counterargument. That this amounts to a cover up, because it was ONLY pictures that came out of Abu Ghraib that exposed the war crimes being committed.
http://andrewsullivan.theatlantic.com/the_daily_dish/2009/05/obamas-uturn-on-the-torture-photos.htmlWithout photos, we would never have heard of the mass abuse and torture at Abu Ghraib. Bush and Cheney would be denying today that any of it happened at all. When the photos were uncovered, revealing clearly what the anodyne words "stress position", "mock execution", "forced nudity" etc actually meant, we finally were able to hold the government accountable for the abuse it authorized.
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We now know that these Abu Ghraib techniques were imported from Gitmo and were used in every theater of war as Cheney constructed a secret war machine that used the capture, torture and abuse of prisoners as its central intelligence-gathering tool. But we only have the photos from Abu Ghraib and so people can continue to pull a Noonan and pretend that this didn't happen no a much wider scale. From my understanding, the photos would prove very similar techniques spread across the globe. And so it would be clear that any Muslim anywhere, upon seeing US troops, could be Abu Ghraibed. The photos would reveal more powerfully than the impressive documentation in countless reports that Bush and Cheney's torture and abuse machine was everywhere, in every theater. How do you run an effective counter-insurgency when all Afghans know that Americans bring torture along with "democracy"?
Obama inherits this legacy. He has two options: pull the lid right off it, and fuel more anger and anti-Americanism; or hunker down, acquiesce to the military and become an active accomplice to the cover-up. He's trying to straddle the divide but now realizes he cannot prosecute Bush's wars with Bush's military while exposing Bush's war crimes. Hence the cover-up.
There are ways to prove war crimes: top down (documents) and bottom up. The torture memos reveal that the leadership systematically implemented the torture, and photos from facilities all over the globe prove it was systematic from the bottom up.
The other thing we should think about is the original whistleblower of Abu Ghraib, who is a far braver soul than President Obama. He literally risked his life to get the truth out. He was paid back by getting death threats and a pariah in his own town in West Virginia (while Lynndie England was NOT a pariah). He was forced to leave his town for good and be under protection of the authorities. You could argue that he "endangered the troops" and really the homeland, as Abu Ghraib turned out to be the #1 recruitment technique for al Qaeda. Are you arguing that he did the wrong thing?
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/12/07/60minutes/main2238188.shtmlYou may not remember the name Joe Darby, but you remember the impact of what he did. Darby turned in the pictures of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib in Iraq – pictures he had discovered purely by accident. Unfortunately for Darby, exposing the truth has changed his life forever, and for the worse. Finally, there is an Afghanistan tie in to all of this. This is where we need Chairman Kerry's leadership. I don't want him being an errand boy for the Obama Administration -- he needs to assert his independent wisdom here.
http://www.talkingpointsmemo.com/archives/2009/05/bad_sign.phpIt's hard not to view today's reversal by the White House, announcing that photos of detainee abuse in Afghanistan and Iraq will not be released to the public, as a sign of how long and hard they think the slog is ahead in Afghanistan -- and how crucial the outcome there will be for the future success of this Administration.
Obama has installed a new commander in Afghanistan who is steeped in counterinsurgency doctrine and devoted considerable resources and political capital to a new strategy there. I'm speculating, but the White House and Pentagon must not have cherished the idea of having their new start in Afghanistan undermined by the release of pictures that would further inflame the Muslim world.
It is also noteworthy to know that the general who Obama has now put in charge of Afghanistan was VERY complicit with the torture, making sure the Red Cross never saw that the armed forces were engaged in war crimes.
Kerry needs to have a gut check soon on whether he wants to go along with all of this. I will surprise you by saying I agree with you on what Kerry should do re: torture -- he does not serve on Judiciary or Intelligence, and from what I saw today, it would be fruitless for him to hold hearings in the SFRC as a similar pie fight would ensue. I think Congressional hearings are not going to help. A Truth commission would be good, but of course, the President does not back that.