Donald Trump Has a
Passionate Desire to Bring Back Torture
https://www.thenation.com/article/donald-trump-has-a-passionate-desire-to-bring-back-torture/
When George W. Bush and
Dick Cheney launched their forever wars—under the banner of a “Global War on
Terror”—they unleashed an unholy trinity of tactics. Torture, rendition, and
indefinite detention became the order of the day. After a partial suspension of
these policies in the Obama years, they now appear poised for resurrection.
For eight years under President Obama, this
country’s forever wars continued, although his administration retired the expression “war on terror,”
preferring to describe its war-making more vaguely as an effort to “degrade and destroy” violent jihadists like ISIS.
Nevertheless, Obama made major efforts to suspend Bush-era violations of
US and international law, signing executive orders to that effect on the day he
took office in 2009. Executive Order 13491, “Ensuring Lawful Interrogations,”
closed the CIA’s secret torture centers—the “black sites”—and ended permission
for the agency to use what had euphemistically become known as “enhanced
interrogation techniques.”
On that same day in 2009, Obama issued
Executive Order 13492, designed—unsuccessfully, as it turned out—to close the
US military prison at Guantánamo Bay, the site of apparently endless detention
without charges or trials. In 2015, Congress reinforced Obama’s first order in
a clause for the next year’s National Defense
Authorization Act that limited permissible interrogation techniques to those
described in the US Army Field Manual section on “human intelligence collector
operations.”
All of that already seems like such ancient
history, especially as the first hints of the Trump era begin to appear, one in
which torture, black sites, extraordinary rendition, and so much more may well
come roaring back. Right now, it’s a matter of reading the Trumpian tea leaves.
Soon after the November election, Masha Gessen, a Russian émigré who has
written two books about Vladimir Putin’s regime, gave us some pointers on how to do this. Rule number
one: “Believe the autocrat.” When he tells you what he wants to do—build a
wall, deport millions, bring back torture—“he means what he says.” Is Gessen
right? Let’s examine some of those leaves.
TORTURE REDUX
It should come as no surprise to anyone who
paid minimal attention to the election campaign of 2016 that Donald Trump has a
passionate desire to bring back torture. In fact, he campaigned on a platform
of committing war crimes of various kinds, occasionally even musing about
whether the United States could use nukes against ISIS. He promised to return waterboarding to its
rightful place among 21st-century US practices and, as he so eloquently put it,
“a hell of a lot worse.” There’s no reason, then, to be shocked that he’s been
staffing his administration with people who generally feel the same way
(Secretary of Defense James “Mad Dog” Mattis being an obvious exception).
The CIA was certainly not the only outfit engaged in torture in the
Bush years, but it’s the one whose practices were most thoroughly examined and publicized. Despite his enthusiasm for
torture, Trump’s relationship with the agency has, to say the least, been
frosty. Days before his inauguration, he responded to revelations of possible
Russian influence on the US election by accusing its operatives of behaving
like Nazis, tweeting: “Intelligence agencies should never have allowed this
fake news to ‘leak’ into the public. One last shot at me. Are we living in Nazi
Germany?”
He quickly appointed a new director of the CIA
(as hasn’t been true of quite a few other positions in his administration). He
chose former congressman Mike Pompeo, whose advice about torture Trump has
also said he would consider seriously. A polite term for Pompeo’s position on
the issue might be: ambiguous. During his confirmation hearings, he maintained that he would “absolutely not”
reinstate waterboarding or other “enhanced techniques,” even if the president
ordered him to. “Moreover,” he added, “I can’t imagine that I would be asked
that.”
However, his written replies to the Senate
Intelligence Committee told quite a different, far less forthright tale.
Specifically, as the British Independent reported, he wrote that if a ban on waterboarding
were shown to impede the “gathering of vital intelligence,” he would consider
lifting it. He added that he would reopen the question of whether interrogation
techniques should be limited to those found in the Army Field Manual. (“If
confirmed, I will consult with experts at the agency and at other organizations
in the US government on whether the Army Field Manual uniform application is an
impediment to gathering vital intelligence to protect the country.”)
In other words, as the Independent observed, if
the law prohibits torture, then Pompeo is prepared to work to alter the law.
“If experts believed current law was an impediment to gathering vital
intelligence to protect the country,” Pompeo wrote to the Senate committee, “I
would want to understand such impediments and whether any recommendations were
appropriate for changing current law.” Unfortunately for both the president and
him, there are laws against torture that neither they nor Congress have the
power to change, including the UN Convention Against Torture and the Geneva
Conventions.
