The president's lawyer.No single incident in the "war" on terror has done more to damage America's credibility and moral stature, or to fuel the indignation and ambitions of Islamic terrorists in Iraq and throughout the Middle East, than the torture of Iraqi prisoners by U.S. soldiers at the Abu Ghraib prison The Abu Ghraib prison (Arabic: سجن أبو غريب; also Abu Ghurayb) is in Abu Ghraib, an Iraqi city 32 km (20 mi) west of Baghdad. . Contrary to the Bush administration's assertions that "a few bad apples" were responsible for the torture, it is evident that a policy sanctioning the use of coercive interrogation interrogation In criminal law, process of formally and systematically questioning a suspect in order to elicit incriminating responses. The process is largely outside the governance of law, though in the U.S. methods was set at the very highest levels of the administration. Incidents of torture using identical "techniques" have occurred in U.S.-run prisons from Afghanistan to Guantanamo Bay Noun 1. Guantanamo Bay - an inlet of the Caribbean Sea; a United States naval station was established on the bay in 1903 bay, embayment - an indentation of a shoreline larger than a cove but smaller than a gulf (see Peter Dula, page 12). One of the chief architects of this militarily ineffective and morally bankrupt policy was Alberto Gonzales For the New York Yankees infielder, see . Alberto Gonzales (born August 4 1955) is an American jurist who served as the 80th Attorney General of the United States. Gonzales was appointed to the post in February 2005 by President George W. Bush. , President George W. Bush's White House counsel. It was Gonzales who penned a now notorious memo describing the Geneva Conventions Geneva Conventions, series of treaties signed (1864–1949) in Geneva, Switzerland, providing for humane treatment of combatants and civilians in wartime. as "obsolete." He was among those who urged the president to place so-called enemy combatants in Guantanamo Bay, where U.S. and international law on the treatment of prisoners would not apply--or so Gonzales claimed. Gonzales also played an important role in a series of legal briefs Legal Briefs is an interactive television program aired on CablePulse24 and CourtTV Canada, hosted by Lorne Honickman, a lawyer and journalist, as he discusses the ins & outs of the Canadian legal system and provides free legal advice. giving the CIA CIA: see Central Intelligence Agency. (1) (Confidentiality Integrity Authentication) The three important concerns with regards to information security. Encryption is used to provide confidentiality (privacy, secrecy). and the military more latitude to use force to extract information from suspected terrorists. One Justice Department memo set the bar defining torture so high--as "equivalent in intensity to the pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as organ failure, impairment of bodily function Noun 1. bodily function - an organic process that takes place in the body; "respiratory activity" bodily process, body process, activity control - (physiology) regulation or maintenance of a function or action or reflex etc; "the timing and control of his , or even death"--that it reads like a virtual mandate for the sort of abuse practiced at Abu Ghraib. Mental torture was defined in a similarly facile way as psychological harm lasting "months or even years." The nation and the world now know the consequences of this administration's effort to circumvent the law concerning the treatment of prisoners of war prisoners of war, in international law, persons captured by a belligerent while fighting in the military. International law includes rules on the treatment of prisoners of war but extends protection only to combatants. , yet the political damage and moral failure of this policy have not made an impression on the president. How else explain Bush's recent nomination of Gonzales to become the next attorney general of the United States Noun 1. Attorney General of the United States - the position of the head of the Justice Department and the chief law enforcement officer of the United States; "the post of Attorney General was created in 1789" Attorney General , the highest-ranking law enforcement officer in the land? Gonzales's record of misjudgment mis·judge v. mis·judged, mis·judg·ing, mis·judg·es v.tr. To judge wrongly. v.intr. To be wrong in judging. and blind political loyalty stretches back to Texas, where he served as Governor Bush's general counsel. Gonzales's level of concern for human rights and the rule of law was evident in his work briefing Governor Bush on any possible grounds for clemency Leniency or mercy. A power given to a public official, such as a governor or the president, to in some way lower or moderate the harshness of punishment imposed upon a prisoner. Clemency is considered to be an act of grace. in death-penalty cases. Gonzales was responsible for presenting Bush with a written summary of the facts of each capital case before any execution was to proceed. As Alan Berlow points out in the July-August 2003 Atlantic Monthly, Gonzales's reports were cursory at best. For example, in the case of Billy Conn Gardner, a death-row inmate who had been convicted of shooting a cafeteria