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Mar 9th, 2009 Google Bookmarks Technorati StumbleUpon Digg! Reddit Delicious Facebook
Posted by Amrit Singh, Immigrants' Rights Project at 09:37am

Release Photos of Other Abu Ghraibs

(Originally posted on Huffington Post.)

The Justice Department’s release last week of Bush-era Office of Legal Counsel memos was an important step towards exposing past abuses of executive power and restoring government transparency. But still lingering out there, attracting much less attention, yet just as crucial for us to see, are still-secret photos of U.S. personnel abusing prisoners at overseas locations other than Abu Ghraib. The Defense Department has withheld these images from public view for more than five years. As part of its commitment to an “unprecedented” level of openness and accountability, the Obama administration should immediately disclose these pictures.

Most people do not even know that these photographs exist. When the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse images were first leaked to the press almost five years ago, the Bush administration painted the abuse as anomalous and pinned the blame on a few bad apples, a handful of low-ranking “rogue” soldiers. Then-Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said, “I can’t conceive of anyone looking at the [Abu Ghraib] pictures and suggesting that anyone could have recommended, condoned, permitted, encouraged, subtly, directly, in any way, that those things take place.” There were certainly no admissions from the administration that Abu Ghraib was just the tip of the iceberg, or that the administration was in possession of photographic evidence of prisoner abuse at other locations. It was only in the context of the ACLU’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit that the Defense Department was ultimately forced to disclose that it was withholding photographs of prisoner abuse at locations other than Abu Ghraib in Iraq and in Afghanistan.

The public value of these images is considerable. As visual records, they convey what words could not possibly communicate. As evidence of abuse at locations other than Abu Ghraib, they undermine the Bush administration’s claim that abuse was aberrational. The disclosure of these images is critical to help the public understand the scope and scale of prisoner abuse as well as the extent to which such abuse was caused by policy decisions. Disclosure is also crucial for assessing official responsibility for the abuse.

In court, the Bush administration conceded that the secret photographs depict governmental wrongdoing. The government argued, however, that it was entitled to withhold the images because their disclosure could lead to violent outrage and propaganda directed against the United States. In effect, the Bush administration argued that the images should be withheld from public view precisely because they depict governmental wrongdoing. And even though it had previously determined that the Geneva Conventions did not protect Taliban and al Qaeda prisoners, the Bush administration also argued that disclosure would expose the prisoners to “insults and public curiosity” in violation of the Geneva Conventions.

These arguments have no place in a democracy. They effectively place the government above the law. If accepted, these arguments would prevent human rights violations committed by the government from ever coming to light.

Nor do these arguments have any place in the law. Congress enacted FOIA precisely to ensure government accountability. By effectively seeking the greatest protection from disclosure for records that depict the worst government misconduct, the Bush administration’s argument turns FOIA on its head.

The administration’s argument with respect to the Geneva Conventions is similarly unsupportable. Plaintiffs in the FOIA lawsuit seek disclosure of the images only after individually identifying information has been deleted from each of them. Release of the images in this form does not expose the prisoners depicted to “insults” or “public curiosity.” Rather, by exposing prisoner abuse, it serves the Conventions’ central aim of ensuring that prisoners are treated humanely. Nor can the Bush administration’s position be squared with historical United States practice. At the end of the Second World War, while the 1929 Geneva Conventions’ “public curiosity” provisions were in effect, the United States disseminated to the media large numbers of photographs of prisoners in German and Japanese prisons and concentration camps in order to hold the perpetrators accountable.

It should therefore come as no surprise that both the district court and a unanimous panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit soundly rejected these arguments for withholding the prisoner abuse images. In ordering release of the images, the appeals panel expressly recognized that “the facts of this case place governmental accountability at the center of the dispute,” and that “there is significant public interest” in disclosure of the images. Yet, the Bush administration took the added step of requesting further review by the full court of appeals. That request — which is still pending — had the intended effect of further delaying the release of the images.

However, that pending request does not and should not prevent the Obama administration from holding true to its promise of transparency and releasing the prisoner abuse images. The American public has the right to know what was done in its name and to draw its own conclusions from viewing these images.

Indeed, withholding the prisoner abuse images would seriously undermine President Obama’s recent directives on government openness. One of those directives expressly prohibits the government from “keep[ing] information confidential merely because public officials might be embarrassed by disclosure, because errors and failures might be revealed, or because of speculative or abstract fears.” That directive also quotes Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis’s famous observation that sunlight is the best of disinfectants. The President should heed that wisdom, and instruct his administration to publicly disclose these photographs.

