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NYT Editorial--The Prison Puzzle (against secret prisons & torture)

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lostnfound Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-03-05 07:08 AM
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NYT Editorial--The Prison Puzzle (against secret prisons & torture)
Very pleased to see the NYT's straightforward, excellent op-ed on this subject. Well worth reading in its entirety (No subscription required) and passing around to anyone with a conscience. Every paragraph is worthwhile, and they carry it right through Cheney's appointment of Addington and end up placing responsibility with Bush.

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/03/opinion/03thur1.html?th&emc=th

It's maddening. Why does the Bush administration keep forcing policies on the United States military that endanger Americans wearing the nation's uniform - policies that the military does not want, that do not work and that violate standards upheld by the civilized world for decades?

<snip>
The rigid ideologues blocking this reform say the Geneva Conventions banning inhumane treatment are too vague. Which part of no murder, torture, mutilation, cruelty or humiliation do they not understand? The restrictions are a problem only if you want to do such abhorrent things and pretend they are legal. That is why the Bush administration tossed out the rules after 9/11.

<snip>
When his right-hand man, Lewis Libby, resigned after being indicted on charges relating to team Cheney's counterattack against Joseph Wilson, Mr. Cheney replaced him with David Addington, who helped draft the infamous legalized-torture memo of 2002. Mr. Addington is now blocking or weakening proposed changes to the prison policies. The Times said he had berated a Pentagon aide who had briefed him and Mr. Libby recently on the draft of the new military standards for handling prisoners. (The indictment of Mr. Libby said he had done the same thing to a C.I.A. briefer in 2003 when agency officials questioned the intelligence on Iraq.)

Mr. Cheney, a prime mover behind the attempts to legalize torture, is now leading a back-room fight to block a measure passed by the Senate, 90 to 9, that would impose international standards and American laws on the treatment of prisoners. Mr. Cheney wants a different version, one that would make the C.I.A.'s camps legal, although still hidden, and authorize the use of torture by intelligence agents. Mr. Bush is threatening to veto the entire military budget over this issue....
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