Amnesty International Assails the United States over War on

moghrabi

House Member
May 25, 2004
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Amnesty International Assails the United States over War on Terror

By Mike Lillis

Amnesty International has provoked a furious debate about American policy – and about its own judgment and impartiality – by launching the most rhetorically charged attack on the Bush administration’s policies on terrorism and Iraq heard from a mainstream non-governmental organization since September 11.


More than a year after the now-infamous torture photos from Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison were broadcast and displayed across the world, Amnesty International blasted the United States for failing to investigate the episode thoroughly and called on foreign governments to provide the justice it says Washington has shirked, by arresting and prosecuting senior American officials.

“The refusal of the U.S. government to conduct a truly independent investigation into the abuses at Abu Ghraib prison and other detention centers is tantamount to a whitewash, if not a cover-up, of these disgraceful crimes,” said Dr. William F. Schulz, executive director of Amnesty International USA.

Schulz noted that Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, former CIA director George Tenet and several other high-ranking administration officials may be considered responsible for crimes of torture and, therefore, punishable under international law.

“If the United States permits the architects of torture policy to get off scot-free, then other nations should step into the breach,” he said.

Amnesty’s charges were made in late May as the organization unveiled its annual report examining 151 countries for human maltreatment, ranging from support of death squads to discrimination against women. But, the focus of the 2005 report was torture, and the government of the United States was singled out for particular contempt along with that of Sudan, where there have been charges of genocide and systematic rape by government-sponsored militias in the Darfur region.

In the forward to the report, Amnesty Secretary General Irene Khan assailed Washington for its treatment of prisoners in the war on terrorism, drawing a metaphorical parallel between U.S. policies and those of the Soviet Union under Joseph Stalin.

“The detention facility at Guantanamo Bay has become the gulag of our times, entrenching the practice of arbitrary and indefinite detention in violation of international law,” Khan wrote in reference to the American-controlled prison in Cuba where hundreds of detainees are being held as suspected terrorists. “Trials by military commissions have made a mockery of justice and due process.”

The condemnation sparked a storm of criticism from the administration and some media outlets, with President George Bush calling the allegations “absurd,” and both The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal offering terse denunciations.

“Turning a report on prisoner detention into another excuse for Bush-bashing or America-bashing undermines Amnesty’s legitimate criticisms of U.S. policies and weakens the force of its investigations of prison systems in closed societies,” the Post editorial read.

The Journal’s editorial staff was even harsher, dismissing Amnesty as a partisan group that “can’t be taken seriously.”

A New York Times editorial found the gulag metaphor to be fitting, noting that Guantanamo is only one of a chain of shadowy detention camps that includes Abu Ghraib in Iraq, the military prison at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, and other secret locations run by U.S. intelligence agencies.

Among the critics was Julian Ku, associate professor at Hofstra University School of Law, who felt the report was overblown and, at least in part, fueled by a historic animosity toward certain U.S. policies.

Amnesty already believes the U.S. is a human rights abuser because it endorses capital punishment,” said Ku, who specializes in the confluence of international and domestic law. “Even if everything they claim is true, it still doesn’t rise to the level of the Soviet gulag.”

Many humanitarian groups applauded Amnesty’s scathing report.

Hadar Harris, executive director of the Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Law at American University, noted that, when it comes to human rights, the world’s superpower has the obligation to lead by example – a role she said the White House has neglected.

“For better or for worse, other countries do follow this country’s lead,” Harris said. “Amnesty is saying that the emperor has no clothes.

“It’s not just Amnesty, but all of us in the human rights community are really struck by this administration’s rhetoric about adhering to international law, and its lack of compliance with the same,” she added. “What it speaks to … is the lack of accountability we’re seeing here.”

Accountability issues have swirled around Abu Ghraib, where U.S. soldiers have been charged with crimes ranging from conspiracy to assault for prisoner mistreatment. During April 2004, ghastly photographs of military police posing and grinning next to naked, hooded Iraqi prisoners surfaced, along with scorching accounts of abuse and intimidation, from the use of snarling dogs to sexual humiliation. A photo, which quickly became an iconic image, showed a hooded Iraqi prisoner balanced on a box with electrodes attached to his body to create the impression that he would be electrocuted if he fell off.

The horrifying images spread quickly through the news media and Internet more than a year ago, stirring outrage, especially among Muslim communities.

So far, eight soldiers have been convicted of committing crimes at Abu Ghraib, with one trial still pending. The sentences have ranged from a dishonorable discharge to a ten-year prison term. Almost all of those charged were lower-ranking reservists, causing administration critics to wonder where exactly the buck stops in Washington.

In December 2002, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld approved interrogation methods for use under some circumstances at Guantanamo that included sleep deprivation, stripping prisoners and using dogs to inspire fear. Those guidelines were revised a few months later to remove some of the most punishing techniques.

