WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Attorney General nominee Alberto Gonzales faced blistering criticism on Thursday for his role in shaping administration policies blamed for contributing to the torture of terror suspects, which Democrats said had put Americans at greater risk.
"Those abuses serve as recruiting posters for the terrorists," Sen. Patrick Leahy (news, bio, voting record) of Vermont said at a Senate confirmation hearing (news - web sites) for Gonzales, President Bush (news - web sites)'s White House counsel.
"America's troops and citizens are at greater risk because of those actions," said Leahy, the Judiciary Committee (news - web sites)'s top Democrat. "The searing photographs from Abu Ghraib (prison in Iraq (news - web sites)) have made it harder to create and maintain the alliances we need to prevail."
At issue are a memo approved by Gonzales which said only the most severe types of torture were not permissible under U.S. and international agreements, and another he wrote that described parts of the half-century-old Geneva Conventions on the treatment of prisoners of war as "obsolete" or "quaint."
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