| From The New York Times - 8 March 2005 EDITORIAL 
          
          Torture by Proxy
          One of the biggest nonsecrets in Washington these days is the Central Intelligence
          Agency's top-secret program for sending terrorism suspects to countries where concern for
          human rights and the rule of law don't pose obstacles to torturing prisoners. For months,
          the Bush administration has refused to comment on these operations, which make the United
          States the partner of some of the world's most repressive regimes.  
          But a senior official talked about it to The Times's Douglas Jehl and David Johnston,
          saying he wanted to rebut assertions that the United States was putting prisoners in the
          hands of outlaw regimes for the specific purpose of having someone else torture them.
          Sadly, his explanation, reported on Sunday, simply confirmed that the Bush administration
          has been outsourcing torture and intends to keep doing it. 
          For years before the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the C.I.A. had occasionally engaged in the
          practice known in bureaucratese by the creepy euphemism "extraordinary
          rendition." But after the attacks in New York and Washington, President Bush gave the
          agency broad authority to export prisoners without getting permission from the White House
          or the Justice Department. Rendition has become central to antiterrorism operations at the
          C.I.A., which also operates clandestine camps around the world for prisoners it doesn't
          want the International Red Cross or the American public to know about. 
          According to the Times article, the C.I.A. has flown 100 to 150 suspected terrorists to
          countries like Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Pakistan - each a habitual offender
          when it comes to torture. It's against American law and international convention to send
          prisoners to any nation where they are likely to be tortured, so the official said no
          prisoner is sent to another country without assurances from that government that they will
          be treated humanely. He said that C.I.A. officials "check on those assurances, and we
          double-check." 
          Those assurances are worthless, and the Bush administration surely knows it. In normal
          times, the governments of these countries have abysmal standards for human rights and
          humane treatment, and would have no problem promising that a prisoner won't be tortured -
          right before he's tortured. And these are not normal times. The Bush administration has
          long since made it clear that it will tolerate torture, even by men and women in American
          uniforms. And why send prisoners to places like Syria and Saudi Arabia, if not for the
          brutal treatment Americans are supposed to abhor? The senior official said it saved
          manpower and money, compared with keeping them in the United States or at American-run
          prisons abroad. The idea that this is a productivity initiative would be comical if the
          issue were not so tragically serious. 
          No rational person would deny the need to hunt down terrorists, to try to extract
          lifesaving information from them and to punish them, legally. But the C.I.A. has sent
          prisoners to countries where they were tortured for months and then either disappeared or
          were released because they knew nothing. The guilty ones can never be brought to justice -
          not after they have been illegally imprisoned and even tortured.  
          American officials have offered pretzel logic to defend these practices. Attorney
          General Alberto Gonzales has said that if the United States sends a prisoner abroad, then
          our nation's constitution no longer applies.  
          This is just the sort of thinking that led to the horrible abuses at prisons in Iraq,
          where the Army is now holding more Iraqi prisoners than ever: nearly 9,000. The military
          says it's doing a better job of screening these prisoners than in the days when a vast
          majority of Iraqi prisoners were, in fact, innocent of any wrongdoing. But there is still
          a shortage of translators to question prisoners, the jails are dangerously overcrowded,
          and there's never been a full and honest public accounting of the rules the American
          prison guards now follow. 
          Let's be clear about this: Any prisoner of the United States is protected by American
          values. That cannot be changed by sending him to another country and pretending not to
          notice that he's being tortured.  |