November 1, 2005
Here is the key passage in Senator John McCain's anti-torture amendment
to the 2006 Defense Appropriations Bill (which the Bush administration
has threatened to veto if it arrives so amended): "No individual in the
custody or under the physical control of the United States Government,
regardless of nationality or physical location, shall be subject to
cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment."
Here are the August 2002 words of John Yoo, then-deputy assistant
attorney general in the Office of Legal Counsel at the Department of
Justice (now a law professor at Berkeley and the author of a new book
reviewed below) in his infamous "torture memo" to White House Counsel
Alberto Gonzales. After hauling out many dictionaries, Yoo managed to
redefine torture in the following pretzled fashion: "must be equivalent
in intensity to the pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as
organ failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death." Thus, did
a junior member of the Bush administration open the legal way for
waterboarding in the White House. This is the man who, only two weeks after September 11, wrote a memo to Gonzales' deputy entitled The President's Constitutional Authority to Conduct Military Operations against Terrorists and Nations Supporting Them,
which is certainly in the running for the most sweeping claim of
unfettered executive power in our nation's history and which laid the
(il)legal groundwork for an Iraq war of choice to come. "In the
exercise of his plenary power to use military force," Yoo insisted,
"the President's decisions are for him alone and are unreviewable."
Over four years later, lobbying for torture is no longer restricted to
secret, high-level White House meetings, insider memos from Justice
Department lawyers, or little privately scrawled notes
from Donald Rumsfeld -- like the one on a November 27, 2002 memo on
acceptable interrogation methods: "I stand for 8-10 hours a day. Why is
standing [as a counter-resistance technique] limited to 4 hours?" Last
week, on the torture side of the ledger, Vice President Cheney
descended from the imperial heavens to lobby Senator McCain, a man who
knows something about torture first-hand, to exempt the CIA (and
possibly other secret agencies) from his amendment. According to the New York Times, here is the (tortured) wording of the exemption the Vice President was pushing:
"[The measure] shall not apply with respect to
clandestine counterterrorism operations conducted abroad, with respect
to terrorists who are not citizens of the United States, that are
carried out by an element of the United States government other than
the Department of Defense and are consistent with the Constitution and
laws of the United States and treaties to which the United States is a
party, if the president determines that such operations are vital to
the protection of the United States or its citizens from terrorist
attack."
"As for Mr. Cheney," the Washington Post editorial page commented astringently, "[h]e will be remembered as the vice president who campaigned for torture."
Last week, by the way, the ACLU released
"an analysis of new and previously released autopsy and death reports
of detainees held in U.S. facilities in Iraq and Afghanistan, many of
whom died while being interrogated. The documents show that detainees
were hooded, gagged, strangled, beaten with blunt objects, subjected to
sleep deprivation and to hot and cold environmental conditions… The
documents show that detainees died during or after interrogations by
Navy Seals, Military Intelligence and 'OGA' (Other Governmental Agency)
-- a term, according to the ACLU, that is commonly used to refer to the
CIA." Evidently, this is just everyday life in the world created by
Dick Cheney and John Yoo.
As it happened, Cheney was going for the torture trifecta. The Monday
after the indictment and resignation of I. Lewis Libby, he announced
the appointment of a new vice-presidential chief of staff, his counsel
David Addington, a man the Washington Post
has identified as "a principal author of the White House memo
justifying torture of terrorism suspects. He was a prime advocate of
arguments supporting the holding of terrorism suspects without access
to courts." These days, it seems, this is nothing short of a
qualification for holding high office. After all, the three men who
head our new Homeland Security State -- Alberto Gonzales, Michael
Chertoff, and Donald Rumsfeld (Justice, Homeland Security, and Defense)
-- were all intimately involved in creating and/or parsing pretzled
definitions of torture meant to free our "commander-in-chief" to order
more or less anything he wanted done to anyone at all out there in the
imperium.
Now, the Vice President proudly joins this line-up with the lovely complaint (according to a number of publications) that McCain's amendment "would bind the president's hands in wartime." (Ouch! And how that would hurt!)
