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Muchas Gracias Compadres


By davidswanson - Posted on 28 March 2009

By David Swanson

Spain has begun a criminal investigation into six of Bush and Cheney's torture lawyers, and our own Justice Department has got some 'splaining to do.

You see, it's actually required by our laws and by international law and treaties that we prosecute our own torturers. It's not optional. It doesn't matter whether our television stations can handle more than one news story at a time, or whether our president wants to avoid anything that might limit presidential power, or whether Eric Holder thinks this is a good year for torture prosecutions. It's not optional. Spain is enforcing the law because we are illegally failing to. Spain is child services come to tell us we're not running our household legally, and Spain is obviously right. Of course Americans want prosecutions, but we have failed to compel our government to do what we want. In the absence of anyone to thank in Washington, we should thank Spain. We should send thank you notes to their courts and newspapers. Those of us who can vacation abroad should do so in Spain. We should buy products from Spain, eat Spanish food, and learn to speak Spanish, because our basic values are not spoken in English anymore. Well, American English anyway (the language of "enhanced interrogation techniques" and "looking forward, rather than backward"). Britain, too, has begun a criminal investigation.

Here are the people likely to soon be indicted in Spain, as listed in the criminal complaint, people now at serious risk of arrest if they leave the United States:

• David Addington, 103 W Maple Street, Alexandria, VA 22301-2605, USA [This is a few blocks from the King Street Metro Stop and yet shamefully not a regular location for protests or citizen's arrests.]

• Jay S. Bybee, United States Court of Appeal for the Ninth Circuit, The James R. Browning Courthouse, 95 7th Street, San Francisco, CA 94103, USA [This is a giant marble building in the center of the city represented in Congress by the Speaker of the House, and yet this man is neither impeached nor protested.]

• Douglas Feith, Senior Fellow, Hudson Institute, 1015 15th Street, N.W., 6th Floor, Washington, DC 20005, USA [This is three blocks from the White House and one from the Washington Post, and yet this man is left in peace.]

• William J Haynes, Chief Corporate Counsel, Chevron Headquarters, 6001 Bollinger Canyon Road, San Ramon, CA 94583, USA [OK, This is on the outskirts of the same Bay Area that can't be bothered about Bybee overturning the decisions of decent judges in the middle of downtown, so Haynes' domestic immunity is understandable. Unless you read about what he did.]

• John Yoo, UC Berkeley School of Law, 215 Boalt Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720-7200, USA. [This is the one guy American society seems to have found a modicum of the appropriate distaste for, to the extent that he is no longer tolerated in Berkeley, but can be found and protested in Orange County, Calif.]

• Alberto R. Gonzáles, P. O. Box 9932 - McLean, VA, 22102-0932, USA. [Reportedly he can't find a job, he was forced out of office under threat of impeachment, and a pretense was made of investigating him. But he would live happily ever after if it were up to Washington, D.C.]

Now, it seems highly likely to me that Spain left Bush and Cheney out of this list due to simple fear of power. They didn't have the nerve, although the chief judge involved has written in the past about Bush's criminality. Baltasar Garzón wrote last year that Bush should face war crimes. But he apparently believes that he can get there in steps more easily than he can start at the top.

So where did Spain come up with all the evidence in its lengthy complaint against the six lawyers, and how has all of that evidence been kept secret from the U.S. media? Well, as it happens, it's all been publicly available for quite some time. It would be very difficult to argue that there is not probable cause to begin a criminal investigation, so nobody does argue it. The U.S. media simply avoids it.

The trick will be in maintaining the silence. What if Eric Holder were to hold a press conference and let an actual reporter in the room? When the Senate Armed Services Committee releases its full report on torture, will it be possible to avoid the realization that everything that we and Spain had before PLUS the new stuff justifies and requires the appointment of a special prosecutor? When the Department of Justice's Office of Professional Responsibility releases its long buried report, will it be possible to maintain that night is still day and up is still down? When the Justice Department releases more memos on April 2nd that were used to sanction torture, will anyone in power in Washington finally be moved to speak? When each newly released prisoner tells his story, will it be possible each time to completely avoid the question of prosecuting the criminals?

