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Nov 01 2007
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By MWC NEWS   

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Refusal to Denounce Waterboarding Shows Him Unfit for Attorney GeneralImage

The United States Senate should reject Michael Mukasey’s appointment as attorney general because of his unwillingness to state that “waterboarding” and other cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment is illegal.

In response to written questions from the Senate Judiciary Committee, Mukasey said on Tuesday that waterboarding – mock drowning prosecuted by the United States as torture since 1902 – was “repugnant,” but refused to call it illegal. 
 
“Mukasey seems to think he was nominated to be an ethics professor rather than the nation’s chief law enforcement officer,” said Kenneth Roth, executive director at Human Rights Watch. “If he is still unsure whether the horrific practice of waterboarding is illegal, then he shouldn’t be confirmed.” 
 
In his 172-page response to Senate Judiciary committee questions, Mukasey refused to comment on the legality of any specific interrogation techniques, claiming that it would be inappropriate to comment on them until he had been briefed by the Justice Department on “the actual facts and circumstances” of how they may have been used. But waterboarding is clearly unlawful regardless of the circumstances, Human Rights Watch said. 
 
“If Mukasey had been asked about the rack and thumbscrew, would he have said that it depends on the circumstances?” Roth asked. “The only reason to equivocate on waterboarding is to protect administration officials who authorized it from possible prosecution," Roth added.

" Mukasey seems to think he was nominated to be an ethics professor rather than the nation’s chief law enforcement officer. If he is still unsure whether the horrific practice of waterboarding is illegal, then he shouldn’t be confirmed."

Kenneth Roth, executive director at Human Rights Watch


Human Rights Watch pointed out that waterboarding has been prosecuted by US military courts as torture for more than 100 years, since the Spanish-American War. After World War II, US military commissions prosecuted and severely punished enemy soldiers for having subjected American prisoners to waterboarding. In its annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, the State Department has consistently condemned other countries for using the practice. 
 
The Judge Advocates General (JAGs) of the US Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines agreed in August 2006 that waterboarding, which creates the perception of drowning, violates US law and the law of war. Several JAGs specifically stated that use of this technique would violate the US anti-torture statute, making it a felony offense. 
In addition, rather than rejecting certain interrogation techniques regardless of the circumstances, Mukasey adopted the administration’s subjective “shocks the conscience” test to interpret the prohibition on cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment. Under that legal test, the cruelty of an interrogation technique must be balanced against its purpose, and in the administration’s view, little shocks the conscience if done in the name of fighting terrorism. That thinking led to the adoption of abusive interrogation techniques – including waterboarding – in the first place. 
 
Of particular concern, Mukasey suggested that the rules of interrogation adopted in 2006 by the US Army Field Manual are primarily designed for the interrogation of prisoners of war, not terrorist suspects. But the Army Field Manual, which applies to all persons in military custody regardless of status, was adopted at a time when most of those in US military custody were terrorist suspects who had been denied prisoner of war status. The Army Field Manual explicitly prohibits a range of abusive interrogation techniques, including waterboarding, exposure to hot and cold, and use of dogs. 
 
Mukasey’s answers were vague or unresponsive on a number of other important questions. He failed to state clearly what – if any – interrogation techniques would violate a minimum standard of humane treatment regardless of the interest at stake. He refused to say whether evidence obtained through coercion could legitimately be used in a prosecution against a terrorist suspect, and whether an American citizen detained on US soil could be indefinitely detained as an “enemy combatant.” Mukasey also failed to answer what, if anything, he would do to oversee the actions of private contractors operating in Iraq and Afghanistan and whether he thought it legal to send terrorist suspects to countries that regularly engage in torture if the US were provided “diplomatic assurances” – unenforceable promises of humane treatment. 
 
“How can the government be expected to abide by the rule of law if its chief law enforcement officer won’t even say what the law is?” said Roth. “Mukasey provided evasions, not answers, to the most pressing issues facing the Justice Department. He should not be confirmed as attorney general.” 

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Comments (3)
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1. 02-11-2007 22:56
President Bush has gone on the offensive for the confirmation of Michael Mukasey, his nominee for attorney general. His tactic? Calling any senator who insists Mukasey give real answers to questions on torture and wiretapping -- you guessed it -- soft on terrorism.  
 
Having served as a top federal prosecutor and judge, Michael Mukasey is perhaps the best-qualified nominee for attorney general in history to answer the questions he has been asked by senators.  
 
Yet when it comes to straightforward questions, like whether waterboarding (simulated drowning) is torture, and even whether it is legal for foreign governments to beat and administer electric shocks to American soldiers overseas(1), Mukasey won’t give straightforward answers. Until he gives real answers, it is impossible for senators to fully exercise their constitutional duty to "advise and consent" on the Mukasey nomination. 
 
Take Action: Senators Must Insist Mukasey Denounces Acts of Torture. 
 
Mukasey has not only refused to state whether waterboarding is torture when authorized by the U.S. government, but he also refused to say whether it is illegal for foreign countries to commit acts such as waterboarding, electric shocks, beatings, head slaps, and induced hypothermia on Americans. Senators must hold off with Mukasey’s nomination unless he clearly states that tactics like waterboarding and electric shocks are torture. And Mukasey needs to commit to enforce our nation’s anti-torture laws, regardless of who is ordering or carrying out torture. 
 
Take Action: Senators Must Insist Mukasey Denounces Acts of Torture. 
 
As the top law enforcement official in the country, the attorney general is supposed to enforce the law, not equivocate and dance around clear-cut legal issues. Yet Mukasey has evaded straight answers -- not only on torture -- but on eavesdropping as well. Under his theory, any restrictions on unfettered spying that Congress passes may be meaningless, since Mukasey believes the president has the power to engage in domestic wiretapping without a warrant and outside the law. 
 
Mukasey's answers to these questions reveal a more fundamental and troubling problem in his views on the scope of executive power. If an attorney general, whose mission is to enforce the law, believes the President has the power to disregard the law, our constitutional balance of powers is in peril. 
 
Efforts to bring spying in line with the Constitution, to stop torture and abuse, and to get to the bottom of potential crimes by top federal officials, like former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, all depend on an attorney general that will enforce the law.  
 
Take Action: Senators Must Insist Mukasey Denounces Acts of Torture. 
 
Thank you for your continued involvement.  
 
Sincerely, 
Caroline Fredrickson
Caroline Fredrickson
2. 03-11-2007 00:20
What's your definition of torture ?.....water-boarding certainly isn't !
cat
3. 03-11-2007 00:31
That\'s right...lets wait until Iran gets the bomb...exports it to several of our enemies, who sneak them into our country and detonate them in a few large cities. I suppose that obama if President, will refuse to retaliate, because the UN urges restraint and were are not sure where & whom is responsible. Gotta love that osama obama...getting his talking points and orders right from jesse jackson, another anti-American racist.
cat

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