Despite his anodyne prose, John Yoo is a living link between an
imperial presidency freed of all constraints -- or all that matter
anyway -- and the plunge into barbarism that has made torture the
binding issue of this administration. (It's the sort of connection that
Caligula or Claudius would have grasped instantly.) David Cole, whose Enemy Aliens: Double Standards and Constitutional Freedoms in the War on Terrorism
takes up the denial of basic constitutional rights in the name of
"wartime" expediency, considers Yoo's new book and the extreme theory
of presidential power it proposes in an essay that is running in the
November 17 issue of the New York Review of Books and appears here thanks to the kindness of that magazine's editors. Tom
What Bush Wants to Hear
A Consideration of John Yoo's The Powers of War and Peace: The Constitution and Foreign Affairs After 9/11
By David Cole
Few lawyers have had more influence on President Bush's legal policies
in the "war on terror" than John Yoo. This is a remarkable feat,
because Yoo was not a cabinet official, not a White House lawyer, and
not even a senior officer within the Justice Department. He was merely
a mid-level attorney in the Justice Department's Office of Legal
Counsel with little supervisory authority and no power to enforce laws.
Yet by all accounts, Yoo had a hand in virtually every major legal
decision involving the U.S. response to the attacks of September 11,
and at every point, so far as we know, his advice was virtually always
the same -- the president can do whatever the president wants.
Yoo's most famous piece of advice was in an August 2002 memorandum
stating that the president cannot constitutionally be barred from
ordering torture in wartime -- even though the United States has signed
and ratified a treaty absolutely forbidding torture under all
circumstances, and even though Congress has passed a law pursuant to
that treaty, which without any exceptions prohibits torture. Yoo
reasoned that because the Constitution makes the president the
"Commander-in-Chief," no law can restrict the actions he may take in
pursuit of war. On this reasoning, the president would be entitled by
the Constitution to resort to genocide if he wished.
Yoo is now back in private life, having returned to the law faculty
at the University of California at Berkeley. Unlike some other former
members of the administration, he seems to have few if any second
thoughts about what he did, and has continued to aggressively defend
his views. His book The Powers of War and Peace: The Constitution and Foreign Affairs After 9/11
shows why Yoo was so influential in the Bush administration. It
presents exactly the arguments that the president would have wanted to
hear. Yoo contends that the president has unilateral authority to
initiate wars without congressional approval, and to interpret,
terminate, and violate international treaties at will. Indeed, ratified
treaties, Yoo believes, cannot be enforced by courts unless Congress
enacts additional legislation to implement them. According to this
view, Congress's foreign affairs authority is largely limited to
enacting domestic legislation and appropriating money. In other words,
when it comes to foreign affairs, the president exercises unilateral
authority largely unchecked by law -- constitutional or international.
Yoo is by no means the first to advance such positions. Many
conservatives favor a strong executive, especially when it comes to
foreign affairs, and they are generally skeptical about international
law. What Yoo offers that is new is an attempt to reconcile these
modern-day conservative preferences with an influential conservative
theory of constitutional interpretation: the "originalist" approach,
which claims that the Constitution must be interpreted according to the
specific understandings held by the framers, the ratifiers, and the
public when the Constitution and its amendments were drafted.
The problem for originalists who believe in a strong executive and
are cynical about international law is that the framers held precisely
the opposite views -- they were intensely wary of executive power, and
as leaders of a new and vulnerable nation, they were eager to ensure
that the mutual obligations they had negotiated with other countries
would be honored and enforced. During the last two centuries, of
course, executive power has greatly expanded in practice; and the
attitude of many U.S. leaders toward international law has grown
increasingly disrespectful as the relative strength of the U.S.
compared to other nations has increased. But these developments are
difficult to square with the doctrine of "original intent," which, at
least as expressed by Justice Antonin Scalia and other extreme
conservatives, largely disregards the development of the law for the
past two centuries. Yoo's task is to reconcile the contemporary uses of
American power with his belief in original intent. His views prevailed
under the Bush administration, and therefore should be examined not
only for their cogency and historical accuracy, but for their
consequences for U.S. policy in the "war on terror."
