But torture is never allowed under our laws.
Lawyers in the Department of Justice’s Office of Legal
Counsel wrote memos at the request of high-ranking government
officials in order to insulate them from future prosecution
for subjecting detainees to torture. In memos dated August
1, 2002 and March 18, 2003, former Deputy Assistant Attorney
General John Yoo (Jay Bybee, now a federal judge, signed the
2002 memo), advised the Bush administration that the Department
of Justice would not enforce the U.S. criminal laws against
torture, assault, maiming and stalking, in the detention and
interrogation of enemy combatants.
The federal maiming statute makes it a crime for someone
"with the intent to torture, maim, or disfigure"
to "cut, bite, or slit the nose, ear or lip, or cut out
or disable the tongue, or put out or destroy an eye, or cut
off or disable a limb or any member of another person."
It further prohibits individuals from "throwing or pouring
upon another person any scalding water, corrosive acid, or
caustic substance" with like intent.
Yoo said in an interview in Esquire that "just because
the statute says -- that doesn't mean you have to do it."
In a debate with Notre Dame Professor Doug Cassell, Yoo said
there is no treaty that prohibits the President from torturing
someone by crushing the testicles of the person's child. In
Yoo's view, it depends on the President's motive, notwithstanding
the absolute prohibition against torture in all circumstances.
The Torture Convention defines torture as the intentional
infliction of severe physical or mental pain or suffering.
The U.S. attached an "understanding" to its ratification
of the Torture Convention, which added the requirement that
the torturer "specifically" intend to inflict the
severe physical or mental pain or suffering. This is a distinction
without a difference for three reasons.
First, under well-established principles of criminal law,
a person specifically intends to cause a result when he either
consciously desires that result or when he knows the result
is practically certain to follow.
Second, unlike a "reservation" to a treaty provision,
an "understanding" cannot change an international
legal obligation.
Third, under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties,
an "understanding" that violates the object and
purpose of a treaty is void. The claim that treatment of prisoners
which would amount to torture under the Torture Convention
does not constitute torture under the U.S. "understanding"
violates the object and purpose of the Convention, which is
to ensure that "no one shall be subjected to torture
or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment."
The U.S. "understanding" that adds the specific
intent requirement is embodied in the U.S. Torture Statute.
Nevertheless, Yoo twisted the law and redefined torture much
more narrowly than the definitions in the Convention Against
Torture and the Torture Statute. Under Yoo's definition, the
victim must experience intense pain or suffering equivalent
to pain associated with serious physical injury so severe
that death, organ failure or permanent damage resulting in
loss of significant body functions will likely result.
Yoo wrote that self-defense or necessity could be used as
a defense to war crimes prosecutions for torture, notwithstanding
the Torture Convention's absolute prohibition against torture
in all circumstances. There can be no justification for torture.
After the exposure of the atrocities at Abu Ghraib and the
publication of the August 1, 2002 memo, the Department of
Justice knew the memo could not be legally defended. That
memo was withdrawn as of June 1, 2004. A new opinion, authored
by Daniel Levin, Acting Assistant Attorney General Office
of Legal Counsel, is dated December 30, 2004. It specifically
rejects Yoo’s definition of torture, and admits that
a defendant’s motives to protect national security will
not shield him from a torture prosecution. The rescission
of the August 2002 memo constitutes an admission by the Justice
Department that the legal reasoning in that memo was wrong.
But for 22 months, it was in effect, which sanctioned and
led to the torture of prisoners in U.S. custody.
John Yoo admitted the coercive interrogation “policies
were part of a common, unifying approach to the war on terrorism.”
Yoo and other Department of Justice lawyers, including Jay
Bybee, David Addington, William Haynes and Alberto Gonzalez,
were part of a common plan to violate U.S. and international
laws outlawing torture. It was reasonably foreseeable that
the advice they gave would result in great physical or mental
harm or death to many detainees. Indeed, more than 100 have
died, many from torture.
ABC News reported last month that the National Security Council
Principals Committee consisting of Dick Cheney, Condoleezza
Rice, Donald Rumsfeld, Colin Powell, George Tenet, and John
Ashcroft met in the White House and micromanaged the torture
of terrorism suspects by approving specific torture techniques
such as waterboarding. Bush admitted, "Yes, I'm aware
our national security team met on this issue. And I approved."
These top U.S. officials are liable for war crimes under
the U.S. War Crimes Act and torture under the Torture Statute.
They ordered the torture that was carried out by the interrogators.
Under the doctrine of command responsibility, used at Nuremberg
and enshrined in the Army Field Manual, commanders, all the
way up the chain of command to the commander in chief, can
be liable for war crimes if they knew or should have known
their subordinates would commit them, and they did nothing
to stop or prevent it. The Bush officials ordered the torture
after seeking legal cover from their lawyers.
But Yoo and the other Justice Department lawyers who wrote
the enabling memos are also liable for the same offenses.
They were an integral part of a criminal conspiracy to violate
our criminal laws. Yoo admitted in an Esquire interview last
month that he knew interrogators would take action based on
what he advised.
The President can no more order the commission of torture
than he can order the commission of genocide, or establish
a system of slavery, or wage a war of aggression.
A Select Committee of Congress should launch an immediate
and thorough investigation of the circumstances under which
torture was authorized and rationalized. The high officials
of our government and their lawyers who advised them should
be investigated and prosecuted by a Special Prosecutor, independent
of the Justice Department, for their crimes.
John Yoo, Jay Byee, and David Addington should be subjected
to particular scrutiny because of the seriousness of their
roles in misusing the rule of law and legal analysis to justify
torture and other crimes in flagrant violation of domestic
and international law.