Nor is Mike Pompeo the only Trump nominee
touched by the torture taint. Take, for instance, the president’s pick for the
Supreme Court. From 2005 to 2006, Neil Gorsuch worked in the Justice
Department’s Office of Legal Counsel, the wellspring for John Yoo’s and Jay
Bybee’s infamous “torture memos.” Gorsuch also assisted in drafting Bush’s “signing statement”
on the 2005 Detainee Treatment Act. That act included an amendment introduced
by Senator John McCain prohibiting the torture of detainees. As the White House
didn’t want its favorite interrogation methods curtailed, Gorsuch recommended
putting down “a marker to the effect that…McCain is best read as essentially
codifying existing interrogation policies.” In other words, the future Supreme
Court nominee suggested that the McCain amendment would have no real effect, because
the administration had never engaged in torture in the first place. This
approach was the best strategy, he argued, to “help inoculate against the
potential of having the administration criticized sometime in the future for
not making sufficient changes in interrogation policy in light of the McCain
portion of the amendment.”
In his brief tenure at the Office of Legal
Counsel, Gorsuch provided further aid to the supporters of
torture by, for example, working on government litigation to prevent the
exposure of further “Darby photos.” These were the shocking pictures from Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison
that came into the possession of US Army Sgt. Joe Darby. He then passed them up
the chain of command, which eventually led to the public revelation of the
abuses in that US-run torture palace.
Trump’s new attorney general, Jeff Sessions, is
also a torture enthusiast. He was one of only nine senators to vote against the
2005 Detainee Treatment Act. The act limited the military to the use of those
interrogation methods found in the Army Field Manual. In 2015, he joined just 20
other senators in opposing an amendment to the next year’s military
appropriations bill, which extended the Field Manual rules to all US agencies
involved in interrogation, not just the military.
REVIVING THE BLACK
SITES?
So far, President Trump hasn’t had the best of
luck with his executive orders. His two travel bans, meant to keep Muslims from
entering the United States, are at present trapped in federal court, but worse
may be in the offing.
Trump promised during the campaign to reopen
the CIA’s notorious black sites and bring back torture. Shortly
after the inauguration, a draft executive order surfaced that was clearly intended to do just
that. It rescinded President Obama’s orders 13491 and 13492 and directed the
secretary of defense and the attorney general, together with “other senior
national security officials,” to review the interrogation policies in the Army
Field Manual with a view to making “modifications in, and additions to those,
policies.” That would mean an end run around Congress, since it doesn’t take an
act of that body to rewrite part of a manual (and so reinstitute torture
policy).
It also called on the
director of national intelligence, the CIA director, and the attorney general
to “recommend to the president whether to reinitiate a program of interrogation
of high-value alien terrorists to be operated outside the United States and
whether such program should include the use of detention facilities operated by
the Central Intelligence Agency.” In other words, they were to consider
reopening the black sites for another round of “enhanced interrogation
techniques.”
As in so many such
documents, that draft order included a cover-your-ass clause, in this case suggesting
that “no person in the custody of the United States shall at any time be
subjected to torture or cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment,
as proscribed by US law.” As we learned in the Bush years, however, such
statements have no real effect because, as in a 2002 memo produced by John Yoo and Jay Bybee,
“torture” can be redefined as whatever you need it to be. That memo certified
that, to qualify as torture, the pain experienced by a victim would have to be
like that usually associated with “serious physical injury, such as organ
failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death.” In other words, if he
didn’t die or at least come close, you didn’t torture him.
After the recent draft
executive order on these subjects was leaked to the media and caused a modest
to-do, a later version appeared to drop the references to black sites
and torture. While no final version has yet emerged, it’s clear enough that the
initial impulse behind the order was distinctly Trumpian and should be taken
seriously.
As soon as the draft
order surfaced in the press in late January, the
White House disclaimed all knowledge of it and no version of it appears on
current lists of Trump executive actions since taking office. But keep in mind
that presidents can issue secret executive orders that the public may never
hear about—unless the news spills out from an administration whose powers of
containment so far could be compared to those of a sieve.
DÉJÀ
VU, RENDITION EDITION
Notably, neither of Obama’s Inauguration Day
executive orders addressed extraordinary rendition. In fact, this was a weapon
he preferred to keep available.
What is extraordinary
rendition? Ordinary rendition simply means transferring someone from one legal
jurisdiction to another, usually through legal extradition. Rendition becomes
“extraordinary” when it happens outside the law, as when a person is sent to a
country with which the United States does not have an extradition treaty, or
when it is likely (or certain) that the rendered person will be tortured in
another country.
In the Bush years, the
CIA ran an extraordinary rendition machine, involving the kidnapping of terror suspects (sometimes, as it
turned out, quite innocent people) off the streets of global cities as
well as in the backlands of the planet, and sending them to those brutal CIA
black sites or rendering them to torturing regimes around the world. Rendition
continued in a far more limited way during Obama’s presidency. For example, a
2013 Washington Post story described the rendition of three Europeans
“with Somali roots” in the tiny African country of Djibouti and of an Eritrean
to Nigeria. The article suggested that, in part because of congressional
intransigence on closing Guantánamo and allowing the jailing and trial of
suspected terrorists in US courts, rendition represented “one of the few
alternatives” to the more extreme option of simply killing suspects outright, usually by drone.