War
On its face, the Constitution divides power over foreign affairs. It
gives Congress substantial responsibility, especially with respect to
war. Congress has the power to raise and regulate the military; to
declare war and issue "Letters of Marque and Reprisal," which authorize
lesser forms of conflict; to define offenses against the law of
nations; and to regulate international commerce. The Senate must
confirm all treaties and all appointments of ambassadors. The president
is named as the "Commander-in-Chief," and appoints ambassadors and
makes treaties subject to the Senate's consent. In addition, the words
"executive power" have, since the beginning of the republic, been
regarded as giving the president an implicit authority to represent the
nation in foreign affairs.
These divisions of responsibility were conceived for widely
recognized historical and philosophical reasons. The Constitution was
drafted following the Revolutionary War, in which the colonies rebelled
against the abuses of the British monarchy, the prototypical example of
an unaccountable executive. The new nation so distrusted executive
power that the first attempt to form a federal government, the Articles
of Confederation, created only a multi-member Continental Congress,
which was in turn dependent on the states for virtually all significant
functions, including imposing taxes, regulating citizens' behavior,
raising an army, and going to war. That experiment failed, so the
Constitution's drafters gave Congress more power, and revived the
concept of a branch of government headed by a single executive. But
they insisted on substantial limits on the power of the new executive
branch, and accordingly assigned to Congress strong powers that had
traditionally been viewed as belonging to the executive -- including
the power to declare war.
Many of the framers passionately defended the decision to deny the
president the power to involve the nation in war. When Pierce Butler, a
member of the Constitutional Convention, proposed giving the president
the power to make war, his proposal was roundly rejected. George Mason
said the president was "not to be trusted" with the power of war, and
that it should be left with Congress as a way of "clogging rather than
facilitating war." James Wilson, another member, argued that giving
Congress the authority to declare war "will not hurry us into war; it
is calculated to guard against it. It will not be in the power of a
single man, or a single body of men, to involve us in such distress;
for the important power of declaring war is vested in the legislature
at large." Even Alexander Hamilton, one of the founders most in favor
of strong executive power, said that "the Legislature alone can
interrupt [the blessings of peace] by placing the nation in a state of
war." As John Hart Ely, former dean of Stanford Law School, has
commented, while the original intention of the Founders on many matters
is often "obscure to the point of inscrutability," when it comes to war
powers "it isn't."
In the face of this evidence, Yoo boldly asserts that a deeper
historical inquiry reveals a very different original intention --
namely, to endow the president with power over foreign affairs
virtually identical to that of the king of England, including the power
to initiate wars without congressional authorization. He argues that
the power to "declare War" given to Congress was not meant to include
the power to begin or authorize a war, but simply the power to state
officially that a war was on -- a statement that would be "a courtesy
to the enemy" and would authorize the executive to exercise various
domestic wartime powers. At most, Yoo contends, the clause giving
Congress power to "declare War" was meant to require congressional
approval for "total war," a term Yoo never defines, but it left to the
president the unilateral decision to engage in all lesser hostilities.
He quotes dictionaries from the founding period that defined "declare"
as "to pronounce" or "to proclaim," not "to commence." He points out
that the Constitution did not give Congress the power to "engage in" or
to "levy" war, terms used in other constitutional provisions referring
to war. And he notes that unlike some state constitutions of the time,
the federal constitution did not require the president to consult
Congress before going to war.
All the evidence Yoo cites, however, can be read more convincingly
to corroborate the view he seeks to challenge -- namely, that the
Constitution gave the president only the power, as commander in chief,
to carry out defensive wars when the country came under attack, and to
direct operations in wars that Congress authorized. British precedent
is of limited utility here, since the framers consciously departed from
so much of it. Dictionary definitions of "declare" also offer little
guidance, since Yoo ignores that there is a world of difference between
someone's "declaring" his or her love for wine or Mozart and a
sovereign's declaring war. "Declare War" was in fact a legal term of
art, and there is evidence that it was used at the time to mean both
the commencement of hostilities and a statement officially recognizing
that war was ongoing. The use of the word "declare" rather than "levy"
or "engage in" simply reflects the division of authority under which
the president actually levies -- or carries on -- the war once it is
begun. Indeed, the framers famously substituted "declare" for "make" in
enumerating Congress's war powers for just this reason. And the framers
had no reason to require the president to consult with Congress before
going to war since it was Congress's decision, not the president's.
