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Senate Overwhelmingly Passes Measure Banning Release of Detainee Abuse Photos

by: Jason Leopold, t r u t h o u t | Report

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At Camp Delta, Guantanamo Bay, a US Army soldier patrols a cellblock. (Photo: AFP)

    The Senate overwhelmingly passed a measure on Wednesday evening to block the release of photos depicting US soldiers abusing detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan.

    The legislation will now be sent to the House, but it's unclear whether Democratic lawmakers will support it. The photo ban was previously included as an amendment in a $106 billion Iraq/Afghanistan supplemental spending bill, which the Senate also passed on Thursday. Recently, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she and other Democratic members of Congress did not support the measure when it was inserted as an amendment into the spending bill. The amendment was sponsored by Sens. Joe Lieberman (I-Connecticut) and Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina). Graham and Lieberman have waged a public campaign to force President Barack Obama to block the release of the photos by appealing to the Supreme Court if the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, which rejected previous efforts by the Bush administration to keep the photos classified, upholds its previous rulings. They vowed to filibuster the supplemental spending bill if their measure was not passed.

    Graham said Wednesday he removed his hold on the spending bill for Iraq and Afghanistan and other legislation after he received assurances from Rahm Emanuel, Obama's chief of staff, that if the House refuses to back the legislation banning the release of the photos President Obama will issue an executive order prohibiting the Department of Defense from turning over the images to the American Civil Liberties Union. The civil rights group sued to gain access to photos and videos related to the treatment of detainees in US custody.

    "I wanted to be assured by the administration that if the Congress fails to do its part to protect these photos from being released, the President would sign an Executive order which would change their classification to be classified national security documents that would be outcome determinative of the lawsuit," Graham said Wednesday before his measure was sent to the floor for a vote. "Rahm Emanuel has indicated to me that the President is committed to not ever letting these photos see the light of day, but they agree with me that the best way to do it is for Congress to act."

    In a joint statement on Thursday, Graham and Lieberman said, "Passing this bill is essential to protecting our fighting men and women."

    "Each one of these photos would be tantamount to a death sentence to those serving our nation in the most dangerous and difficult spots like Iran, Afghanistan and elsewhere."

    Graham and Lieberman's bill prohibits the release of the abuse photos for three years. Either the secretary of defense or Obama has authorization to extend the ban for an additional three years. Graham said he has not seen the photos at issue in "years," but he intends to view them again next week.

    Gabor Rona, international legal director of Human Rights First, said, "Sen. Lieberman and Graham's claims might carry more weight had the US government been consistently honest about the mistreatment it authorized. But as long as the American people are kept in the dark about what crimes were committed in their name, they cannot intelligently exercise their democratic right and obligation to call for corrective measures."

    ACLU executive director Anthony Romero said, "The Obama administration's adoption of the stonewalling tactics and opaque policies of the Bush administration flies in the face of the President's stated desire to restore the rule of law, to revive our moral standing in the world and to lead a transparent government....

    "It is true that these photos would be disturbing; the day we are no longer disturbed by such repugnant acts would be a sad one. In America, every fact and document gets known - whether now or years from now. And when these photos do see the light of day, the outrage will focus not only on the commission of torture by the Bush administration but on the Obama administration's complicity in covering them up."

    By opposing the release of photographic and other evidence of prisoner abuse, Obama is furthering a long-running cover-up that has protected senior Bush administration officials who set the harsh interrogation policies that led to torture and other misconduct.

    In effect, Obama's reversals on his earlier pledges of openness regarding alleged US war crimes means that he is shutting the door on new internal investigations that might go beyond the truncated inquiries allowed by President George W. Bush and his top aides.

    Retired Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, who was commander of US forces in Iraq at the time of the Abu Ghraib scandal, confirmed in a recently published paperback version of his book, "Wiser in Battle," that the prisoner-abuse investigations were constrained for political reasons.

    "A meaningful and unlimited investigation, which the Bush administration adamantly opposed, would result in an unmitigated disaster," Sanchez wrote. "It would open up Pandora's box and let out a world of evil."

    Sanchez added, "It's now clear the Bush administration did not tell the truth about the use of torture at Guantanamo Bay, or in Afghanistan and Iraq.... In the aftermath of Abu Ghraib, administration officials worked diligently to deflect responsibility away from them and down to military leadership on the ground. ...

