In the wake of an explosive Senate report that found post-Sept. 11 interrogation techniques used by the CIA essentially useless and far more brutal than previously disclosed, human rights advocates are calling for U.S. action to ensure that such crimes never happen again, with some pushing for full investigations and prosecutions at the highest level of government.
“The summary of the report … released this afternoon confirms what the international community has long believed — that there was a clear policy orchestrated at a high level within the Bush administration to commit systematic crimes and gross violations of international human rights law,” said Ben Emmerson, the U.N. special rapporteur on counter terrorism and human rights, in a statement. “It is now time to take action.”
Emmerson went on to say that the individuals responsible for this “criminal conspiracy” must face penalties “commensurate with the gravity of their crimes,” and that seniority should not translate to immunity.
“The fact that the policies revealed in this report were authorized at a high level within the U.S. government provides no excuse whatsoever. Indeed, it reinforces the need for criminal accountability,” Emmerson said. “As a matter of international law, the US is legally obliged to bring those responsible to justice.”
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The long-awaited report, released Tuesday by the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, detailed gruesome accounts of suffering at the hands of the CIA’s interrogation techniques, which included keeping detainees awake for as long as 180 hours, threatening the lives of detainees’ wives, and severe, repeated waterboarding sessions, among others. It also revealed troubling instances where the spy agency provided “inaccurate information” about its tactics to the White House, Congress, Department of Justice (DOJ), internal CIA investigators, the press and the public.
So ingrained were these techniques that when President George W. Bush marked the 2003 U.N. International Day in Support of Victims of Torture, the CIA panicked and had to circle back with the administration to make sure what it was doing was okay. According to the report, after Bush stated that “torture anywhere is an affront to human dignity everywhere,” and The Washington Post ran a piece about his pledge, then-CIA Deputy General Counsel John Rizzo called John Bellinger, the legal adviser to the National Security Council, to “express our surprise and concern at some of the statements attributed to the Administration in the piece, particularly the Presidential statement on the U.N. International Day in Support of Victims of Torture as well as a quote from the Deputy White House Secretary Scott McClellan that all prisoners being held by the USG [U.S. government] are being treated ‘humanely.’”
Days later, Vice President Cheney stated “that the CIA was executing administration policy in carrying out its interrogation program,” the Senate report reads.
When asked whether the Justice Department would reopen a criminal investigation into the interrogation program, a senior administration official told msnbc’s Joy Reid Tuesday that the attorney general’s office had no such plans. The Justice Department conducted a thorough review in 2009 that encompassed the same information as was revealed in the Senate report, the official explained, and the DOJ determined then that there was not enough evidence to guarantee a viable prosecution.
Naureen Shah, director of Amnesty International USA’s security and human rights program, called that interpretation “completely wrongheaded.”
“We’re talking about crimes that under international law must not only be investigated, but have to be prosecuted by the Justice Department,” Shah told msnbc. “[These acts] are illegal, and there’s no question about it.”
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