Most troubling for Yoo's thesis, his account renders the power to
"declare War" a meaningless formality. At the time of the
Constitution's drafting, a formal "declaration of war" was not
necessary for the exercise of war powers under either domestic or
international law, so Yoo's hypothesis that the declaration served that
purpose fails. Yoo's further suggestion that the clause recognizes a
distinction between "total wars," which must be declared, and lesser
wars, which need not be, has no historical basis. Despite his
ostensible commitment to originalism, Yoo cites no evidence whatever to
suggest that any such distinction existed for the founding generation.
Nor does he ever explain what the distinction might mean today. And the
fact that the text grants Congress both the power to "declare War" and
to issue "Letters of Marque and Reprisal" strongly suggests an intent
that Congress decide on all forms of military conflict other than
repelling attacks. Once these explanations evaporate, all that is left
for Yoo's theory of the war clause is that it gives Congress the power
to provide a "courtesy to the enemy" -- hardly a persuasive refutation
of the clear language of the framers quoted above.
Yoo's evidence does not undermine the conclusion that the framers
intended Congress to take responsibility for the decision to send the
nation into war. But in some sense, arguments against his theory are
academic. Modern practice is closer to Yoo's view than to the framers'
vision. Beginning with the Korean War, presidents have routinely
involved the nation in military conflicts without waiting for Congress
to authorize their initiatives. Yoo notes that while the nation has
been involved in approximately 125 military conflicts, Congress has
declared war only five times. Were the framers lacking in practical
judgment when they gave Congress this power?
Yoo claims that since September 11, it is all the more essential
that the nation be able to act swiftly and without hesitation, even
preemptively, to protect itself. We can't afford to wait around for
Congress to figure out what it wants to do. The "war on terror" does
not permit democratic deliberation, at least not in advance. And, as
Yoo repeatedly insists, Congress remains free to cut off funds for any
military action that it does not like.
But there is as good reason today as there was when the Constitution
was drafted to give Congress the power to authorize military
activities. As the framers accurately predicted, presidents have proven
much more eager than Congress to involve the nation in wars. It is
easier for one person to make up his mind than for a majority of two
houses of Congress to agree on a war policy.
Presidents also tend to benefit from war more than members of
Congress, by increasing their short-term popularity, by acquiring
broader powers over both the civilian economy and the armed forces,
and, sometimes, by the historical recognition later accorded them.
Moreover, as the Vietnam War illustrated, even when a war becomes
extremely unpopular, it is not easy to cut off funds for the troops.
It is true, as Yoo observes, that, since Harry Truman, presidents of
both parties have generally resisted the view that they need
congressional authorization to commit forces to military conflict. But
this attitude is in fact a relatively recent development. While formal
declarations of war have been rare, Yoo fails to note that presidents
have generally sought congressional authorization for military actions.
Until the Korean War, presidents either openly acknowledged that
congressional authorization was necessary or offered rationales for why
a particular military initiative was an exception to that rule. Thus,
the view that Yoo promotes as "original" has in fact been advanced only
during the last fifty years, and only by self-interested executives.
This view is particularly disputed by Congress, as can be seen in
the 1973 War Powers Resolution, which sought to reaffirm and restore
Congress's constitutional role in deciding on whether to go to war, and
also in the legislative debates that inevitably take place when
presidents talk of going to war. As the war in Iraq has painfully
underscored, the decision to go to war, especially a war initiated by
the president without broad international support, can have disastrous
consequences; and extricating the country from such a war can be
extremely difficult. Were Congress to be eliminated from the initial
decision-making process, as Yoo would prefer, the result would almost
certainly be even more wars, and more quagmires such as the one in
Iraq. On this issue, the framers were persuasive, and it is Yoo who has
failed to understand both the checks on executive power they imposed
and the reasons they did so.
