It’s Simple and It’s Mandatory: Prosecute the Bush Administration Torturers
By Fran Quigley
A few weeks ago, I had a dinner discussion with two profoundly frustrated Kenyan attorneys. They were exasperated by the enduring corruption in their home country, including an apparently stolen presidential election and a lack of criminal prosecutions even when elected leaders are connected to massive bribes and organized violence.
I pointed out that the U.S. has its share of official corruption, too. But they refused my empathy. “The difference is that in the U.S., your government officials who break the law pay the price,” one lawyer said. “They are held accountable to the rule of law and they are prosecuted.”
Well, maybe. A bipartisan Senate Armed Services Committee report recently added to the mountain of evidence that the Bush administration openly defied U.S. and international law by sanctioning the torture of suspects in Guantánamo Bay, Iraq, and in various secret prisons around the world.
But two Obama advisors told the Associated Press that it was unlikely the new Justice Department would bring criminal charges. Senate Judiciary Chair Patrick Leahy said prosecutions in the U.S. “are not going to happen.”
The idea is that we need to focus on the enormous challenges posed by the wilting economy, two wars, a dysfunctional health care system, etc. Better to deal with torture by appointing a blue-ribbon commission, which is sure to issue a hand-wringing, toothless scolding, and then move on.
One problem: authorizing torture is a crime. And in the U.S., crimes are supposed to be prosecuted, whether the criminal is a Morgan County meth dealer or the President of the United States.
As President Obama told Senator McCain during the recent campaign, a leader has to be able to multi-task. We can simultaneously fix our economy and prosecute criminal deeds. The unacceptable alternative is to whitewash an ugly episode of executive branch lawlessness, thereby sending a message of impunity to future presidents.
Seasoned interrogators agree that torture is ineffective at obtaining reliable information, and it is clear the Bush-sanctioned brutality has undercut the U.S.’s moral authority on human rights. In my view, therefore, deciding to prosecute would be sound strategy for the Obama administration. Others disagree. But such a policy debate is irrelevant, because prosecuting torturers is not a tactical choice—it is a legal obligation.
By virtue of our agreements to the Geneva Conventions and the Convention Against Torture, President Obama is required to bring to justice those who have sponsored torture. The last thing we need is another president choosing not to follow the law when it is inconvenient.
Time and again, the Bush administration claimed a presidential prerogative to ignore existing laws and constitutional checks on power in any time of self-defined crisis. This is a familiar tactic in Kenya, where it is known as the “big man” approach of a leader putting himself above the rule of law.
As my Kenyan colleagues said, there should be no place for that in their country. We need to show there is no place for it in ours, either.
Quigley is an Indianapolis attorney working on local and international poverty issues. This column is online at
http://www.indystar.com/article/20090209/OPINION12/902090340/1002/OPINION Fran Quigley
Indiana-Kenya Partnership/USAID-AMPATH
www.iukenya.org
www.ampathkenya.org
(reprinted with permission)