    "It is also apparent that the White House and the Department of Defense consistently attempted to minimize any further exposure of their actions and, specifically, to prevent a serious investigation into their executive-decision making process."

    Sanchez wrote that "to prevent this [disgrace] from ever happening again" and "to restore America's moral authority," the Obama administration and Congress "must conduct more comprehensive investigations across all involved agencies, learn from the findings, and implement permanent changes."

    But it's becoming increasingly clear that after deciding in April to disclose four Justice Department memos rationalizing torture, Obama was stung by the backlash from former Vice President Dick Cheney and other Bush administration defenders. Since then, the president has opposed release of the abuse photos and other documents related to the interrogations. Obama claims that further disclosures would only inflame the Muslim world and endanger American troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, but he also has adopted Bush's long-discredited claim that the mistreatment of detainees was the work of a few miscreant MPs.

    "The individuals who were involved [in prisoner abuses] have been identified, and appropriate actions have been taken," Obama said in a statement last month. "It's therefore my belief that the publication of these photos would not add any additional benefit to our understanding of what was carried out in the past by a small number of individuals."

    Also pushing Obama to keep the photos secret were two military holdovers from the Bush administration - Gen. Ray Odierno, Bush's last commander of US forces in Iraq, who remains there under Obama, and Defense Secretary Robert Gates. Pentagon spokesman Geoff Morrell said it was Odierno who convinced Gates to make a fight over the photo release.

    Change of Course

    Obama's decision to fight to conceal the photos marks an about-face on the open-government policies that he proclaimed during his first days in office.

    On January 21, he signed an executive order instructing all federal agencies and departments to "adopt a presumption in favor" of Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests and promised to make the federal government more transparent.

    "The Government should not keep information confidential merely because public officials might be embarrassed by disclosure, because errors and failures might be revealed, or because of speculative or abstract fears," Obama's order said. "In responding to requests under the FOIA, executive branch agencies should act promptly and in a spirit of cooperation, recognizing that such agencies are servants of the public."

    Last September, in upholding a lower court ruling ordering the release of the photos, the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit noted that past US administrations had championed the release of photos that showed prisoners of war being abused and tortured.

    Notably, after World War II, the US government publicized photos of prisoners in Japanese and German prisons and concentration camps, which the court noted "showed emaciated prisoners, subjugated detainees, and even corpses. But the United States championed the use of the photos as a means of holding the perpetrators accountable."

    The Bush administration's legal arguments for withholding the photographs were rife with examples of hypocrisy, including an argument that release of the photos - even with the personal characteristics of detainees obscured - would violate their privacy rights under the Geneva Conventions.

    The irony was that the Bush administration - with the help of legal opinions drafted by Justice Department lawyers - had maintained that detainees from the war in Afghanistan and the larger "war on terror" were not entitled to prisoner of war protections under the Geneva Conventions.

    The ACLU argued that the Bush administration's legal strategy was "surprising because there would be no photos of abuse to request had the government cared this much about the Geneva Conventions before the abuses occurred and the photos were taken."

    In disputing the administration's selective application of these international standards, the ACLU noted that "the Geneva Conventions were designed to prevent the abuse of prisoners, not to derail efforts to hold the government accountable for those abuses."

    Federal courts agreed with the ACLU's arguments. The Second Circuit Court of Appeals deemed the Bush administration's position legally flawed and added that releasing "the photographs is likely to further the purposes of the Geneva Conventions by deterring future abuse of prisoners."

    The appeals court also shot down the Bush administration's attempt to radically expand FOIA exemptions for withholding the photos, stating that the Bush administration had attempted to use the FOIA exemptions as "an all-purpose damper on global controversy."

    Now, after Bush administration defenders pummeled Obama as soft on national security, he has agreed to lift up their tattered legal banner and carry it forward.

  

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Jason Leopold is the Deputy Managing Editor at Truthout. He is the author of the Los Angeles Times bestseller, News Junkie, a memoir. Visit www.newsjunkiebook.com for a preview.

Comments

This is a moderated forum. Β It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.

"Passing this bill is

"Passing this bill is essential to protecting our fighting men and women." Yeah, because the most important thing when carrying out a foreign policy of rape and pillage is the safety of the ones who will follow through with torture to be sure that the maximum level of depravity of the whole affair is achieved.