Treaties
Yoo's interpretation of the treaty power, like his view of the war
power, departs dramatically from the text of the Constitution and its
traditional understanding. The Constitution's Supremacy Clause
explicitly provides that
"all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the
Authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the Land;
and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby.
On the strength of that clause, and statements made about treaties at
the time of the framing, it has long been accepted that treaties have
the force of law in the United States, create binding obligations, and
may be enforced by courts. Indeed, the Supreme Court long ago stated
that treaties are "to be regarded...as equivalent to an act of the
legislature."
In the modern era, Congress often specifies when ratifying a treaty
that it should not be enforceable in court until further legislation is
enacted. And even without such directives, courts sometimes find
treaties not to be judicially enforceable; the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the D.C. Circuit did so recently in rejecting a Guantánamo
detainee's claim that his pending trial in a military tribunal violated
the Geneva Conventions.
Yoo would go further, insisting on a presumption against judicial
enforcement unless Congress clearly specifies otherwise. On this view,
treaties lack the force of law, and become mere political promises,
having about as much force as campaign rhetoric. And he further claims
that the president has unilateral authority to interpret, reinterpret,
and terminate treaties, effectively rendering presidents above the law
when it comes to treaties.
To support these revisionist views, Yoo relies heavily and
repeatedly on a rigid dichotomy between foreign affairs -- which he
sees, in the British tradition, as the executive's domain -- and
domestic matters -- which he sees as the province of the legislature.
But as we have seen, the Constitution's framers explicitly rejected
such a rigid division, giving Congress and the Senate substantial power
over functions that the British saw as executive in nature, including
the power to make war and treaties, and expressly assigning the
judiciary the responsibility to enforce treaties as the "Law of the
Land."
If anything, Yoo's historical evidence is even thinner with respect
to the treaty power and the Supremacy Clause than it is with respect to
the clause on declaring war. As Jack Rakove, one of the foremost
historians of the federal period, has concluded, the framers "were
virtually of one mind when it came to giving treaties the status of
law." As other historians have pointed out, one of the principal
incentives for convening the Constitutional Convention was the
embarrassing refusal of state governments to enforce treaties. The
Supremacy Clause solved that problem in as direct a way as possible --
by making treaties the "Law of the Land," enforceable in courts and
binding on government and citizenry alike. That treaties were not
thought to need further implementing is underscored by the framers'
unanimous decision to omit treaty enforcement from Congress's
enumerated powers, "as being superfluous since treaties were to be
'laws.'" Yoo's account turns that conclusion on its head; his reading
would render superfluous the Supremacy Clause's assertion that treaties
are laws. If treaties had domestic force only when implemented by a
subsequent statute, as Yoo maintains, then the statute itself would
have the status of the "Law of the Land," not the treaty.
Yoo is no more convincing with respect to presidential
interpretation of treaties. He maintains that because foreign policy is
an executive prerogative, the executive must be able to reinterpret and
terminate treaties unilaterally. But while the Constitution plainly
envisioned the president as the principal negotiator of treaties, it
also gave clear responsibilities for treaties to the other branches;
all treaties must be approved by two-thirds of the Senate, and once
ratified, treaties become "law" enforceable by the courts. The
president must certainly be able to interpret treaties in order to
"execute" the laws, just as he must be able to interpret statutes for
that purpose. But there is no reason why his interpretations of
treaties should be any more binding on courts or the legislature than
his interpretations of statutes.
