May 12, 2004
In Nothing We Trust
Free us from
oversight, said the Bush Administration on September 12, 2001, because
you can trust in our professionalism and our ethical constraint. Were
the good guys. We wont do anything bad.
President Bush
more or less repeats this mantra today in response to the escalating scandal
of American prisons in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo, that it was just a
few bad apples, that were a democracy and and this shows how great democracy
is that it can expose a few isolated misdeeds. Trust us. The worlds collective
jaw drops. Does he really believe that? If so, hes even more isolated
and naïve than anyone has suspected. If not, then he and his inner circle
are just as calculatingly grotesque as the most spectacular conspiracy theorists
have portrayed them as being.
Look at what those
photographs show. What anybody with an ounce of common sense knows is that the
scenes being staged in them were not dreamed up by a bunch of reservists. Its
got the stench of military intelligence all over it. Im sure well
hear in court-martials to come that no direct orders were given to have any
of this happen, or that it was only private contractors. How stupid do they
think we are? You can see it easily: an intelligence chief says to the grunts,
Hey, we need some information out of these guys. See if you can figure
out a way. A few minutes later he says, Hey, I heard from a buddy
that Muslim men really freak out about nudity. No orders were given, sure.
John McCain's fury at Rumsfeld during the hearings was clearly about this issue.
We all know how it works, and we all know that what happened in the prisons
goes right to the top. Not in the abstract, "I take responsibility"
sense (though what does that mean? In what respect is Rumsfeld or Bush doing
anything when they say that?) but in the quite concrete sense that permission
to torture and humiliate Iraqis was sanctioned by the highest reaches of the
hierarchy.
A few months back,
Mark Bowden published a
spectacularly foolish article on interrogation and torture in the Atlantic
Monthly in which he mistook a kind of abstract ethical bullshit session
thinking about torture for the actual institutional practice of it. I agree
that there is a kind of thought experiment on torture and coercion that we have
to undertake in an open-minded manner. If you knew with 100% certainty that
a suspect in your custody knew where a nuclear weapon was hidden in a major
American city, and that if you didnt find out its location within 24 hours,
it would be detonated, I think most of us would say, Whatever it takes
to find out, do it.
That is a fiction, a thought experiment. Bowdens defense of torture, in response to many angry letters observing that it is very rare for interrogators to actually know who is guilty or who possesses information that justifies coercion, was basically, Well, Im only justifying this in the case of the real professionals, who know what theyre doing, and wont ever misuse coercion or torture for anything less than a vitally necessary end.
Welcome to yet
another fiction or abstraction, and a remarkably stupid one at that. When is
this ever the case? What real people in the world have the necessary professionalism
and the necessary factual knowledge of the specific information held by a prisoner?
In practical terms, none. As Adam Ashforth has argued in his work on commissions
of inquiry in South Africa, states use coercion or torture largely to demonstrate
that they can. Its a performance of power--and that's mainly what US soldiers
have been doing in prisons, torturing and humiliating captives just to demonstrate
that they can do so. Bowden says, Trust them. The whole point is
that you cant and you mustnt, regardless of how clear-headed or
fair-minded the aspirant torturer might be.
The domestic and
international terrain on these issues intertwines. Many critics of the Bush
Administration charge it with an assault on the U.S. Constitution. Sometimes
these charges get hung up on the details of particular cases, or on antipathy
towards particular individuals like John Ashcroft. The charge is accurate, but
what we have seen in the last month is that its not just or primarily
about a set of specific attacks on civil liberties. The Bush Administration
is attacking the core philosophy of the Constitution, at every moment and in
every way that they say, Trust us.
Amid the wreckage
of American legitimacy, nothing stands out more than Theodore Olson and other
lawyers from the US Solicitor Generals office standing before the Supreme
Court of the United States arguing that in war, the federal government can do
anything that it judges to be a prudential necessity for winning that war, that
no constraints apply and that no explicit powers, Constitutional or statutory,
need be granted to the federal government to do that which it sees as needful.
That the executive branch and the military need no oversight or review by any
other branch of the government.
To hear the official
legal voice of the United States government making that argument is the most
shameful thing I have heard in my life. The pictures from Iraq are nothing next
to it. Olsons argument was the equivalent of watching him drop trousers
and take a crap on the Constitution. The central genius of the Constitution
is that it constrains the government, that it says that government has no powers
save those granted to it by the Constitution. It thoroughly rejects the claim
that government must be free to expand its powers expediently.
That is the living,
beating heart of the United States: that as a people and a nation, we are suspicious
of power. That we recognize that we must never just trust in power, whether
it is interrogators or the President. This has nothing to do with whether the
people who hold power are good or bad people. Good people, people you like and
trust, can misuse power. In fact, thinking probabilistically, it is a certainty
that they will. I can trust an individual as an individual, but that is very
different from writing individuals in my government a blank check.
Abu Gharib is about more than the Iraq War, and more than Donald Rumsfeld. It is the purest revelation of the consequences of the Administrations contempt for the core values of American democracy, a contempt that they are spreading insidiously throughout the government of the United States. We have a precious few months to remove that cancer, to uproot that tree root and branch. If we fail in Novemberand make no mistake, it will be we, it will be the majority of Americans who make the wrong choice, who failthen I think historians are likely to write that this was the beginning of the end of the American democratic experiment, the moment where the mob handed the reins to Augustus and so guaranteed that one day they would burn, too, under the serenade of Neros violin.