"The Government should

"The Government should not keep information confidential merely because public officials might be embarrassed by disclosure, because errors and failures might be revealed, or because of speculative or abstract fears," Obama's order said. Notice how Obama's statement uses soft words like embarrassment, errors, failures. It belies the deliberacy of their actions. They were not errors, they were deliberately planned. They were not failures, they successfully brutalized and abused a population who was fighting to save their country. They are soldiers just like ours, only in order to do their business, the Bush admin. parsed words as usual and called them enemy combatants to circumvent the law... a very thin disguise indeed. Because we all had such hopes for Obama to be a strong and willful president, he is all the more disappointing in his action and words, patently dishonest, like nearly all politicians.

Looking at the big

Looking at the big picture--the most important things are that Obama has issued orders banning torture and closing down Guantanamo. This sort of thing won't happen in the future. We are steering definitively away from the awful Bush admin legacy. It's also disingenuous not to see that releasing the photos would play right into the hands of Islamic extremists and their recruitment tactics.

Senators, Lieberman and

Senators, Lieberman and Graham: What are you trying so hard to hide?

Okay.... Mr Obama has

Okay.... Mr Obama has officially moved to my ick list of people in this world. Shame on you Mr President .. You would protect the Bush regime .. clear crimes against humanity - crimes.. against Humanity Mr President. They will never see the light of day? .. who are you trying to kid?.. Secrets always always find a way of coming out.. Right now.. is YOUR time - to do the right thing.. if you chose to allow this type of criminal activity- this will be your testament to the American people- to the world. When you could possibly make a difference in the outcome - if you wait until someone leaks the documents, photos, memo's.. your time will have passed. And it will be all over except the finger pointing and well yea.. I personally hope the International Community- steps in and does something.. crimes against humanity.. the Geneva Conventions .. they might as well rip them up .. because it means absolutely nothing.. shame on you. How many people will this single act - of thumbing their nose at it ( the Geneva conventions) how many lives will that ultimately cost ? How many people will die because.. they just don't mean anything.

Proof positive that the new

Proof positive that the new bosses are just like the old bosses. The Dems are simply Republicans in different suits. When the "Democratic" senate starts voting just like Joe Leiberman, you can basically figure that we no longer have even the trappings of a two-party democracy.

You can block the images

You can block the images from being released to the public, but you can't block what happened. We already know! Also, you don't need to release the photos to the public in order to have prosecutions. Perfectly alright to have a trial without leaking sensitive information to the public - it has happened before and our security was not compromised. Lastly, I am an American and I stand against torture even though I haven't seen the photos. I do not need to see the images to know that raping and sodomizing detainees in US custody is WRONG. I'll say it loud and I'll say it proud.

Torture. I'm with Roxanne.

Torture. I'm with Roxanne. We know about it, that it has been going on, we have read of the extent and descriptions of the photos. We have demanded that it cease and our president has put a stop order out. But that old adage about the picture and the thousand words? The thousand words that do not need translation into any other language? I am SOLELY concerned at this point with the welfare of our soldiers. What, exactly, does publishing any of this horrific garbage accomplish, other than increased incensed danger to their fragile lives? Everybody, no matter that the war was not justly begun, was preemptive, these soldiers do not deserve our censure for following orders. You've seen what the military does to the men and women who resist. The military then torture our own.

They can hide the photos and

They can hide the photos and try to sweep it under the rug, and we will still know that torturers and torturer protectors run our government. I'm fed up! When I was younger, I never thought it would be this bad now. I had the audacity of hope, but it is being crushed. I know Obama can't change everything at once, but there are values he is ignoring because he doesn't want to spend time on them or fight the republicans. This is too much. Killers and torturers in high places go free while ordinary people pay for their crimes.

That President Obama knows

That President Obama knows that these pictures would be that dangerous leaves a lot to the imagination but then my imagination didn't even come close to what I thought before seeing the Abu Graib photos. I was shocked and I know I would be sick to see any more but my curiosity would command me to click on one after the next. Personally, I think there is ample evidence to indict/convict/imprison Bush/Cheney administration, all the lawyers, and all his cabinet members, and all the secretaries and janitors. President Obama had better cut the crap with the "I want to look forward thing." A NATION OF LAWS MY FOOT!