The Rule of Law
Yoo's views on the war and treaty powers share two features. First,
they both depart radically from the text of the Constitution. He would
reduce the power to "declare War" to a mere formality, a courtesy to
the enemy; and he would render entirely superfluous the Supremacy
Clause's provision that treaties are the "Law of the Land." It is
ironic that a president who proclaims his faith in "strict
construction" of the Constitution would have found Yoo's
interpretations so persuasive, for Yoo is anything but a strict
constructionist. One of the arguments most often made in defense of
"originalism" is that interpretations emphasizing a "living" or
evolving Constitution are too open-ended, and accordingly they permit
judges to stray too far from the text. Yoo unwittingly demonstrates
that his brand of originalism is just as vulnerable to that criticism
as other approaches, if not more so. He not only departs from the text,
but contradicts the principles that underlie it.
Second, and more significantly, all of Yoo's departures from the
text of the Constitution point in one direction -- toward eliminating
legal checks on presidential power over foreign affairs. He is candid
about this, and defends his theory on the ground that it preserves
"flexibility" for the executive in foreign affairs. But the specific
"flexibility" he seeks to preserve is the flexibility to involve the
nation in war without congressional approval, and to ignore and violate
international commitments with impunity. As Carlos Vazquez, a professor
of law at Georgetown, has argued in response to Yoo, "flexibility has
its benefits, but so does precommitment." The Constitution committed
the nation to a legal regime that would make it difficult to go to war
and that would provide reliable enforcement of international
obligations. Yoo would dispense with both in the name of letting the
president have his way.
Even if Yoo is wrong about the original understanding in 1787, is he
wrong about 2005? As the subtitle of his book indicates, his argument
rests not just on revisionist history, but also on arguments about what
is practically necessary in a twenty-first-century world threatened by
terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. He contends that these
developments demand that the president have the leeway to insulate his
foreign policy decisions both from the will of Congress and from the
demands of international law.
Here it is worth reviewing the positions Yoo advocated while in the
executive branch and since, and their consequences in the "war on
terror." At every turn, Yoo has sought to exploit the "flexibility" he
finds in the Constitution to advocate an approach to the "war on
terror" in which legal limits are either interpreted away or rejected
outright. Just two weeks after the September 11 attacks, Yoo sent an
extensive memo to Tim Flanigan, deputy White House counsel, arguing
that the President had unilateral authority to use military force not
only against the terrorists responsible for the September 11 attacks
but against terrorists anywhere on the globe, with or without
congressional authorization.
Yoo followed that opinion with a series of memos in January 2002
maintaining, against the strong objections of the State Department,
that the Geneva Conventions should not be applied to any detainees
captured in the conflict in Afghanistan. Yoo argued that the president
could unilaterally suspend the conventions; that al-Qaeda was not party
to the treaty; that Afghanistan was a "failed state" and therefore the
president could ignore the fact that it had signed the conventions; and
that the Taliban had failed to adhere to the requirements of the Geneva
Conventions regarding the conduct of war and therefore deserved no
protection. Nor, he argued, was the president bound by customary
international law, which insists on humane treatment for all wartime
detainees. Relying on Yoo's reasoning, the Bush administration claimed
that it could capture and detain any person who the president said was
a member or supporter of al-Qaeda or the Taliban, and could
categorically deny all detainees the protections of the Geneva
Conventions, including a hearing to permit them to challenge their
status and restrictions on inhumane interrogation practices.
Echoing Yoo, Alberto Gonzales, then White House counsel, argued at
the time that one of the principal reasons for denying detainees
protection under the Geneva Conventions was to "preserve flexibility"
and make it easier to "quickly obtain information from captured
terrorists and their sponsors." When CIA officials reportedly raised
concerns that the methods they were using to interrogate high-level
al-Qaeda detainees -- such as waterboarding -- might subject them to
criminal liability, Yoo was again consulted. In response, he drafted
the August 1, 2002, torture memo, signed by his superior, Jay Bybee,
and delivered to Gonzales. In that memo, Yoo "interpreted" the criminal
and international law bans on torture in as narrow and legalistic a way
as possible; his evident purpose was to allow government officials to
use as much coercion as possible in interrogations.
Yoo wrote that threats of death are permissible if they do not
threaten "imminent death," and that drugs designed to disrupt the
personality may be administered so long as they do not "penetrate to
the core of an individual's ability to perceive the world around him."
