Geneva Conventions

Join an Amnesty International Delegation to Shut Down Guantanamo

Amnesty International is encouraging concerned citizens throughout the Untied States to meet with their Congresspeople to discuss steps to shut down the illegal detention centres in Guantánamo Bay and elsewhere around the world. The plan they're proposing involves an immediate transfer of prisoners to proper facilities in the United States, prompt trials for the prisoners accused of crimes, release of the prisoners who will not be charged and legislation to prevent further abuses and incidents of torture. Go to the Signup Page to find a local delegation and join it. Even if no delegation is available in your area, you can still meet with your Representative and/or Senators to discuss the issue and share your concerns with them.

What exactly is 'torture'?

Politicians, human rights activists, citizens and soldiers around the globe are debating whether the treatment of prisoners by U.S. forces is consistent with international and national laws. Although the U.S. government refuses to extend Constitutional protections or treat them as 'prisoners of war' or 'civilians under enemy control', officials repeatedly claim that they are treating prisoners in a manner 'consistent with international law'. Conversely, repeated reports of abuses and illegal practices from soldiers, FBI agents, prisoners and foreign governments have created serious doubts about whether the U.S. government is being entirely truthful in these claims. Given the current administration's history of misrepresentation, the fact that many reject claims that the government is in compliance with international human rights laws as outright lies is not at all surprising.

Congressman Buyer's Position on Torture Allegations

Originally posted on A contrario on 27 May 2008

On 2 May, I received a response from Congressman Steve Buyer to my 16 April letter requesting an independent investigation into the abuse and torture of prisoners by U.S. forces. He included an 'Issue Position Statement' with his response, which I have reproduced in its entirety below1:

  1. 1. To the best of my knowledge, a position statement is by definition intended for public distribution, and can therefore be freely distributed. As it claims to reflect the views of its original author, however, any intentional alteration to such a statement could probably be construed as libel.

A Citizen's Subpoena to Impel the House to Investigate Torture Charges

Originally posted on A contrario on 5 May 2008

The letter requesting that certain politicians be subpoenaed for testimony that is quoted below was sent by the ACLU on my behalf to the House Judiciary Committee and several other members of Congress on 5 May. The ACLU provided the introductory paragraph, and I wrote the rest of the letter. This letter was one of many petitions delivered to Congress as part of the ACLU's 'Citizen's Subpoena' campaign. Hopefully, the Judiciary Committee's call for testimony marks the beginning of a serious investigation into Executive policies on the use of torture or 'aggressive interrogation techniques'.

I demand to know the truth about torture. It's time to conduct a full investigation to determine what laws may have been broken and whether war crimes or other torture crimes were committed. John Ashcroft, John Yoo, George Tenet, Douglas Feith and others must testify. It's time to legally compel Bush's torture team to tell the truth.

Guantánamo Bay and Torture in the United States

What does the decision to operate an illegal prison camp without Congressional or judicial oversight say about the US government's commitment to international humanitarian law? Very few spokespersons in the media seem to be willing to address this question directly, despite its apparent importance. Although the detention and interrogation policies implemented by the Bush administration were not particularly new in terms of the tactics employed by the U.S. government, the blatant arrogance with which they were implemented was unprecedented. While it initially indicated that he would at least superficially break with the Bush administration's policies, the Obama administration has repeatedly perpetuated and tried to legitimize some of its predecessor's most egregious abuses. While this issue occasionally appears in the headlines, the media has thus far done little more than try to pass off its parroting of the establishment's "hawks" and "doves" as objective journalism. In contrast to the more extreme examples such as FOX News---which has given up on "objective" journalism altogether and instead produces wholesale propaganda designed to terrify the public into believing that they're on the verge of being swarmed by masses of bloodthirsty terrorists hell-bent on destroying freedom, justice, and the American way---mainstream journalism does appear to possess a certain level of objectivity. The range of this objectivity, however, is always circumscribed by the interests of the eight or so major corporations that own almost all the mass media in the US. In the case of illegal incarceration and torture, this means that much of the debate has been about whether these tactics help to further the United States' foreign policy objectives, and not what those objectives are, or what harms or benefits they will bring to the US and world public. I have collected the resources listed here in an effort to present this larger context of the debate.

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