Those who hide Torture will

Those who hide Torture will also commit torture. The troops don't need protecting,they can protect themselves. The tortured citizens cannot. Show truth,not fear to show truth. If the acts are so disturbing, then STOP committing those acts and make sure NO ONE ever commits acts of torture and gets away with it! To shine the light upon these perverse acts is the first step to eradicate these abominations of tyranny.

I don't care about the

I don't care about the photos. Do I want to see Jeffery Dahmer's victims? How about a child who was sexually abused? I am not looking for sensational FOX/CNN screen shots. The issue is not the stupid photos. The issue is justice. Prosecution needs to happen. Judges can see those photos. We just need to see justice served. Obama's policies are great about ending torture, but in one Tuesday in a future November, that decision can be just as easily reversed. Set a precedent here of accountability and the odds of that go down.

In reply to Roxanne, I don't

In reply to Roxanne, I don't think you can prosecute the criminals without releasing the photos. Without the photos staring people in the face most people will continue to deny it happened. Without a public outcry there will be no prosecutions. These photos are not "sensitive" information. They have nothing to do with national security. They have everything to do with keeping guilty people free to continue committing their crimes. Releasing the photos is necessary.

didn.t a district court

didn.t a district court order the release of these pictures? while for the most part congress has done very little to validate their holding office the courts have done their job.

I believe the photos should

I believe the photos should not be released to the public AT THIS TIME, only for the safety of our soldiers. That is important. We do not need to incite forces against them, they are our children and our responsibility. However... with the decision to suppress the photos, a legal statement should be made that the photos will be made available for prosecution purposes and a guaranteed assurance that the officials responsible for these illegal policies will be held accountable. We don’t need the photos, we need to know NOW that this will be dealt with truthfully and Justice will for once prevail. As important as it is to protect our current soldiers from photo backlash, prosecution is absolutely critical to protecting our future soldiers (and civilians), and deter the use of torture worldwide. Do we really want the next century to move toward the dark ages? Will we start doing public hangings next because someone important thinks it is effective?

mmmm let's see now

mmmm let's see now ... Congress will provide the funding so We can continue to bomb 'em, shoot 'em, starve 'em, mangle 'em, burn 'em, kill 'em, and let's not be naive - torture 'em - wait -stop right there- Don't show 'em the pictures, We don't want to anger 'em.

If the Pentagon Papers

If the Pentagon Papers affair taught us anything, it is that secrets like these will not remain hidden forever. Some day, a highly trusted, terribly troubled public servant -- like Daniel Ellsberg was -- will gain access to these photos, copy some of all of them and they will hit the world's press like a thunderbolt. By the same token, no administration, this one or its successors, will dare to let it be known that the photos have been destroyed .... These are the simple realities of secret information, once its existence has become widely enough known.

Hiding the photos has

Hiding the photos has nothing to do with protecting our soldiers. It has everything to do with the Obama Administration's appointee Lawyers protecting the Bush-Cheney Administration's appointee Lawyers. It is about Presidential Power and nothing else. Apparently Obama is so enraptured by his new found power that he is now protecting Bush and maintaining heinous Bush policies. Will Obama stand for Justice or just get in the way of it? SIGN THE PETITION To Prosecute Them For Torture AT ANGRYVOTERS.ORG http://ANGRYVOTERS.ORG Over 250,000 have signed Join them and call yourself a Patriot Are our New & Blue Dog Democrats Just The Old Republicans. .

If the photos in question

If the photos in question show things that would "inflame the Muslim world and endanger American troops in Iraq and Afghanistan", they must be really horrible. It's not easy to imagine that the Muslim world could hate us any more than they already do.

After Obama talked

After Obama talked transparency, he abruptly changes course ... Just like health care and ending our foreign hijinks. And where's Dick Cheney on this to demand the release of more documents? Oh, right, these pictures will probably confirm that he's a war criminal ...

They are not "soldiers just

They are not "soldiers just like ours", they are not even soldiers, they are murderers. Our soldiers do not target buildings full of innocent people, our soldiers target murderers. The scum of the earth is why Hague Resolutions were put in place demanding lawful combatants wear uniforms, bear arms openly and other requirements that "soldiers just like ours" must conform to in order to be protected under the aegis of the Geneva Conventions.