The Torture President
Press release
A legacy secured: Dana Perino (11-Mar-08), Statement by the Press Secretary, Office of the Press Secretary [office of senior White House official with a rank one step below Cabinet level; primary spokesperson for the Administration], online at whitehouse
George W. Bush approved the executions of 127 people when he was Governor of Texas and thus distinguished himself as the killingest Governor in Texas history. Building upon that reputation, the 110th Congress ratified Bush's legacy as the Torture President on Wednesday by failing to override his veto of the Intelligence Authorization Bill.
The Intelligence Authorization Bill would have prohibited the CIA and other U.S. government agencies from using interrogation techniques that are illegal under the Geneva Convention or not authorized by the U.S. Army Field Manual. Bush vetoed it.
Here's the official White House press release commemorating this ignominious occasion:
Today the House of Representatives failed to override the President's veto of the Intelligence Authorization Bill. The President believes that he has no higher responsibility than protecting the American people. The President also believes in making sure the Intelligence Community has the tools necessary to protect America from attack. By requiring the Intelligence Community to use only the interrogation methods authorized in the publicly available Army Field Manual, the bill would have eliminated the legal alternative procedures in place in the CIA program to question the world's most dangerous and violent terrorists. The CIA program has produced critical intelligence and helped us prevent a number of attacks. An override of the President's veto would have diminished the Intelligence Community's ability to protect our Nation
As the former Attorney General of Colorado and the current Senator from that state Ken Salazar said about the veto:
By vetoing the Intelligence Authorization bill the President has undermined one of our most fundamental moral standards – that our Nation does not condone torture...Disappointingly, [U.S. Attorney General] Mr. Mukasey and the administration still have not acknowledged that water-boarding is illegal.
For an historical perspective on how Americans viewed waterboarding during the Spanish-American War (outrage followed by apathy), see the February 25th issue of the New Yorker: The water cure: Debating torture and counterinsurgency – A century ago, by Paul Kramer (New Yorker 84[2]:38-43, and online at newyorker.com).




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