Posted on 09/02/2009 4:08:34 PM PDT by seanmerc
WASHINGTON -- Its no surprise that former Vice President Dick Cheney is opposed to the Justice Departments decision to investigate the torture of prisoners during the Bush-Cheney administration.
After all, Cheney has acknowledged that he was "aware" of waterboarding (simulated drowning) of detainees to get them to talk.
Its fair speculation that the orders for this method of torture came from on high. And in the Bush-Cheney administration, no one was higher than the vice president.
Cheney has blasted Attorney General Eric Holders appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate abuse of prisoners. The duty fell to veteran Connecticut lawyer John H. Durham, who is already probing the CIAs destruction of interrogation videotapes.
"As attorney general, my duty is to examine the facts and to follow the law," Holder said. "Given all of the information currently available, it is clear to me that this review is the only responsible course of action for me to take."
Mr. Durham, meet Mr. Cheney.
President Barack Obama would have preferred to skip any autopsy of his predecessors administration, insisting that he did not want to "look back" but only to "look forward."
But not to worry, neither Cheney nor former President George W. Bush will be held accountable for violations of national and international law or for tarnishing Americas reputation for just plain decency in dealing with prisoners. (The use of waterboarding was prevalent during the reign of terror designed by Spanish Inquisitor Torquemada. Are we now in the same class as torturers of that ilk?)
If the inquiry into the CIA and its contractors goes according to past pattern, only lower ranking folks will catch flak. Take, for example, the Abu Ghraib prison scandal. That ended with soldiers getting jailed for their sadistic abuses but their superiors never faced a court martial.
The latest revelations of CIA atrocities against prisoners -- as revealed in a heavily censored 2004 report -- includes threats against a blindfolded man, the firing of a gun near a detainee, the choking of a prisoner, slamming prisoners against walls, staging mock executions and threatening to assault or kill the families of prisoners during interrogations. Are we talking about America?
In a recent interview on Fox News, Cheney said the Obama administration is "setting a terrible precedent" and playing politics by examining the behavior of the Bush-Cheney administration.
"I think its an outrageous political act and will do great damage, long term, to have people take on difficult jobs, make difficult decisions, without having to worry about what the next administration is going to say," Cheney said.
Gosh, the former vice president sure got that right. If future administrations engage in immoral and abusive acts, they should be held accountable. That very thought could be a deterrent to any future criminal activities performed in our name.
When he was in office, Cheney had no qualms about interfering with government departments and agencies. The politicization of the Justice Department was well known in his era.
He had a resilient supporter in the person of Michael Mukasey -- the last attorney general in the Bush-Cheney administration, who said he found waterboarding `repugnant" but couldnt decide whether it was "torture."
Cheney has become the self-appointed attack-dog defender of Bush administration tactics. He tries to justify torture and the abusive treatment of captives on the ground that there have been no terrorist bombings on U.S. soil since the Sept. 11 al-Qaida attack.
He has a rich imagination when it comes to explaining cause and effect but manages to slide past the legacy of the Bush-Cheney administration: Thousands of Americans have died in Iraq, which had absolutely nothing to do with Sept. 11.
Physics, yes. ; )
Glad I missed it. And don’t show me! I just ate.
Oh my, was that really necessary? The horror!
OMG! seriously, any idea why so many libs are..........homely?
The alligator needs the disclaimer not me!
That would be like suing a gun manufacturer because someone was shot by a miscreant who stole one of their products and used it with malice.
Oh, wait a minute...
LOL!!
I hear you. You got it right!
“”I believe that being forced to view photos of Helen Thomas is far worse than any torture conducted by the CIA or any other USG agency in our defense.””
There you go - place these pictures on every fence, gate, wall and door in GITMO. The terrorists would beg to be shot on the battlefield.
I’m proposing a two bag rule for posting pictures of the sea hag.
From Dictionary.com
TORTURE:
1. the act of inflicting excruciating pain, as punishment or revenge, as a means of getting a confession or information, or for sheer cruelty.
2. a method of inflicting such pain.
Waterboarding is NOT torture.
AAAARGGHH!
That lifeless, wispy hair indicates improper blood circulation to her head— and brain!
...how 'bout dancin'?
I've noticed that, too.
...and it scares the he!! outa me,
that she'll follow me home.
yhea, it does, thank heavens for screen savers... *grin*
and the photo(s) posted.
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