Maybe it will. But if Spain indicts, it will be worth remembering -- and reminding Spain -- that President Obama considers rendition to be a "legal" activity.

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I am so happy to know that somewhere in the world people are aware that torture is a crime. We can thank Spain, but we need to ask Obama, where is the change?
4Peace

4Peace, we have asked Obama where the "change" 4 peace is, and he is adamant about looking forward and not back! But, we need to keep writing him, Holder and Congress, weekly. We need to remind them that you cannot go forward without reconciling the past because the past always repeats itself if it is not brought to account.

Britain also launches investigation into torture. Following web site is the Salon article, Britain Responds to the "rule of law" Nuisance, by Glen Greenwald.

http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2009/03/27/britain/index.html

Notes on the Loss of Democracy in America

The official political/military coup and takeover of the U.S. Government happened on 9.11.2001 and the official finanical/corporate coup and takeover of the U.S. Government happend on 9.11.2008.

George W. Bush was the frontman and Dick Cheney was the driver for the shadow government that overthrew Congress and the U.S. Constitution.

This is the defining narrative of our time and everything else is just dust in the wind. Unless the American people rise up and reclaim Democracy in America the Republic is dead and will not be reborn.

...rise up for is to get another beer, go to the mall, or take a dump. Pitchforks and torches were outlawed by the Bush/Cheney regime.

REAL "CHANGE"? http://www.dsausa.org/dsa.html

Looking back at that big fat mess that the Bush Cabal made, before someone else comes by to clean it up, because if that happens, it will not look good.

wwww.oldelmtree.com

Spain it is !!!! I am going to buy something pink from Spain. Please give me a hint. I am not the sharpest tool in the shed.

EW

"EVERY gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed."--President Dwight D. Eisenhower, April 16, 1953

Better start with this.
I can think of some other things, but your companion might not approve.
It's Rosé wine:
http://www.torres.es/eng/asp/nv_rosados.asp
Never tried it, but I love their Sangre de Toro!
http://www.torres.es/eng/asp/nv_ficha.asp?Ficha=producto&Cod=3
And no, I'm not a stockholder...

Been watching French TV news on BFMTV.fr for some time and picking that up. Truth is, though, they basically tipped Rumsfeld off when the maob was at the door and helped get him out of the country. And their Reporters Without Borders freedom of the press rank isn't much better than ours this year.

Let's see whether they come through for us.

Spain is to be highly commended for being the first to prosecute these war criminals and do what the Democrats repeatedly promised they would do, but never did: To hold the Bush administration accountable.
Representative Dennis Kucinich was the first to draw up articles of impeachment and introduce them to Congress. The result: They were ignored. However, each article of impeachment was a formidable indictment of the Bush administration, and collectively they were a staggering exhibition of innumerable acts of felonious criminality, multiple violations of National and International laws, and even acts of terrorism against another sovereign nation.
(The last is particularly ironical for one who had shouted
out a war cry for a war on terror, and yet he, himself, actively supported MEK Terrorists with funding and US agents, who carried out bombings, killing local inhabitants in remote areas of Iran).

The world has advanced in the institution of international laws and in establishing the Central Criminal Court to prosecute and mete out justice to high ranking criminals.
This has brought hope that crimes such as genocide can be prosecuted and punished, with the hope that such prosecutions will act as a deterrent. Our world has shrunk and we now are readily in touch with all nations, and have inherited responsibility for the well being of our fellow men and women, regardless of to which nation they belong.
Many NGO's have taken up this formidable challenge and donated financial support, aid, healthcare, food, water supplies and sanitation. The UN and its many branches has accepted responsibility for the well being of men and women in many nations - an overwhelming task. Thus it is fitting that Spain, a member of the European Union, should prosecute those who have connived in acts of torture of foreign nationals in violation of International law and the UN Charter of Human Rights, when the Nation whose nationals have committed such crimes fails in its duty to prosecute the culprits.
We, as a nation trying to recover our reputation as a nation of laws and high principles, should all insist that these men be brought to justice in our own land. To ignore
this duty, is to perpetuate injustice, to become accessories after the fact, and to promote further crimes by permitting impunity. In short, it will undermine the very fabric of our democracy and system of justice far into the foreseeable future.

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