned or tortured..
HUMAN RIGHTS - is all inclusive.. It is not only our right as members of the global human family to protest when ppl are being treated brutally, but it is also our duty to do whatever we can to stop it.
As we approach the 21 Century, we find that the world is becoming one community. We are being drawn together by the grave problems- over population, dwindling natural resources, and an environmental crisis that threaten the very foundation of our existence on this planet--the list goes on and on…..-we are all responsible for it!!!
every time someone votes they're trying to deny someone else their freedom (rights).
Ed Rollins at the end, like so many Republicans, still believes OBL is "running around with a portable 'kidney machine'."
If these people don't think he's received a kidney transplant by now and think he's been "living in a cave for 8 years on dialysis", they truly are out of touch with reality (no duh).
anyone got a kidney transplant? I wonder how long it takes to find a suitable donor, what drugs you need to take, how long it takes before you don't need to take any drugs, or get treatment from doctors anymore.
My god, man! We're talking about obliterating the Geneva conventions and Carville is caught up in "how unsophisticated" it was?
And I love Blitzer saying, "...what SOME would view as torture..."
No, Wolfie. It's what the "OVERWHELMING MAJORITY" would see as torture.
The bush administration
tried to legalize torture and also assassination,
in this country.
an this country, belongs to the people, doesn't it?
speaking of torture, and assassination, you will find this article right here, so very interesting..lets hope that somebody has the nuts to bring charges to all of em'.
http://zfacts.com/p/100.html
Am I the only person on the face of this earth that want's to slap Wolkie Blitzer whenever he command's us to "Stand By"?
I find it offensive and presumptuous with his Gestapo style.
He is a maddeningly arrogant bastard!!!!
Total droid!!!!!!!!!
If Obama and our " new " administration will not obey and enforce the laws and bring justice then I hope this Spanish judge and the rest of the world will . The American people should insist on and demand justice in this case but we are too lame , useless and apathetic these days . This government is just as guilty and corrupt as the Bush / Cheney cabal was if it simply tries to sweep all of this under the rug . If nothing is done to correct the wrongs and bring justice , if no one is held liable and punished this doesn't bode well for the future and our standing in the rest of the world and the country itself will never be the same again . I know if all of this goes unpunished I will never see my country the same again , never .
Then he is equally guilty in my eyes. Torture, whether is be of an animal or human is a moral decision. Anyone that makes that decision is going against the moral social contract that humans have agreed upon as right.
Someone tell me the difference between Alberto Gonzales or George Bush defending those who torture and Barack Obama defending those who torture. We cannot let Obama get away with this kind of immoral action. Those who ordered torture; those who agreed and carried out torture, all must be prosecuted.
Keep in mind that all military personnel are allowed to refuse an order that they find morally objectionable. If someone tortured, it was not following orders, it was a choice.
I turned off the clip very quickly. Wolfie using that "SOME", to begin with. Then trotting out the macabre Fran Townsend, head cheerleader and torture lover. I did see Gergen spewing some babble too. Then I killed it, dead.
What a bunch of hogwash. The proper thing is to investigate, and charge people who have committed crimes. If, after the fact, Obama wants to PARDON them, then let him do that.
Instead, Obama is giving a pardon before the fact. He's pardoning them by turning a blind eye to their deeds.
If that were how this country was supposed to be run, then there would never be a need for an official pardon. The president could simply order his Justice department to ignore any crimes he wanted ignored, and never once need to pardon someone.
As far as I am concerned, Obama is now every bit as guilty as Bush and Bush's administration.
The USA is now technically a Banana Republic. No doubt in my mind.
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