In the midst of a very busy week on the Hill, the fight over the Army Field Manual has been one of the more frustrating.
To briefly recap, a spending bill to finance the nation’s intelligence efforts went to conference. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) added an important provision requiring one interrogation standard for the entire U.S. government. In an important policy shift, the Feinstein measure required the intelligence community to abide by the same interrogation standards articulated in the Army Field Manual, which, of course, prohibit torture.
Now, for John McCain, an alleged opponent of torture, this became an enormous hassle. He’d already said, publicly, that the techniques listed under the Army Field Manual are effective and legal, and there was no reason to go beyond them. But when push came to shove, he was against torture before he was for it.
The hassle for the White House, meanwhile, was different. Bush said he would veto funding for the nation’s intelligence agencies if the Army Field Manual mandate was included in the legislation. This led to a fairly straightforward question: if the torture-free Field Manual is good enough for U.S. troops interrogating detainees, why isn’t it good enough for intelligence officials interrogating detainees.
Dana Perino gave the White House spin a shot.
In [yesterday’s] White House press briefing, spokeswoman Dana Perino defended the veto decision by citing the age of CIA interrogators. She said that they are well-trained “professionals” with “an average age of 40.” U.S. soldiers, on the other hand, are too immature to be trusted, argued Perino. That’s why they need the Army Field Manual:
“This is done at the CIA, and it is done by professionals who are given hundreds of hours of training, who are — I think General Hayden said an average age of 40; who are being asked to do very hard work in order to protect Americans.
“The Army Field Manual is a perfectly appropriate document that is important for young GIs, some so young that they’re not even able to legally get a drink in the states where they’re from.”
This is the best spin the White House could come up with? U.S. troops are a bunch of kids, so we can mandate use of the Field Manual because we can’t otherwise trust them?
Let me get this straight. As far as the president is concerned, young GIs, many of whom can’t legally drink alcohol, can enlist for military service. They can use machine guns, drive tanks, fly fighters jets, etc. They can do three and four tours of duty in Iraq, putting their lives on the line every day. But they also need the restrictions of the Army Field Manual, because they’re just kids.
But, the White House says, when it comes to 40-something intelligence officials, anything goes. They’re more mature, so we have nothing to worry about.
I suspected the Bush gang would have trouble coming up with a coherent spin on the controversy, but I expected a little more than this.
And lest anyone think Perino just screwed up, giving reporters an odd line that hadn’t been thought through, keep in mind that Director of National Intelligence Mike McConnell told the Senate Intelligence Committee the same thing.
Before the Senate Intelligence Committee today, Director of National Intellingence Mike McConnell echoed Perino’s comments, stating that the Army Field Manual is “designed for young and inexperienced” men and women in uniform.
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) sharply replied that it’s unfair to “denigrate” the troops as if they’re a “bunch of 18 year olds running around” and “the Army Field Manual has to protect them from their naivete and their ignorance.”
All of this is terribly silly. The point has nothing to do with the ages of the troops, the CIA agents, or the private contractors. This is about basic interrogation standards, created by the military, and articulated in the Field Manual. Either those standards are effective and legal — as McCain used to believe before he sold out — or they’re not.
That the Bush gang is left patronizing U.S. troops to rationalize an awful policy tells us all we need to know about the merit of the White House’s position.