worker, Gonzales failed to tell Bush that two of the witnesses provided conflicting descriptions of the killer. In another case, Gonzales didn't inform Bush that the convict's lawyer was asleep during most of the jury selection. In the interest of simple morality, let alone as an officer of the court, Gonzales should have provided Bush with the full details of each case. He seems to have clearly understood, however, that his client's interest in the facts was limited even then. Gonzales's legal advice in Texas and as White House counsel raises serious questions about how far he will go as attorney general to further the political agenda of his long-time mentor. As White House counsel, he has broadly interpreted presidential powers The executive authority given to the president of the United States by Article II of the Constitution to carry out the duties of the office. Article II, Section 1, of the Constitution provides that the "executive power shall be vested in a President of the United of executive privilege executive privilege, exemption of the executive branch of government, or its officers, from having to give evidence, specifically, in U.S. law, the exemption of the president from disclosing information to congressional inquiries or the judiciary. and vigorously expanded government secrecy. He has been a strong defender, for example, of not providing Congress or the public with information about Vice President Dick Cheney's meetings with energy industry executives to help formulate the nation's energy policy. There is little in Gonzales's record to suggest that he will aggressively defend the rightful independence of the Department of Justice when he becomes attorney general or change his mind about the subordination of constitutional rights to presidential authority. Politically, it is not difficult to see why Bush has nominated his fellow Texan. In addition to his unwavering loyalty, Gonzales's resume is impressive: the son of immigrant farm workers, he graduated from Rice and Harvard Law School Harvard Law School (colloquially, Harvard Law or HLS) is one of the professional graduate schools of Harvard University. Located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard Law is considered one of the most prestigious law schools in the United States. and served on the Texas Supreme Court. If approved as attorney general, Gonzales will be the nation's highest-ranking Hispanic-American official. Appointing him is an obvious attempt to appeal to Hispanics, a vital group of swing voters who are more up for grabs than ever before (an unprecedented 44 percent voted for Bush in November). Gonzales had been mentioned as a potential nominee for the Supreme Court, but his candidacy has been opposed by some prolife groups. While serving as a justice on the Texas Supreme Court, he ruled along with the court majority to uphold a state law that allowed a teenager to get an abortion without her parents' knowledge or consent. It is widely believed that Gonzales would have been Bush's top choice for the Supreme Court if not for his decision in that abortion case. There is speculation that his appointment as attorney general will allow him to prove his prolife bona fides, and thus pave the way for his eventual nomination to the High Court. It is discouraging, if not entirely surprising, that the criticism of Gonzales by prolife groups has focused entirely on the single abortion ruling while ignoring his far more dubious record with respect to the death penalty and dispensing with legal safeguards against torture. The fundamentally flawed nature of Gonzales's legal thinking was made clear in last spring's U.S. Supreme Court ruling rejecting the administration's efforts to deny the right to a trial to American citizens suspected of terrorism, and in a recent U.S. District Court's decision halting special "military commissions" that tried suspected terrorists in Guantanamo because they violated the Uniform Code of Military Justice The Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) was enacted by Congress in 1950 (10 U.S.C.A. § 801 et seq.) to establish a standard set of procedural and substantive criminal laws for all the U.S. military services. (It went into effect the following year. . It should be a matter of grave concern, for Republicans and Democrats alike, that the nation's future attorney general was instrumental in formulating both of these unconstitutional legal strategies. Sadly, it appears that Gonzales will be quickly confirmed by the Senate in January. Democrats, it is said, are intent on conserving their political ammunition for the expected battle over the next Supreme Court justice's views on abortion rights. If that is the case, the Democratic Party's moral confusion will be exposed once again. Demanding answers from Gonzales about the errors in legal judgment that led to Abu Ghraib should be more important than blocking the appointment of justices who might overturn Roe v. Wade Roe v. Wade, case decided in 1973 by the U.S. Supreme Court. Along with Doe v. Bolton, this decision legalized abortion in the first trimester of pregnancy. . The liberties of all Americans, not just unrestricted access to abortion, are at stake. |
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