Sincerely Yours: Another Legal Triumph
for the Obama-Yoo Administration
by Chris Floyd
James Bovard at Antiwar.com points
out one of the more egregiously sick-making of the many atrocious
"arguments" employed by Barack Obama in his successful effort to block
the efforts of Maher Arar to seek justice for his unjust rendition and
proxy torture in the Great War of Global Terror.
Maher Arar is greeted home by his children
Obama bade his legal henchmen -- his own personal John Yoos, as it
were -- to tell the Supreme Court that it should kill the Canadian
citizen's case seeking compensation for his unlawful arrest by U.S.
officials, who then rendered him not unto Caesar but to the untender
mercies of Syria's torture cells. The Robed Ones agreed, dismissing,
without comment, Arar's appeal of a lower court ruling that quashed his
case -- a decision that Scott Horton rightly likened last year to the Dred
Scott case, which upheld the legality of slavery, even in states which
prohibited it.
The Arar ruling upholds the "legality" of a new, universal form of
slavery, i.e., the United States government can deprive anyone in the
world of their freedom, and dispose of their bodies as it sees fit:
torture, "indefinite detention," or even "targeted assassination." The fact
that it is a man of partly African descent who is now outstripping the
Southern slavers in this extension of servitude to the entire world is
one of those poisonously bitter ironies with which history abounds.
But grim and depraved as Obama's position is, it is not without its
comic elements. As Bovard notes, one of the "arguments" offered by the
Obama/Yoo administration was that the case should be dismissed because
it might call into question “the motives and sincerity of the United
States officials who concluded that petitioner could be removed to
Syria.” We kid, as they say, you not.
So now cases of monstrous and criminal actions by agents of the
United States government cannot be heard in court, because this might
impugn the "sincerity" of the officials involved. And after all, as we
all know, it is the inner feelings of government officials that are all
important in determining the legality -- and morality -- of their
actions. That is why the murder of more than a million Iraqis in an act
of naked military aggression is not a war crime; it is, at the very
worst, just a "tragic blunder," a misdirected excess of good intentions
gone awry. Because we meant well, didn't we? We always mean well.
Even those Southern slavers were "sincere" in their belief that
keeping people of African descent in servitude was the "right" thing to
do. It's too bad that Barack Obama was not around in those days to stick
up for them and ensure that their "motives and sincerity" could not be
questioned. Heaven forefend that the delicate sensibilities of slavers,
renditioners, torturers and assassins should ever be exposed to public
scrutiny!
So Arar's American case is now dead. (The Canadians long ago 'fessed
up -- and paid up -- for their role in his torment.) But its
implications live on. As I noted in my first article on the Arar case,
back in December 2003:
... Arar's case is not extraordinary.
In the past two years, the Bushist organs have "rendered" thousands of
detainees, without charges, hearings or the need to produce any evidence
whatsoever, into the hands of regimes which the U.S. government itself
denounces for the widespread use of torture. Apparatchiks of the organs
make no secret of the practice -- or of their knowledge that the
"rendered" will indeed be beaten, burned, drugged, raped, even killed.
"I do it with my eyes open," one renderer told the Washington Post.
Detainees -- including lifelong American residents -- have been snatched
from the homes, businesses, schools, from streets and airports, and
sent to torture pits like Syria, Morocco, Egypt, Jordan -- even the
stateless chaos of Somalia, where Ashcroft simply dumped more than 30
Somali-Americans last year, without charges, without evidence, without
counsel, and with no visible means of support, as the London Times
reports.
But this is not the scandal we were speaking
of.
Of course, the American organs needn't rely
exclusively on foreigners for torture anymore. Under the enlightened
leadership of Ashcroft, Bush, Donald Rumsfeld and other upstanding
Christian statesmen, America has now established its own centers for
what the organs call "operational flexibility." These include bases in
Bagram, Afghanistan and Diego Garcia, the Indian Ocean island that was
forcibly depopulated in the 1960s to make way for a U.S. military
installation. Here, the CIA runs secret interrogation units that are
even more restricted than the American concentration camp on Guantanamo
Bay. Detainees -- again, held without charges or evidentiary
requirements -- are "softened up" by beatings at the hands of military
police and Special Forces troops before being subjected to "stress and
duress" techniques: sleep deprivation (officially condemned as a torture
method by the U.S. government), physical and psychological
disorientation, withholding of medical treatment, etc. When beatings and
"duress" don't work, detainees are then "packaged" -- hooded, gagged,
bound to stretchers with duct tape -- and "rendered" into less dainty
hands elsewhere.
But this is not the scandal we were speaking
of.
Not content with capture and torture, the
organs have been given presidential authority to carry out raids and
kill "suspected terrorists" (including Americans) on their own volition
-- without oversight, without charges, without evidence -- anywhere in
the world, including on American soil. In addition to this general
license to kill, Bush has claimed the power to designate anyone he
pleases "an enemy combatant" and have them "rendered" into the hands of
the organs or simply killed at his express order -- without charges,
without evidence, with no judicial or legislative oversight whatsoever.
The life of every American citizen -- indeed, every person on earth --
is now at the disposal of his arbitrary whim. Never in history has an
individual claimed such universal power -- and had the force to back it
up.
But this is not the scandal we were speaking
of.
All of the above facts -- each of them manifest
violations of international law and/or the U.S. Constitution -- have
been cheerfully attested to, for years now, by the organs' own
apparatchiks, in the Post, the NY Times, Newsweek, the Guardian, the
Economist and other high-profile, mainstream publications. The stories
appear -- then they disappear. There is no reaction. No outcry in
Congress or the courts -- the supposed guardians of the people's rights
-- beyond a few wan calls for more formality in the concentration camp
processing or judicial "warrants" for torture. And among the great mass
of "the people" itself, there is -- nothing. Silence. Inattention.
Acquiescence. State terrorism -- lawless seizure, filthy torture,
official murder -- is simply accepted, a part of "normal life," as in
Nazi Germany or Stalin's empire, where "decent people" with "nothing to
hide" approved and applauded the work of the "organs" in "defending
national security."
This is the scandal, this is the
nation's festering shame. This acquiescence to state terror will breed
-- and attract -- a thousand evils for every one it supposedly
prevents.
And please note: none of this has changed. None of it. These
crimeful, brutal abuses of power are becoming more thoroughly
entrenched under the rule of the progressive Peace laureate now in the
White House. What Bush did with winks and nods, Obama is openly
championing, expanding and codifying into law. And these deeply sincere
evils will keep reverberating, in ways that we can not even imagine, far
into the lives of our children and grandchildren, and for generations
beyond. UPDATE: Scott Horton has much more on the latest ruling in
the Arar case.
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