He said that the law prohibiting torture did not prevent interrogators
from inflicting mental harm so long as it was not "prolonged." Physical
pain could be inflicted so long as it was less severe than the pain
associated with "serious physical injury, such as organ failure,
impairment of bodily function, or even death."
Even this interpretation did not preserve enough executive
"flexibility" for Yoo. In a separate section of the memo, he argued
that if these loopholes were not sufficient, the president was free to
order outright torture. Any law limiting the president's authority to
order torture during wartime, the memo claimed, would "violate the
Constitution's sole vesting of the Commander-in-Chief authority in the
President."
Since leaving the Justice Department, Yoo has also defended the
practice of "extraordinary renditions," in which the United States has
kidnapped numerous "suspects" in the war on terror and "rendered" them
to third countries with records of torturing detainees. He has argued
that the federal courts have no right to review actions by the
president that are said to violate the War Powers Clause. And he has
defended the practice of targeted assassinations, otherwise known as
"summary executions."
In short, the flexibility Yoo advocates allows the administration to
lock up human beings indefinitely without charges or hearings, to
subject them to brutally coercive interrogation tactics, to send them
to other countries with a record of doing worse, to assassinate persons
it describes as the enemy without trial, and to keep the courts from
interfering with all such actions.
Has such flexibility actually aided the U.S. in dealing with
terrorism? In all likelihood, the policies and attitudes Yoo has
advanced have made the country less secure. The abuses at Guantánamo
and Abu Ghraib have become international embarrassments for the United
States, and by many accounts have helped to recruit young people to
join al-Qaeda. The U.S. has squandered the sympathy it had on September
12, 2001, and we now find ourselves in a world perhaps more hostile
than ever before.
With respect to detainees, thanks to Yoo, the U.S. is now in an
untenable bind: on the one hand, it has become increasingly
unacceptable for the U.S. to hold hundreds of prisoners indefinitely
without trying them; on the other hand our coercive and inhumane
interrogation tactics have effectively granted many of the prisoners
immunity from trial. Because the evidence we might use against them is
tainted by their mistreatment, trials would likely turn into occasions
for exposing the United States' brutal interrogation tactics. This
predicament was entirely avoidable. Had we given alleged al-Qaeda
detainees the fair hearings required by the Geneva Conventions at the
outset, and had we conducted humane interrogations at Guantánamo, Abu
Ghraib, Camp Mercury, and elsewhere, few would have objected to the
U.S. holding some detainees for the duration of the military conflict,
and we could have tried those responsible for war crimes. What has been
so objectionable to many in the U.S. and abroad is the government's
refusal to accept even the limited constraints of the laws of war.
The consequences of Yoo's vaunted "flexibility" have been
self-destructive for the U.S. -- we have turned a world in which
international law was on our side into one in which we see it as our
enemy. The Pentagon's National Defense Strategy, issued in March 2005,
states,
"Our strength as a nation state will continue to be
challenged by those who employ a strategy of the weak, using
international fora, judicial processes, and terrorism."
The proposition that judicial processes -- the very essence of the rule
of law -- are to be dismissed as a strategy of the weak, akin to
terrorism, suggests the continuing strength of Yoo's influence. When
the rule of law is seen simply as a device used by terrorists,
something has gone perilously wrong. Michael Ignatieff has written that
"it is the very nature of a democracy that it not only does, but
should, fight with one hand tied behind its back. It is also in the
nature of democracy that it prevails against its enemies precisely
because it does." Yoo persuaded the Bush administration to untie its
hand and abandon the constraints of the rule of law. Perhaps that is
why we are not prevailing.
David Cole is a law professor at Georgetown and a contributor to the New York Review of Books where this piece has just appeared. He is the author of Enemy Aliens: Double Standards and Constitutional Freedoms in the War on Terrorism, recently published in a revised paperback edition.
[Note: This piece originally contained numerous footnotes, which can be found in the November 17 issue of the New York Review of Books or, next week, at that magazine's website where the piece will be also posted.]
This article appears in the November 17 issue of the New York Review of Books
Copyright 2005 David Cole
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