President Obama will visit CIA headquarters today to talk to employees and once again express two contradictory thoughts:
1.Certain CIA employees engaged in acts of torture of prisoners that can only be described as Evil
2.There will be no prosecution of CIA employees who committed these crimes against humanity
This is akin to using the vacuum cleaner to push dirt under the rug rather than suck it up and throw it out. This clearly contradictory stance will be expressed after the Obama administration released memos detailing the sort of torture that occurred in the (not so) secret prisons of the Bush regime. This torture included the now infamous "waterboarding"- a term that may not sound awful, like a new form of surfing- but in fact involves near drowning of the prisoner in order to supposedly gain information. This method was used 266 times against 2 prisoners!
One would think that if this form of torture were effective, 2 or 3 times would have been sufficient.
But that hasn't stopped former CIA employees and Bushies from defending torture as a useful tool in the "war on terror." And this is why there must be a Truth Commission that formally investigates how these crimes against humanity became standard operating procedure for the CIA.
As cultural sociologist Jeffrey Alexander points out, if we do not publicly decide what is evil, then we can never know what is good. When evil occurs, like the Holocaust, Watergate, or now the sanctioned torture of prisoners, we must respond with a public examination of it. In this way, we ritually cleanse ourselves of the "dirt" that polluted us.
Torture is surely dirt and if we as a society do not publicly express outrage and hold the leaders who sanctioned it accountable, then we can never rid ourselves of it. It will remain merely swept under the rug, always ready to come back out and soil our society again.
Fortunately for the future of our country, the Senate Intelligence Committee has begun an investigation of the C.I.A. interrogation program. This Truth Commission, led by my own Senator, Patrick Leahy (VT), is an absolutely necessary part of the cleansing process that must take place to remove torture from official US policy. Of course, torture will remain "unofficial" policy at the CIA, but at least it will be unofficial. As unofficial policy, torture cannot be publicly defended as a great way of getting information from prisoners.
Waterboarding Used 266 Times on 2 Suspects - NYTimes.com.
A truly horrific episode for our country. deserving of outrage. Maybe Leahy's truth commission will help, lets hope so. But I remain an enthralled Obamanite and believe he'll end up doing a good job with this.
Posted by: Todd Essig | 04/20/2009 at 02:00 AM
Truth Commission? Didn't Stalin invent that and use it on journalists and others? One good thing about the unconscionable release of the CIA memos is that it has turned people like you against the Obama, so you and I can agree on something. I guess it is better to expose, humiliate, prosecute and jail the patriotic lawyers who wrote those memos in order to help their nation protect people like you than it is to put terrorist in boxes with insects or water board them. By all means, lets grant Constitutional rights to illegal enemy combatants; and lets indict, prosecute, and convict Americans in the press so their lives can be ruined without even the benefit of a trial. That is what you want, is it not?
Posted by: deskates | 04/27/2009 at 02:00 AM