This article originally provided by
The New Times
May 26, 2005
With the Gloves Off
By
BOB HERBERT
A photo of President Bush gingerly holding a month-old
baby was on the front page of yesterday's New York Times.
Mr. Bush is in the habit of telling us how precious he
thinks life is, all life.
The story was about legislation concerning embryonic stem
cell research, and it included a comment from Tom DeLay
urging Americans to reject "the treacherous notion that
while all human lives are sacred, some are more sacred than
others."
Ahh, pretty words. Now I wonder when Mr. Bush and Mr.
DeLay will find the time to address - or rather, to denounce
- the depraved ways in which the United States has dealt
with so many of the thousands of people (many of them
completely innocent) who have been swept up in the so-called
war on terror.
People have been murdered, tortured, rendered to foreign
countries to be tortured at a distance, sexually violated,
imprisoned without trial or in some cases simply made to
"disappear" in an all-American version of a practice
previously associated with brutal Latin American
dictatorships. All of this has been done, of course, in the
name of freedom.
The government would prefer to keep these matters secret,
but we're living in a digital age of near-instantaneous
communication. Evidence of atrocities tend to emerge sooner
rather than later, frequently illustrated with color photos
or videos.
A recent report from Physicians for Human Rights is the
first to comprehensively examine the use of psychological
torture by Americans against detainees in Iraq, Afghanistan
and at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. The employment of psychological
torture, the report says, was a direct result of decisions
developed by civilian and military leaders to "take the
gloves off" during interrogations and "break" prisoners
through the use of techniques like "sensory deprivation,
isolation, sleep deprivation, forced nudity, the use of
military working dogs to instill fear, cultural and sexual
humiliation, mock executions, and the threat of violence or
death toward detainees or their loved ones."
"Although the evidence is far from complete," the report
says, "what is known warrants the inference that
psychological torture was central to the interrogation
process and reinforced through conditions of confinement."
In other words, this insidious and deeply inhumane
practice was not the work of a few bad apples. As we have
seen from many other investigations, the abuses flowed
inexorably from policies promulgated at the highest levels
of government.
Warfare, when absolutely unavoidable, is one thing. But
it's a little difficult to understand how these kinds of
profoundly dehumanizing practices - not to mention the
physical torture we've heard so much about - could be
enthusiastically embraced by a government headed by men who
think all life is sacred. Either I'm missing something, or
President Bush, Tom DeLay and their ilk are fashioning whole
new zones of hypocrisy for Americans to inhabit.
There's nothing benign about psychological torture. The
personality of the victim can disintegrate entirely. Common
effects include memory impairment, nightmares,
hallucinations, acute stress disorder and severe depression
with vegetative symptoms. The damage can last for many
years.
Torturing prisoners, rather than making the U.S. safer,
puts us all in greater danger. The abuses of detainees at
places like Guantánamo and the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq
have come to define the United States in the minds of many
Muslims and others around the world. And the world has
caught on that large percentages of the people swept up and
incarcerated as terrorists by the U.S. were in fact innocent
of wrongdoing and had no connection to terrorism at all.
Bitterness against the U.S. has increased exponentially
since the initial disclosures about the abuse of detainees.
What's the upside of policies that demean the U.S. in the
eyes of the world while at the same time making us less
rather than more secure?
The government, like an addict in denial, will not even
admit that we have a problem.
"We're in this Orwellian situation," said Leonard
Rubenstein, the executive director of Physicians for Human
Rights, "where the statements by the administration, by the
president, are unequivocal: that the United States does not
participate in, or condone, torture. And yet it has engaged
in legal interpretations and interrogation policies that
undermine that absolutist stance."
E-mail:
bobherb@nytimes.com |