Critics of the administration contend the sanctioned abuse of prisoners not only constitutes torture but also undermines any moral authority the U.S. has in condemning similar abuses by other countries.

“It is unbelievable that the U.S. is not taking decisive action except to punish a few at the bottom of the chain of command,” said Gay McDougall, executive director of the Washington-based humanitarian group Global Rights. “It is disgusting, and it will be totally ineffective if the goal is in fact to stop this sort of thing from happening again.”

Amnesty officials have called for a congressionally appointed independent commission to investigate the culpability of high-level officials. Such an investigation “will go a long way to restoring confidence that true justice has no double standards,” said the group’s secretary general.

Amnesty USA leader William Schultz suggested that other nations bound by Geneva Convention rules have an obligation to investigate the U.S. officials if they ever set foot on their soil. “Crimes such as torture are so serious that they amount to an offense against all of humanity and require governments to investigate and prosecute people responsible for those crimes – no matter where the crime was committed,” he said.

Administration officials deny that upper level officials have evaded responsibility for the crimes.

“We’ve done exactly what Secretary Rumsfeld said we’d do last May while testifying before (Congress): evaluate what happened, make sure those who have committed wrongdoing are brought to justice, and make changes as needed to see that it doesn’t happen again,” said Lt. Col. John Skinner, a spokesman for the Defense Department.

“DOD policy did not sanction, condone or encourage detainee abuse. The humane treatment of detainees has always been the standard.”

Human rights advocates are not buying that argument.

“The point being made by Amnesty International is that the responsibility for these crimes goes up the chain of command,” McDougall of Global Rights said. “It’s unfair and inaccurate to lay the blame for what’s happened at the lowest end of the food chain.”

Others wonder why there has been no public outcry.

“What’s truly amazing is that the American people are not outraged every single day,” American University’s Harris said. “And if you tell me how to change that, we’d be living in a very different world.”

http://www.crimesofwar.org/onnews/news-amnesty.html
 

Jo Canadian

Council Member
Mar 15, 2005
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PEI...for now
Re: Amnesty International Assails the United States over War

Iraq detainees 'found starving'
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4440134.stm



Iraq's government says it has begun an investigation into the alleged abuse of more than 170 detainees held by Iraqi security forces in Baghdad. The prisoners, many malnourished and some showing signs of torture, were found when US troops took control of a interior ministry building on Sunday. The US operation followed persistent inquiries from the family of one of those held, most of whom were Sunnis.

Iraq's prime minister has promised to find those responsible for any abuse.

'Hard evidence'

The BBC's Caroline Hawley in Baghdad says the discovery will not come as a surprise to many Iraqis. There have been persistent allegations of abuse by members of the Shia-dominated security forces, our correspondent says. But Sunday's discovery is hard evidence and officials believe it may be the tip of the iceberg. There are suspicions the building may also have been used as a base for a militia called the Badr Brigade, which has links to senior government officials, our correspondent adds. Prime Minister Ibrahim Jaafari told reporters: "I was informed that there were 173 detainees held at an interior ministry prison and they appear to be malnourished. "There is also some talk that they were subjected to some kind of torture." He said the prisoners had now been moved to a better location and would be given medical care
 

moghrabi

House Member
May 25, 2004
4,508
4
38
Canada
RE: Amnesty International

Sj,

Read the report before you post your opinion. This is how it is usually done.

I love you too.
 

Jo Canadian

Council Member
Mar 15, 2005
2,488
1
38
PEI...for now
Re: Amnesty International Assails the United States over War

 

Karlin

Council Member
Jun 27, 2004
1,275
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Re: Amnesty International Assails the United States over War

Ya, those abused detainees were not held or abused by Americans, just the ones they trained to take over, as the cartoon suggests.

A White House Spokesperson said today "The USA does not use torture", so I guess it will continue [as long as they don't admit it].

As if using phosphorus bombs, or DU weapons, is not considered torture
As if sending people to other nations to be tortured is not actually "doing" torture...
And as long as the media does not report the actual "normal tortures" committed by the USA, it is not torture...

As long as those are in play, sleep well America....
 

PoisonPete2

Electoral Member
Apr 9, 2005
651
0
16
RE: Amnesty International Assails the United States over War

Unfortunately Amnesty Int. is an NGO and must try to embarrass governments into taking action. Countries, such as the United States, who use torture, weapons of mass destruction and ignore Treaty obligations, tend not to be sensitive to reports. And their People won't believe it.

Canada had a perfect opportunity to stand up against American policy of Rendition when it happened to our Nationals, but did our gutless government point the finger at the U.S. for abetting torture? No, we blamed the Syrians because they are now enemies of the Americans.

Every civilized nation should have arrest Warrants sitting at the ready for all of the Bush cabel. There is no diplomatic immunity from crimes against humanity.