'US'
torturers and drone killers...
By Jamal
Kanj
December 20,
2014
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=392293
I watched
painfully former vice-president Dick Cheney on 'Meet the Press' programme
trying to defend and redefine his role in the 'authorised' CIA torture. Whenever he was asked about a specific torture
case, Cheney always referred back to the 'tortured'
Americans who lost their lives in 9/11.
While the
jury is still out on the real operatives behind 9/11, there is little to argue
that more than 3,000 citizens lost their lives in one of the most heinous
crimes in the 21st century. And Cheney is hiding behind those Americans to
justify one of the most disgraceful sadistic abuses and complete disregard for
human dignity in US history. America was duped into believing that torture
saved life, when in fact America lost its humanity.
When asked
how he could explain the report findings that '25 per cent of the (tortured)
detainees turned out to be innocent', the
former vice-president retorted, 'I have no problem as long as we achieve our
objective ... It worked now for 13 years.'
Not
surprisingly this is coming from an ungrateful person who is living on someone
else's borrowed heart. Larry King once asked him what he thought of his heart
donor. He callously responded 'I don't spend time wondering who had it, what
they'd done, what kind of person.'
How could
such a person be capable of caring or 'wondering'
about the life of other Americans, but to exploit their suffering to advance
his partners' business in the oil and military industrial complex?
While he
gabbled for half an hour, 'Dick' failed to
cite one single case where torture had saved American life or thwarted a
terrorist strike. Indeed, according to the US Senate report, 'At no time did
the CIA's coercive interrogation techniques lead to the collection of imminent
threat intelligence, such as the hypothetical 'ticking time bomb' information
that many believe was the justification for the use of these techniques.'
Regarding
possible violations of US signed international human rights treaties, Cheney
argued that 'We got the authorisation from the president and authorisation from
the Justice Department to go forward with the programme.' Other than providing broad statements, he never ventured into
the legal precedents that made waterboarding, for instance, lawful under
international law.
The Senate
report, however, pointed to a legal memorandum drafted by the CIA's Office of
General Counsel on November 26, 2001 where it suggested that the 'CIA could
argue that the torture was necessary to prevent imminent, significant, physical
harm to persons, where there is no other available means to prevent the harm'.
The footnote
for that legal memo referenced an Israeli law which warrants that 'torture was
necessary to prevent imminent, significant, physical harm to persons, where
there is no other available means to prevent the harm'.
The CIA
didn't just emulate Israel's legal system to sanction torture, but it copied
the same Israeli torture methods. For the reported CIA torture techniques had
striking resemblance to what I personally heard from many Palestinian prisoners
who were once held in Israeli dungeons. Torture methods that left behind no
physical marks but intended to break captives by inducing extreme mental
distress like painful 'stress positions',
exposure to extreme cold, 'Russian roulette', sleep
and sensory deprivation, etc.
The report
did not mention any official Israeli role in devising the 'enhanced technique'. Although, I dare to conjecture that Israeli consultants were
on board to gobble some of the $81 million paid since 2006 to companies
providing consulting services to CIA torturers.
Responding
to the torture report, President Barack Obama declared 'this isn't who we are'. Well, this is certainly not respecting the human dignity of
America's founding fathers. It is, however, 'who we are'
when the tail is wagging the dog: for Israel is making 'US' to become torturers and drone killers.
* Mr Kanj
(www.jamalkanj.com) writes regular newspaper column and publishes on several
websites on Arab world issues. He is the author of “Children of Catastrophe,”
Journey from a Palestinian Refugee Camp to America. A version of this article
was first published by the Gulf Daily News newspaper.
|