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3 Responses to "Release Photos of Other Abu Ghraibs"

  1. Hawaiian style Says:

    Sorry you have believed that a new president would re instill justice into the US Government.

    First there are 4 co-equal branches of the Gov. Exec., Legis., Justice (legal), and Defense (War Dept.).

    Second the Pres has just joined the most exclusive club in the world and is not enthusiastic about creating an environment where the other members get mad at him.

    Third, the War Department might be too tough to change. They certainly are the tail that wags the dog.

    Fourth the release of more torture photos would inflame the public and increase pressure on the President to do something about it. He does not want to. He prefers to make general statements like,"We do not Torture."

    Auwe. Auwe.

  2. Vic Livingston Says:

    WHY AREN'T HUFF POST AND OTHER 'PROGRESSIVE' PUBLICATIONS WRITING ABOUT DOMESTIC TORTURE AND ABUSE OF INNOCENT BUT 'TARGETED' U.S. CITIZENS?

    Urge President Obama to sign an Executive Order banning:

    * Radiation weapons assault on "targeted" but innocent U.S. citizens

    * High-tech community "gang-stalking," surreptitious home entries; malicious vandalism and pervasive surveillance (including CENSORSHIP AND/OR PRIOR RESTRAINT of internet telecommunications

    * Secret federal "programs of financial destruction"

    ***

    BUSH DOJ LEGAL MEMOS USED TO PROVIDE LEGAL JUSTIFICATION FOR ONGOING DOMESTIC TORTURE VIA MICROWAVE RADIATION WEAPONRY

    The Bush Justice Department "torture memos," some still secret, are believed to have been used to provide legal justification for the covert use of classified, silent microwave radiation weapons on U.S. citizens -- "targeted" under the pretext of the "war on terror" as "undesirables" and "dissidents."

    Victims, including the journalist who authored the articles linked below, say these painful, debilitating and illness-inducing microwave assaults constitute torture and "slow-kill," a military descriptive for prolonged assaults that eventually result in death -- what could be described as an American genocide.

    Victims of these assaults say their family finances are decimated by an array of secret "programs of personal financial destruction" that involve the forced cooperation of private enterprise; surveillance and interception of mail and telecommunications; and the forging of billing, utility, banking and mortgage statements -- what they charge is a process of expropriation and theft by deception.

    Sources say these covert programs were justified by the Bush Justice Department under legal theories that are said to include a suspected "nexus to terrorism" and, according to a source, the legal theory that weapons and/or medical experimentation on U.S. citizens is permissible if subjects are under federal investigation for suspected offenses.

    These microwave weapons assaults have continued under the Obama administration, and are facilitated by an "extrajudicial punishment network" enabled by federal agencies; local police nationwide; and "community gang stalker" citizen vigilantes fronted by government-funded community policing and volunteer organizations.

    ***

    Victims have asked the FBI/Justice Department to launch a civil rights investigation. They say officials have told them they see nothing to investigate, and hint that victim accounts are delusional.

    Victims maintain that marginalizing the persecuted as "unstable" or "mentally ill" is a tactic being used to cover up crimes against humanity, a highly organized and well-funded social genocide.

    ***

    TEAM OBAMA: WHAT DO YOUR BUSH HOLDOVERS KNOW ABOUT THIS:

    * Silent, covert microwave radiation weapons assaults on innocent but "targeted" U.S. citizens;

    * Terroristic vigilante community gang stalking, surreptitious home entry, police-tolerated vandalism;

    * Secret federal "programs of personal financial destruction."

    http://www.nowpublic.com/world/gestapo-usa-govt-f unded-vigilante-network-targets-terrorizes-u-s-citizens
    http://www.nowpublic.com/world/domestic-torture-radiation-weaponry- americas-horrific-shame

    OR (if links are corrupted / disabled):

    http://www.NowPublic.com/scrivener

  3. Cynthia Smith Says:

    Having heard about the content of these photos, as reported by Seymour Hersch, I agree with the President that these photos will do more harm than good if released. That does not preclude the investigators of torture from seeing them and in fact, it is imperative they see them in order to strengthen the case of an investigation into the use of torture. As a member of the ACLU, I support transparency when that in itself serves the highest good. However, in this case, the highest good is to serve justice through an exhaustive investigation, with charges if appropriate (how they can not?)and consideration for our troops and the increased risk they face if these photos are released.
    For justice's sake, withhold these photos and name a special prosecutor STAT.
    With gratitude for all your work,
    Cynthia Smith
    Portland, OR

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