By Doug Porter
If you are unfortunate enough to be aware of the news today, you’ll be a witness to our country’s greatest exercise in what Walter Lippmann and subsequently Noam Chomsky called ‘manufactured consent.”
I’m referring to the release of the heavily redacted summary of the the Senate Intelligence Committee report on the use of torture. By the end of the day, via the conclusions of the chattering class, the American public will know three things:
- US policy following the 2001 Al Qaeda attacks included broadly worded permissions to engage in torture.
- There is controversy over whether torture was effective.
- Oversight of the intelligence apparatus in the government is a danger to our national security.
Here a link to the actual report.
After a wave of reports on nuggets contained in that report, the conversation in the media will quickly shift to the analysis portion of the program, featuring carefully vetted interviews with individuals who will opine on “both sides” of the issue.
Those defending the release of the Senate report will face accusations of weakness in the face of an overwhelmingly evil threat to our national security.
The actual truths of the matter will be obscured. The questions that we as a people should be asking of ourselves and our leaders will get lost in ad hominem attacks on anybody who dares to challenge the above narratives.
In advance of the release of the Senate report, the Associated Press laid a solid foundation:
American embassies, military units and other U.S. interests are preparing for possible security threats related to the release of a report on the CIA’s harsh interrogation techniques at secret overseas facilities after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
The report from the Senate Intelligence Committee will be the first public accounting of the CIA’s use of what critics call torture on al-Qaida detainees held at “black” sites in Europe and Asia. The committee on Tuesday was expected to release a 480-page executive summary of the 6,000-plus-page report compiled by Democrats on the panel.
As Maine Senator Angus King (I) said, “It’s not the report that’s putting lives at risks, it’s what we did that’s putting lives at risk.”
And then there’s the “first public accounting” part of the Associated Press story.
From the Guardian: (Emphasis mine)
The release of the torture report will represent the third major airing of faulty CIA intelligence in 15 years, following official commissions into the 9/11 plot and Saddam Hussein’s defunct illicit weapons programs.
Despite months of negotiation over how much of the 6,000-page report will be declassified, most of its findings will never see the light of the day. But even a partial release of the report will yield a furious response from the CIA and its allies.
Except for details regarding how the CIA misled (protected) the executive branch in reporting on its own activities, virtually everything else in today’s summary has been disclosed elsewhere. The 54 countries cooperating with the CIA’s renditions, detentions and interrogations (who are not actually named in the summary) were all identified by human rights investigators long ago.
Defenders of Torture
As Jeff Stein at Newsweek reported, defenders of the “rough stuff” at the CIA have rallied in advance of the report’s release to make sure their narrative forms the baseline of discussion.
…On Sunday they rose as one to rebut the anticipated criticisms in the Senate Intelligence Committee’s report, scheduled for release this week, appearing on talk shows, writing op-ed pieces and announcing the launch of a new website called “ciasavedlives.com.”
“It’s a one-stop shopping place for the other side,” Bill Harlow, a spokesman for former CIA Director George Tenet, told John Hudson of Foreign Policy magazine. “With the website … we’ll be able to put out newly declassified documents, documents that were previously released but not well read, and host a repository for op-eds and media appearances by various officials.”
Former CIA Director Michael Hayden was more pointed. “To say that we relentlessly, over an expanded period of time, lied to everyone about a program that wasn’t doing any good, that beggars the imagination,” he said on CBS’s Face The Nation.
Verily, even though the CIA tampered with the computers used by the Senate committee, and one of main defenders of the programs covered in the report was responsible for ordering the destruction of interrogation videos in direct defiance of a White House order, we are supposed to trust in these men.
Mark my words, CNN, Fox News and the Associated Press will do their best to deliver the intended message of these scoundrels.
Voices That Should Be Heard
There are other voices out there commenting on the Senate Report.
Marcy Wheeler at EmptyWheel.Net is an excellent researcher whose analysis deserves to be heard. She points out that the torture programs served purposes other than intelligence collection:
Partly by design, the debate about torture that has already started in advance of tomorrow’s Torture Report release is focused on efficacy, with efficacy defined as obtaining valuable intelligence. Torture apologists say torture provided intelligence that helped to find Osama bin Laden. Torture critics refute this, noting that any intelligence CIA got from those who were tortured either preceded or long post-dated the torture.
