Share

After the Torture Era

by: Eugene Robinson  |  The Washington Post

photo
The Obama administration has the chance to heal the damage that the Bush administration has done with regard to America's stance on torture. (Photo: Getty Images)

    "I have said repeatedly that I intend to close Guantanamo, and I will follow through on that. I have said repeatedly that America doesn't torture, and I'm going to make sure that we don't torture. Those are part and parcel of an effort to regain America's moral stature in the world."

    That unequivocal passage from President-elect Barack Obama's first extended interview since the election, broadcast on "60 Minutes" Sunday night, was a big step toward healing the damage that the Bush administration has done not just to our nation's image but to its soul.

    Amid the excitement of the election and the urgency of the economic crisis, it has been easy to lose sight of the terrorism-related "issues" that defined George W. Bush's presidency and robbed America of so much honor, stature and goodwill.

    I put the word issues in quotation marks because torture can never be a matter of debate. Yet the Bush administration sought to numb Americans to what has traditionally been seen as a clear moral and legal imperative: the requirement that individuals taken into custody by our government be treated fairly and humanely.

    This doesn't mean handling nihilistic, homicidal "evildoers" with kid gloves. It means being as certain as possible that the people we are holding are, indeed, real or would-be terrorists, not unlucky bystanders; and treating these detainees in accordance with international law, as we would expect detained U.S. personnel to be treated.

    At Guantanamo, at Abu Ghraib and in a little gulag of secret CIA prisons overseas, the Bush administration failed to live up to these basic responsibilities and thus sullied us all.

    We will look back on the Bush years and find it incredible, and disgraceful, that individuals were captured in battle or "purchased" from self-interested tribal warlords, whisked to Guantanamo, classified as "enemy combatants" but not accorded the rights that that status should have accorded them, held for years without charges -- and denied the right to prove that they were victims of mistaken identity and never should have been taken into custody.

    A new study by researchers at the University of California at Berkeley, based on interviews with 62 men who were held for an average of three years at Guantanamo before being released without being accused of a crime, found that more than a third said they were turned over to their American captors by warlords for a bounty. Those who reported physical abuse said most of it occurred at the United States' Bagram air base in Afghanistan, where about half the men were initially held before being taken to Guantanamo.

    Two-thirds of the former detainees reported suffering psychological problems since their release, and many are now destitute, shunned by their families and villages. None has received any compensation for the ordeal, according to the report, titled "Guantánamo and Its Aftermath."

    Years from now, we will be shocked to see those pictures of naked prisoners being humiliated and abused at Abu Ghraib -- and we will be ashamed of a U.S. government that punished low-level troops for their sadism but exonerated the higher-ups who made such sadism possible.

    Years from now, we will know the full truth of the clandestine, CIA-run prisons where "high-value" terrorism suspects were interrogated with techniques, including waterboarding, that both civilized norms and international law have long defined as torture. From what we already know, it's hard to say which is more appalling -- the torture itself or the tortured legal rationalizations that Bush administration lawyers came up with to "justify" making barbarity the official policy of the U.S. government.

    Obama's clarity on the issues of Guantanamo and torture stands in contrast to his necessary vagueness about how he will deal with the economic crisis. Torture is wrong today and will still be wrong tomorrow, whereas today's economic panacea can be tomorrow's drop in the bucket. Who would have thought that these "war on terror" issues would be the easy part for the new president?

    Not that easy, though. More reports like the UC-Berkeley study will come out, but this is not a task that can be left to academic researchers alone. The new Obama administration has a duty to conduct its own investigation and tell us exactly what was done in our name. Realistically, some facts are going to be redacted. Realistically, some officials who may deserve to face criminal charges will not. But to restore our national honor and heal our national soul, we at least need to know.

  

»


Comments

This is a moderated forum.  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.

Unless the people in the CIA

Unless the people in the CIA and the US military who have been practicing torture are brought to trial (highly unlikely) there will continue to be torture, just on a "don't ask don't tell" basis. No likelihood of real change with Obama and Clinton.

Well said, Eugene!

Well said, Eugene! Regardless of criminal charges, the citizens of this country must eventually face the truth of what crimes this administration has committed. We need to know, we need to face it, we need to assure it never happens again, we need make ammends to the the victims and the rest of the free world, and we need to heal. PS: Always love to see you on MSNBC—what a great voice and laugh!

The illegitimate

The illegitimate 'administration' will get away with war crimes including torture and mass murder. Is this the vision of future America that the 'greatest generation' had in mind?

It's difficult to understood

It's difficult to understood how the Republican party as epitomized by the Bush administration manages to sell itself to so many voters with the mere lip service it seems to give to religion at every opportunity . . . yet at the same time displays so little soul.

Cheney owns shares in

Cheney owns shares in private prisons indited by a Texas grand jury for torturing the inmates. The stock dividends are huge. I am heartbroken by Texas Bob Wills "Smoke on the Water": a song vowing the life blood of our fathers to stop the same acts by Germany and Japan. The USA wrote the Geneva Convention, got other countries to sign it in San Fransisco, and executed German and Japanese leaders under its provisions. My parents' generation died for this cause. We must hold our own leaders equally culpable.

A lot of people may be

A lot of people may be surprised to find out just how tough Obama is when push comes to shove. Just because he's a nice guy and didn't campaign in the gutter doesn't mean he's a pushover. And he won't be led around by the nose by back-slapping special-interest individuals as Bush was. But Guantanamo is just one of many problems on which action will have to be set in motion while hampered by an economy on life support. So some of the cry-babies still mewling about a black president will just have to suck it up and see if they can emulate his toughness.

Why does Obama's team signal

Why does Obama's team signal that the perps will enjoy impunity? Impunity doesn't signal an end to torture, only a pause. All the Democrats people are proposing is to cool it until the furore dies down, then back go the electrodes. Otherwise they would prosecute the guilty.

Years from now, we may

Years from now, we may forget. Very few people in the US know that it was America that brought Suddam's Ba'ath Party into Iraq or that it was America that had armed the fighters of Afghanistan during the Soviet invasion in the 1980s. Likewise, that America supported dictators in Spain, Portugal, Greece and Chile seem to have escaped the minds of the general population. We truly do live in a world of denial. And I have no doubt that we will indeed convince ourselves that only "a few bad apples" as Rush Limbaugh says were responsible for this. America will someday have to atone for what it has done, even if it does not want to admit its actions.

In a nation of laws, such

In a nation of laws, such as we pretend to be (and hope to become again some day), those who commit crimes and high misdemeanors are brought to justice. That's as much for punishment as for prevention. Unless and until Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Gonzales, Yoo, and maybe even our lying Secretary of State Rice are brought to account and made to pay in some small way for their crimes and abetting, we can't expect to be seen as a nation of laws. It's cowardly to scapegoat a few grunts for the crimes of their superiors. It's an outrage and an insult to know that the perpetrators of high crimes and misdemeanors might continue to get their perks and pensions and taxpayer-supported protection while some few of those who were called upon to do their dirty work, or who suffered because of it, are punished and impoverished. Crime and punishment - now that's change you can count on.

Why are people saying he is

Why are people saying he is a black president...he's not he's HALF black, and no, we're not crying over him being HALF black, we're crying over the fact that the "holding hands and talking things through" liberal mentality will weaken America. You can talk to them all you want, but in the end, terrorist will still attempt to kill you idtiots!