Recently, there was
news that a Trump associate might have been involved in planning a rendition of
his own. Former CIA director James Woolsey toldThe Wall Street Journal that,
last September, Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn discussed arranging an extralegal
rendition with the son-in-law of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu. At the time, he was serving as an
adviser to the Trump campaign. He later—briefly—served as President Trump’s
national-security adviser.
The target of this potential rendition?
Fethullah Gulen, an Islamic cleric who has lived for decades in the United
States. President Erdogan believes that Gulen was behind a 2016 coup attempt
against him and has asked the United States to extradite him to Turkey. The
Obama administration temporized on the subject, insisting on examining the
actual evidence of Gulen’s involvement.
Flynn’s foray may have
been an instance of potential rendition-for-profit, a plan to benefit one of
his consulting clients. At the time, Flynn’s (now-defunct) consulting firm, the
Flynn Intel Group, was working for a Dutch corporation, Inovo, with ties to
Erdogan. The client reviewed a draft op-ed eventually published in The Hill in which Flynn argued
that Gulen should be extradited, because he is a “radical cleric” and Turkey is
“our friend.” In addition to lying about his contacts with the Russian
ambassador during the election campaign, it turns out that Flynn was
probably working as an unregistered foreign agent for
Turkish interests at that time.
Mike
Pompeo also appears to be bullish on renditions. In his written testimony to the Senate Intelligence
Committee, he indicated that, under him, the CIA would probably continue this
practice. When asked how the agency would avoid sending prisoners to countries
known to engage in torture, his reply could have come straight from the
Bush-Cheney playbook:
“I understand that assurances provided by other
countries have been a valuable tool for ensuring that detainees are treated
humanely. In most cases other countries are likely to treat assurances provided
to the United States government as an important matter.”
Asking for such
assurances has in the past given the US government cover for what was bound to
occur in the prisons of countries known for torture. (Just ask Maher Arar, who was rendered to Syria, or Binyam Mohammed, who was rendered to Morocco, about
what happened to them.)
WE’LL
ALWAYS HAVE GUANTÁNAMO…
“We’ll always have Paris,” Rick reminds Ilsa during their bittersweet goodbye
in the classic film Casablanca.
Our Guantánamo lease with Cuba (which reads, “for use as coaling [refueling] or
naval stations only, and for no other purpose”) is a permanent one. So it looks
like we’ll always have Guantánamo, with its memories of torture and murder, and its remaining 41prisoners, undoubtedly stranded there forever.
As it happens, Supreme
Court nominee Neil Gorsuch’s fingerprints are all over the Bush
administration’s Guantánamo policy, too. While at the Office on Legal Counsel,
he helped the administration fight a major legal challenge to that policy
in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld. In that case, the government argued
that detainees at Guantánamo did not have the right of habeas corpus, that the
president has the authority to decide not to abide by the Geneva Conventions,
and that detainees could be tried by military “commissions” in Cuba rather than
by US courts. Given that history, it’s unlikely he’d rule in favor of any
future challenge to whatever use President Trump made of the prison.
While on the campaign
trail, Trump made it clear that he would keep Guantánamo eternally open. In a
November rally in Sparks, Nevada, he tolda cheering crowd:
This morning, I
watched President Obama talking about Gitmo, right, Guantánamo Bay, which by
the way, which by the way, we are keeping open. Which we are keeping open…and
we’re gonna load it up with some bad dudes, believe me, we’re gonna load it up.
In mid-February, Trump
press secretary Sean Spicer reiterated his boss’s affection for the prison,
when he told the White House press corps that the president believes it serves
“a very, very healthy purpose in our national security, in making sure we don’t
bring terrorists to our seas.” Perhaps Spicer meant “our shores,” but the point
was made. Trump remains eager to keep the whole Guantánamo prison
system—including, we can assume, indefinite detention—up and running as an alternative
to bringing prisoners to the United States.
It seems that the head
of the Pentagon agrees. In December 2016, retired Marine Gen. (now Secretary of
Defense) James Mattis told the Senate Armed Services Committee that
any detainee who “has signed up with this enemy” and is captured wherever “the
president, the commander-in-chief, sends us” should know that he will be a
“prisoner until the war is over.” Given that our post-9/11 military conflicts
are truly forever wars, in Mattis’s view, pretty much anyone the US captures in
Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, Yemen, or who knows where else will face at
least the possibility of spending the rest of his life in Guantánamo.
READING THE TEA LEAVES
As far as we know, President Trump has yet to
green-light his first case of torture or his first extraordinary rendition, or
even to add a single prisoner to the 41 still held at Guantánamo. All we have
for now are his ominous desires and promises—and those of his underlings. These
are enough, however, to give us a clear understanding of his intentions and
those of his appointees. If they can, they will resurrect the unholy trinity of
torture, rendition, and indefinite detention. The future may not yet be
inscribed in Trumpian gold anywhere, but on such matters we should believe the
autocrat.
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