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A recent report to  the UN Committee Against Torture concludes that the US presidential  administrations of George W. Bush and Barack Obama are responsible for  far-reaching violations of international law for directing and covering  up a global torture program developed by the US Central Intelligence  Agency in the years following the September 11, 2001 attacks. 
  
The report, prepared by the “Advocates for US Torture Prosecutions,”  Dr. Trudy Bond, Prof. Benjamin Davis, Dr. Curtis F. J. Doebbler, and The  International Human Rights Clinic at Harvard Law School, states  unequivocally that entire sections of the state apparatus are  responsible for “breathtaking” crimes against international law. 
  
“Civilian and military officials at the highest level created,  designed, authorized and implemented a sophisticated, international  criminal program of torture,” the report states. 
  
The report details the vast scale of the torture system, noting that  detainees were tortured not just at the US Guantanamo Bay Military Base  in Cuba, but in numerous secret black sites worldwide, including in  “Bosnia-Herzegovina, Canada, Djibouti, Egypt, Indonesia, Iraq, Italy,  Jordan, Libya, Lithuania, Mauritania, Morocco, Pakistan, Poland,  Romania, Russia, Syria, Thailand, the United Arab Emirates, the United  Kingdom (Diego Garcia), and Yemen.” 
  
Having been “conceived and authorized at the highest levels” of the  US government, responsibility for the crimes committed is shared by  numerous top officials, the report concludes, including “President  George W. Bush, then Vice President Dick Cheney, then Director of the  Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) George Tenet, then National Security  Advisor Condoleezza Rice, then Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, then  Secretary of State Colin Powell, and then Attorney General John  Ashcroft.” 
  
The torture techniques were devised by the CIA in collaboration with  intelligence officers from the Egyptian and Saudi regimes, according to  the report. 
  
“The techniques in question, sometimes styled as interrogation  techniques and sometimes as detention procedures, included near-drowning  (‘waterboarding’), sleep deprivation for days, and forced nudity,” the  report notes. 
  
“They have caused many people intense suffering, including severe mental harm and, in some cases, death,” the report notes. 
  
“Retroactive legal approval” was then contrived by US government  lawyers at the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC). 
  
In order to justify the new methods of “enhanced interrogation,” the  torture lawyers of the Bush administration drew up an “absurdly narrow”  definition of torture to justify the administration’s policies. 
As a CIA lawyer commented to personnel at Guantanamo Bay when  summarizing the content of the Bush administration torture memos, “…it  is basically subject to perception. If the detainee dies you’re doing it  wrong.” 
  
“The fact is that senior officials in the United States government  solicited information on how to use aggressive techniques, redefined the  law to create the appearance of their legality, and authorized their  use against detainees,” notes a report by the US Senate Armed Services  Committee, cited in the new report to the UN. 
  
Using the definition advanced under Bush, former Iraqi leader Saddam  Hussein himself “would be exculpated” for the systematic torture carried  out by his regime, Yale Law School Dean Harold Koh told the  rapporteurs. 
  
Far from being limited to the Bush administration, the report makes  clear that the Obama administration, the Justice Department and multiple  federal courts have upheld the conception that those involved in  “waterboarding, dietary manipulation, walling, long-time standing, sleep  deprivation and water dousing” should receive immunity, and that these  techniques do not constitute torture. 
  
The Obama administration has sought to safeguard all the senior Bush  administration officials most directly responsible for torture from  prosecution or any form of legal or punitive action for their  involvement in torture. 
  
As the report notes, all senior US government officials have received  blanket immunity for their involvement in orchestrating a worldwide  torture network, and “courts-martial and administrative proceedings for  acts of torture have been almost exclusively limited to low-level  private contractors or soldiers.” 
  
The authors conclude that the “enhanced interrogation” methods  violated the UN Convention Against Torture or Other Cruel, Inhuman and  Degrading Treatment and Punishment, which builds on the ban on torture  contained in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the  International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. 
  
The report maintains that “the prohibition against torture is  absolute,” rejecting the legal concepts of the Bush administration and  calling for the prosecution of top Bush administration lawyers,  including the drafter of the three main “Torture Memos,” Deputy  Assistant Attorney General John Yoo, 
  
The failure of the US government to hold accountable any of the  leadership elements that organized the torture is undermining the  “preemptory norm against torture,” according to the report. Torture is  becoming more widespread and viewed as more acceptable by states  everywhere in response to the unabashed repudiation of international law  by the US. 
  
In its concluding recommendation to the UN Committee Against Torture,  the legal scholars demand that the US government adopt a legal and  policy course that is 180 degrees opposed to that followed by the Obama  administration since taking office. 
  
“The United States should promptly and impartially prosecute senior  military civilian officials responsible for authorizing, acquiescing or  consenting in any way to acts of torture committed by their  subordinates,” the rapporteurs write. 
  
Were the demands of the report to be implemented, the result would be  legal-political prosecutions directed against command elements and  numerous individuals within the upper layers of the most powerful  agencies of the American government, including the CIA, the military and  the Department of Justice, together with numerous high-ranking members  of the Bush and Obama administrations. 
Countless figures, many now ensconced in lavish sinecures in academia  and the corporate establishment, would have to face long jail sentences. 
  
No such accountability will be forthcoming from any section of the  political establishment, however, given that the torturers and their  defenders are the preeminent political servants and  military-intelligence specialists of the capitalist class. 
  
The torture program was developed and implemented as part of an  explosion of American militarism, as the ruling class has sought to  maintain its global position through war and violence in every corner of  the globe. At the same time, it is part of a wholesale assault on  democratic rights, directed fundamentally at any opposition to the  policies of the corporate and financial elite. 
  
Far from prosecuting those responsible, the Obama administration is  currently engaged in a coordinated campaign to prevent the release of a  Senate Intelligence Committee summary on CIA torture, working closely  with the spy agency itself to cover up the crimes for which it is  guilty. 
   
By Thomas Gaist, 1 November 2014 
    
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