Even setting aside my belief that, even if torture “worked” to elicit valuable intelligence, it still wouldn’t justify it, there’s a big problem with pitching the debate in those terms.
As the Senate Armed Services Committee Report on torture (released over 5 years ago, in far less redacted form than tomorrow’s summary will be) makes clear, the Bush regime embraced torture not for “intelligence” but for “exploitation.” In December 2001, when DOD first started searching for what would become torture, it was explicitly looking for “exploitation.”
Glenn Greenwald at the Intercept has ongoing commentary running today on various aspects of the report, and (among other things) he maintains that it’s incorrect to look at these instances as past mistakes or to think abuses were limited to a handful of rogue agents:
One of the worst myths official Washington and its establishment media have told itself about the torture debate is that the controversy is limited to three cases of waterboarding at Guantánamo and a handful of bad Republican actors. In fact, a wide array of torture techniques were approved at the highest levels of the U.S. Government and then systematically employed in lawless US prisons around the world – at Bagram (includingduring the Obama presidency), CIA black sites, even to US citizens on US soil. So systematic was the torture regime that a 2008 Senate report concluded that the criminal abuses at Abu Ghraib were the direct result of the torture mentality imposed by official Washington.
American torture was not confined to a handful of aberrational cases or techniques, nor was it the work of rogue CIA agents. It was an officially sanctioned, worldwide regime of torture that had the acquiescence, if not explicit approval, of the top members of both political parties in Congress. It was motivated by far more than interrogation. The evidence for all of this is conclusive and overwhelming. And the American media bears much of the blame, as they refused for years even to use the word “torture” to describe any of this (even as theycalled these same techniques “torture” when used by American adversaries), a shameful and cowardly abdication that continues literally to this day in many of the most influential outlets.
Also worth browsing is ACLU attorney Marcelene Hearn’s”Required Reading: Prequels to the Torture Report” on the Blog of Rights.
Finally, I leave you with the commentary from Daily Kos’ Meteor Blades, who writes with a passion and purpose I can only dream of attaining:
Disgust, however, is only one of the emotions this document of our leaders’ vile behavior should engender. Anger ought to be foremost. Anger at the men and women who chose not just to look the other way, not just to treat human beings inhumanly, not just to cover it up, but to order these savage acts and, when ultimately exposed, to slime us all with the claim that they were necessary to protect our security and maintain our liberty.
Then there is the disgust and anger that those who gave the orders will never see the inside of a prison cell and some who carried out the orders have been promoted, some of them multiple times.
We have one administration to blame for ordering torture and another to blame for failing to call those directly responsible to justice. Nothing in the document released today will change that. But in another 20 or 40 years, it’s even money that some new investigation will reveal what happens when criminals—war criminals—go unpunished. Their successors think they can get away with it too.
There is other news to be covered today…
Quote of the Day:
From a UT-San Diego story calling attention to obviously political promotions and demotions in the County District Attorney’s office:
”Claims that promotions in our office were given in exchange for specific support during the recent campaign are offensive.”
Carl DeMaio: He’s Baaack
KPBS/inewsource reports that failed candidate Carl DeMaio’s found something to do with his $69,000 in left-over campaign funds.
According to paperwork received Friday by the Federal Election Commission, the PAC is named New Generation Leadership Fund and DeMaio is listed as the group’s designated agent and “manager.”
As a super PAC, the fund is able to raise unlimited amounts of money from individuals and entities such as corporations and unions. It can then take that money and spend unlimited amounts of it on everything from television advertisements to polls supporting and opposing candidates for office.
POTUS Interruptus
As a counterpoint to today’s seriousness in this column, I present a video of part of the President’s appearance on the Colbert report last night. It’s pretty damn funny.
