This article originally provided by
The
LA Times
January 20, 2005
COMMENTARY
A Nuremberg Lesson
Torture scandal began far above 'rotten apples.'
By Scott Horton
Scott Horton is a New York attorney and a lecturer in
international humanitarian law at Columbia University.
"This so-called ill treatment and torture in detention
centers, stories of which were spread everywhere among the
people, and later by the prisoners who were freed … were
not, as some assumed, inflicted methodically, but were
excesses committed by individual prison guards, their
deputies, and men who laid violent hands on the detainees."
Most people who hear this quote today assume it was
uttered by a senior officer of the Bush administration.
Instead, it comes from one of history's greatest mass
murderers, Rudolf Hoess, the SS commandant at Auschwitz.
Such a confusion demonstrates the depth of the United
States' moral dilemma in its treatment of detainees in the
war on terror.
In past weeks, we have been treated to a show trial of sorts
at Ft. Hood, Texas, starring Cpl. Charles Graner and other
low-ranking military figures. The Graner court-martial and
the upcoming trial of Pfc. Lynndie England are being hyped
as proof of Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's explanation
for the Abu Ghraib prison tortures: A few "rotten apples" —
not U.S. policy or those who created it — are to blame.
Graner entered a "Nuremberg defense" — arguing that he was
acting on orders of his superiors. This defense was rejected
in Ft. Hood as it was in Nuremberg 60 years ago, when Nazi
war criminals were found guilty of crimes against humanity.
A misled American public can choose to see in the Graner
verdict the proof of the "rotten apples" theory and of the
notion that Graner and the others acted on their own
initiative. But what it should see is a larger Nuremberg
lesson: Those who craft immoral policy deserve the harshest
punishment.
Consider the memorandum written by Alberto Gonzales
— then the president's attorney, now his nominee for
attorney general. He wrote that the Geneva Convention was
"obsolete" when it came to the war on terror. Gonzales
reasoned that our adversaries were not parties to the
convention and that the Geneva concept was ill suited to
anti-terrorist warfare. In 1941, General-Field Marshal
Wilhelm Keitel, the head of Hitler's Wehrmacht,
mustered identical arguments against recognizing the Geneva
rights of Soviet soldiers fighting on the Eastern Front.
Keitel even called Geneva "obsolete," a remark noted by U.S.
prosecutors at Nuremberg, who cited it as an aggravating
circumstance in seeking, and obtaining, the death penalty.
Keitel was executed in 1946.
Keitel's remarks were made in response to a valiant
memorandum prepared by German military lawyers who argued
that the interests of Germany's soldiers, and the interests
of morale and good order, would be served by adhering to the
Geneva treaty. Secretary of State Colin Powell, echoing the
opinions of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and U.S. military
lawyers, sent Gonzales a letter that hit the same notes.
Rumsfeld and the White House would have us believe that
there is no connection between policy documents exploring
torture and evasion of the Geneva Convention and the
misconduct on the ground in Guantanamo Bay, Iraq and
Afghanistan — misconduct that has produced at least 30
deaths in detention associated with "extreme" interrogation
techniques. But the Nuremberg tradition contradicts such a
contention.
At Nuremberg, U.S. prosecutors held German officials
accountable for the consequences of their policy decisions
without offering proof that these decisions were implemented
with the knowledge of the policymakers. The existence of the
policies and evidence that the conduct contemplated in them
occurred was taken as proof enough.
There is no doubt that individuals like Graner and England
should be held to account. But where is justice — and where
are the principles the U.S. proudly advanced at Nuremberg —
if those in the administration and the military who seem
most culpable for the tragedy not only escape punishment but
in some cases are slated for promotion?
Next week, the world will commemorate the liberation of
Auschwitz. A memorial prayer for the death camp victims will
be read at the United Nations. German Foreign Minister
Joschka Fischer will attend to acknowledge that the
depravities at Auschwitz were not the work of a few "rotten
apples" but the responsibility of a nation. Such a
courageous assumption of responsibility should provide a
model for the United States, which can still act to salvage
its tradition and its honor. |