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GOP Stands Up For U.S. Right to Torture
October 11, 2005
by Molly Ivins
On one of those television gong shows that passes for journalism,
the panelists used to have to pick an Outrage of the Week. Then,
each performer would wax indignant about his or choice for 60
seconds or so. If someone asked me to name the Outrage of the Week
about now, I'd have a coronary. How could anyone possibly choose?
I suppose the frontrunner is the anti-torture amendment. Sen. John
McCain proposed an amendment to the military appropriations bill
that would prohibit "cruel, inhuman or degrading"
treatment of prisoners in the custody of the U.S. military.
This may strike you as a "goes without saying"
proposition -- the amendment passed the Senate 90 to nine. The
United States has been signing anti-torture treaties under Democrats
and Republicans for at least 50 years. But the Bush administration
actually managed to find some weasel words to create a loophole in
this longstanding commitment to civilized behavior.
According to the Bushies, if the United States is holding a
prisoner on foreign soil, our soldiers can still subject him or her
to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment -- the very forms of
torture used by the soldiers who were later prosecuted for their
conduct at Abu Ghraib. Does this make any sense, moral or common?
So deeply does President Bush feel our country, despite all its
treaty commitments, has a right to torture that he has threatened to
veto the bill if it passes. This would the first time in five years
he has ever vetoed anything. Think about it: Five years of
stupefying pork, ideological nonsense, dumb administrative ideas,
fiscal idiocy, misbegotten energy programs -- and the first thing
the man vetoes is a bill to pay our soldiers because it carries an
amendment saying, once again, that this country does not torture
prisoners.
This is the United States of America. It is our country, not George
W. Bush's personal property. The United States of America still
stands for the rights of man, for freedom, dignity and justice. We
do not torture helpless prisoners. Our soldiers are not the SS, not
the North Vietnamese who tortured McCain and others for years on
end, not bestial Argentinean fascists, not the Khmer Rouge.
Remember, we invaded Iraq because Saddam Hussein was such a
horrible brute that he tortured people. This is beyond disgusting.
The House Republicans, which have no shame, will try to weaken
McCain's amendment. They need to hear from decent Republicans all
over this country. Don't leave this hideous stain on your party's
name. This is NOT what America stands for. We've had more loathsome
and more dangerous enemies than Al-Qaida and managed to defeat them
without resorting to torture.
And leading the charge in the House will be Tom DeLay, that pillar
of moral rectitude and Christian mercy. Wait a minute: Didn't DeLay
have to step down from his leadership position after he got
indicted? Well, yes, but some step-downs are more down than others.
There was The Hammer in full glory last Friday, twisting arms and
working the floor on behalf of a real cutie of a bill to benefit the
oil companies.
Even Republicans revolted. As Rep. Sherwood Boehlert said, "We
are enriching people, but we are not doing anything to give the
little guy a break." This bill was so awful the leadership had
to hold the vote open for 40 minutes, a clear violation of House
rules -- there's a five-minute limit on votes of this kind -- while
the Republican leaders roamed the floor, cajoling, bullying and
threatening.
I have become inured to Bush's idea of foreign policy, which is to
tell the rest of the world, "Kiss my behind." But the
policy does result in some lovely ironies. On Friday, Mohamed
ElBaradei, the highly respected head of the United Nation's
International Atomic Energy Agency, won the Nobel Peace Prize. Quite
apart from whether you support George Bush or not, ElBaradei and the
IAEA deserve the honor -- they have been both diligent and
effective.
ElBaradei was right when he repeatedly warned the Bush
administration Iraq did not have any weapons of mass destruction and
has said the day the United States invaded "was the saddest in
my life."
But you know our boy George: not for him the gracious, "Gee,
you were right, and we wrong after all." Nope, after ElBaradei
was proved right, Bush tried to have him fired. And the man in
charge of carrying out the campaign to have the guy fired for being
right? John Bolton, now our ambassador to the United Nations.
Liar of the week: George W. Bush said on his Saturday radio address
a week and a half ago that Iraq has 100 battalions of battle-ready
soldiers. By the time he got to his television address on Thursday,
it was 80 battalions. (I guess it's worse to lie if they're taking
pictures of you.) Unfortunately, the next day Gen. George Casey, who
oversees U.S. forces in Iraq, said of those 80, the number of Iraqi
battalions fit to fight independently of U.S. support had slipped
from three to one. One, three, 80, 100 -- if this is Tuesday, it
must be ...
Molly Ivins is the former
editor of the liberal monthly The Texas Observer.
She is the bestselling author of several books including Who
Let the Dogs In?
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