What a surprise, despite all of the president’s rhetoric about humane treatment of detainees, Bush’s actual proposal would allow — you guessed it — the same abusive techniques the administration has been using for years.
Many of the harsh interrogation techniques repudiated by the Pentagon on Wednesday would be made lawful by legislation put forward the same day by the Bush administration. And the courts would be forbidden from intervening.
The proposal is in the last 10 pages of an 86-page bill devoted mostly to military commissions, and it is a tangled mix of cross-references and pregnant omissions.
But legal experts say it adds up to an apparently unique interpretation of the Geneva Conventions, one that could allow C.I.A. operatives and others to use many of the very techniques disavowed by the Pentagon, including stress positions, sleep deprivation and extreme temperatures.
For all the talk about the administration choosing a new course this week, it’s amazing how little has changed.
What’s more, as Kevin Drum noted, these “alternative” interrogation techniques, as the administration is now calling them, are not only “barbaric and ineffective,” but also “precisely the kind of thing that produces blowback a hundred times worse than the meager amount of information we get from torturing these guys. It’s a recipe for losing the war against jihadism.”
Military officials are anxious to bolster this argument.
Military leaders argued this week that they did not believe abusive tactics worked in extracting information.
“No good intelligence is going to come from abusive practices. I think history tells us that. I think the empirical evidence of the last five years, hard years, tell us that,” said Lt. Gen. John Kimmons, the Army’s deputy chief of staff for intelligence.
Information extracted by abusive tactics was of questionable credibility, Kimmons said. Moreover, any good that came from the information would be undercut by the damage to America’s reputation once the abuse became known.
“And we can’t afford to go there,” he said.
No, we can’t, but Bush wants to anyway.