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President Obama to stop torture, close Guantánamo Bay

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Uploaded by on Nov 23, 2008

"I have said repeatedly that I intend to close Guantanamo, and I will follow through on that. I have said repeatedly that America doesn't torture, and I'm going to make sure that we don't torture. Those are part and parcel of an effort to regain America's moral stature in the world."

That unequivocal passage from President-elect Barack Obama's first extended interview since the election, broadcast on "60 Minutes" Sunday night, was a big step toward healing the damage that the Bush administration has done not just to our nation's image but to its soul.

Amid the excitement of the election and the urgency of the economic crisis, it has been easy to lose sight of the terrorism-related "issues" that defined George W. Bush's presidency and robbed America of so much honor, stature and goodwill. I put the word issues in quotation marks because torture can never be a matter of debate. Yet the Bush administration sought to numb Americans to what has traditionally been seen as a clear moral and legal imperative: the requirement that individuals taken into custody by our government be treated fairly and humanely.

This doesn't mean handling nihilistic, homicidal "evildoers" with kid gloves. It means being as certain as possible that the people we are holding are, indeed, real or would-be terrorists, not unlucky bystanders; and treating these detainees in accordance with international law, as we would expect detained U.S. personnel to be treated.

At Guantanamo, at Abu Ghraib and in a little gulag of secret CIA prisons overseas, the Bush administration failed to live up to these basic responsibilities and thus sullied us all. We will look back on the Bush years and find it incredible, and disgraceful, that individuals were captured in battle or "purchased" from self-interested tribal warlords, whisked to Guantanamo, classified as "enemy combatants" but not accorded the rights that that status should have accorded them, held for years without charges -- and denied the right to prove that they were victims of mistaken identity and never should have been taken into custody.

Two-thirds of the former detainees reported suffering psychological problems since their release, and many are now destitute, shunned by their families and villages. None has received any compensation for the ordeal, according to the report, titled "Guantánamo and Its Aftermath."

Years from now, we will be shocked to see those pictures of naked prisoners being humiliated and abused at Abu Ghraib -- and we will be ashamed of a U.S. government that punished low-level troops for their sadism but exonerated the higher-ups who made such sadism possible.

Years from now, we will know the full truth of the clandestine, CIA-run prisons where "high-value" terrorism suspects were interrogated with techniques, including waterboarding, that both civilized norms and international law have long defined as torture. From what we already know, it's hard to say which is more appalling -- the torture itself or the tortured legal rationalizations that Bush administration lawyers came up with to "justify" making barbarity the official policy of the U.S. government.

Obama's clarity on the issues of Guantanamo and torture stands in contrast to his necessary vagueness about how he will deal with the economic crisis. Torture is wrong today and will still be wrong tomorrow, whereas today's economic panacea can be tomorrow's drop in the bucket. Who would have thought that these "war on terror" issues would be the easy part for the new president?

Not that easy, though. More reports like the UC-Berkeley study will come out, but this is not a task that can be left to academic researchers alone. The new Obama administration has a duty to conduct its own investigation and tell us exactly what was done in our name. Realistically, some facts are going to be redacted. Realistically, some officials who may deserve to face criminal charges will not. But to restore our national honor and heal our national soul, we at least need to know.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/17/AR20081117029...

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  • Finally I've met someone on here with some common sense! These fuckers think GITMO was "torture"? They should try being trapped on the 52nd floor of the WTCers while feeling around blindly thru the thick black smoke unable to breath and listening to the screams of those that chose to jump rather than to burn! THAT'S FUCKING TORTURE! If I was at gitmo these muslim fucks would be PRAYING 4 waterboarding when I was done with em. Fuck these liberal assholes and their FUCKING "PRESIDENT"!!!!!!!!!!!

  • stop blaming bush you know theres a congress too!

    you democrats can never get over that

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  • Funny watching this now....after he signs the NDAA

  • Thanks Obama for closing Guantanamo......... wait a minute

  • @danceoncardboardd Just checking. Is Gitmo closed yet? Thought I might have missed the story in the paper since the president announced over two years ago that he was ordering it to be closed. To his credit I guessed after he got into office he learned it wasn't that simplistic.

  • your country did sign the Geneve convention, with almost all nations in the world,

    lack of memory

  • Your regular liberal: To caught up in helping everyone els that he cant take care of himself.

  • It's not just democrats that think that so don't group people together.

    Most Americans just blame one person without considering everyone else involved with the government.

  • Well I liked your George Thorogood - One bourbon, One scotch, One beer (cover). So we can agree on something, yes? I may be a liberal but I like me some bourbon too.

  • STUCK IN IGNORANCE?? I see where you "removed" your comment after you did your homework and found out that the WTCers WERE INDEED attacked under CLINTON. And if you think Bush "Lived in a bubble" then I guess you just seemed to forget just how damn quiet it has been since we put a foot up the terrorists ass. In case you haven't noticed, there hasn't been an attack on the USA since we went on the offensive. Bush was right, "Fight them there so we DONT have to fight them HERE! You're WELCOME!

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