On This Day: 1958 – In Indianapolis, IN, Robert H.W. Welch Jr. and 11 other men (including the Koch Bros papa, Fred C. Koch) met to form the anti-Communist John Birch Society. 1964 – The John Coltrane Quartet recorded “A Love Supreme.” 2001– Ratification of a new labor agreement at Titan Tire of Natchez, Miss., en0eds the longest strike in the history of the U.S. tire industry, which began May 1, 1998, at the company’s Des Moines, Iowa, plant.
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Doug- This. Is. Horrifying.
Thanks for maintaining some decorum in the face of, well… how do you describe this? Evil? A future plot line for “American Horror Story”?
And we are hearing that this is the “redacted,” sanitized, “summary” version. Difficult to imagine what are we NOT allowed to know about these “enhanced interrogation” actions in the name of national security.
The Twittersphere is understandably ablaze. As noted in one tweet- at least one interrogator went so far as to conduct (I won’t call it “play”) Russian roulette :
“@dpeleschuk: Christ, like the Deer Hunter MT @fordm: Buried in redacted footnote: one officer played Rus. roulette with detainee http://t.co/NcNTXYrfG9”
It’s being claimed that some of the horrific “techniques” were unsanctioned. The “contractors” who employed them apparently missed that memo.
Again- thanks for your analysis and perspective.
You’ve got so much mojo working on this it seems a quibble to add that the CIA’s Most Highest and Holy are saying that their torture techniques back in 2006 produced information that led to the finding and killing of bin Laden five years later. You have to wonder why the Bush administration and the undead Cheney waited for Obama to take office, rather than do the deed themselves.
(Maybe they were testing the president, to see whose side he was on?)
Yes, this is horrific and shaming for any American that remembers when this nation’s leaders at least pretended in public to respect the Geneva Convention on Human Rights. But why is anyone shocked by the report NOW?
The time for shock and disgust on this subject began during the Bush Administration, when we saw nightly and endlessly on the evening news that that our leaders had abandoned the rules of law and war and were shamelessly perverting the language to dignify their crimes, even before the revelations about Abu Ghraib and the rest of it. Bush and Cheney and their cronies and supporters were blatantly arrogant war criminals then, and they still are now.
It is sad that no one will every be held accountable for extremely questionable behavior/activities condoned by the corporate/government in authority.
True, David. There is accounability, their is responsiblity, and there is the perception that both will not be addressed.
But on the pages of today’s NYTimes, Anthony Romero, ACLU Exec Director, is actually suggesting a pardon for people who engaged in, and/or, authorized all this, to show that it was a crime. He makes an interesting case- one with legal precedent from the Civil War, Vietnam War, and Nixon era.
The legal logic may not be a good fit for public/political perceptions, but the statutes of limitations have removed many other legal options.
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/09/opinion/pardon-bush-and-those-who-tortured.html
As Marcy Wheeler put it, “[E]ven if torture “worked” to elicit valuable intelligence, it still wouldn’t justify it.”
And, even though those in power at the time “legalized” those “enhanced interrogation techniques” …
Just because it’s legal doesn’t make it RIGHT.
And thank god for Glenn Greenwald!
The argument for pardon is deeply disturbing–Romero describes a pardon as a way of taking the bull by the horns and dealing with the issue, but it doesn’t.
Pardon Bush, Cheney et al. What happens when President Romney imposes his own executive order to resume torture? We are going down a dangerous moral and legal path. Pardons merely help to pave the way.
If only Al Gore were elected in 2000… But wait, he actually was. Bush and Cheney managed to lie us into war, destabilize the whole Middle East and gain for us a trove of enemies and terrorists out for our guts. These are the gifts that keep on giving as Obama who tried to end the wars has found out. We can’t end them now. Thank you President Bush and Cheney. If Al Gore had been elected, we would have a stable Middle East and would be well on our way to replacing fossil fuels with renewable energy sources. What a difference a few votes make. And why is anyone shocked and surprised that we tortured anyone? We knew about Abu Ghraib a long time ago. What’s a few tortured souls compared to the hundreds of thousands of innocents killed and maimed and the millions of refugees?
This is terrifying, have we really lost sight of humanity?
I think the bigger story is how some self-interest masquerading as fear allows an entire population to look the other way when torture is renamed “enhanced interrogation techniques.” We know why the government would try to commit torture. The real story is why we permitted it.