Tuesday's announcement by the administration of
President George W. Bush that detainees held by the U.S. military at Guantanamo
Bay, Cuba, and elsewhere will be treated in accordance with the Geneva Conventions
has provoked both hope and skepticism from human rights activists.
While some rights groups hailed the Pentagon's decision to apply the protections
of Geneva's Common Article 3 to all detainees in its custody as a significant
breakthrough, others said the administration's past record particularly its
definition of "humane" treatment gave them little confidence that
the move would make any substantive difference.
Indeed, the fact that senior administration officials, including White House
spokesman Tony Snow, denied that the decision constituted a reversal of the
administration's previous policy against affording Article 3 rights to terrorist
suspects added to the skepticism among some experts.
"This looks like a PR [public relations] exercise," said Scott Horton,
an international law professor at Columbia University, who has played a major
role in the debate over the application of the Geneva Conventions to the administration's
"global war on terror."
"Given our experience dealing with this administration and the DoD [Department
of Defense] on these issues for a period of several years now, we're best advised
to be skeptical and cautious," he told IPS.
Horton and other analysts also noted that Tuesday's announcement applied only
to detainees in military custody and not to those held by the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) in various undisclosed locations around the world. The CIA has
reportedly used "water-boarding" and other aggressive interrogation
techniques that human rights groups say amount to torture.
"Today's action is a significant step," said Larry Cox, the executive
director of the U.S. section of Amnesty International (AIUSA), in a more hopeful
take on Tuesday's announcement. "However, we urge that these basic protections
[under Article 3] apply to all detainees, including those in secret CIA custody."
The decision, which came in the form of a memo by Deputy Defense Secretary
Gordon England, followed a Supreme Court ruling 10 days ago that the administration
lacked the constitutional authority to establish military tribunals for terrorist
suspects without the explicit approval of Congress.
The same ruling, Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, also asserted that all detainees
in the war on terror were entitled as a matter of law to the due process protections
guaranteed by Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, which, among other provisions,
bans the imposition of sentences by courts that fail to provide "judicial
guarantees which are recognized as indispensable by civilized peoples"
a standard on which, the court suggested, the Pentagon's military commissions
fell short.
Article 3 also requires that all detainees be treated "humanely"
under all circumstances and bans "outrages upon personal dignity, in particular
humiliating and degrading treatment."
Until Tuesday's release of the England memo, which calls for "all DoD
personnel [to] adhere to these standards," the administration had denied
that detainees in the war on terror were entitled to Article 3 protections.
In a February 2002 directive prepared by political appointees in the Justice
Department, the Pentagon and the White House over the objections of then-Secretary
of State Colin Powell and senior military lawyers, Bush ordered that Article
3 standards should "not apply to either al-Qaeda or Taliban detainees."
Instead, the directive ordered that detainees be treated "humanely, and
to the extent appropriate and consistent with military necessity, in a manner
consistent with the principles of Geneva."
The administration has since insisted that all detainees have indeed been treated
"humanely" despite a flood of reports by human rights groups, the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, former detainees, and detainee attorneys about
practices ranging from sexual humiliation and exposure to extreme temperatures
to physical assaults and water-boarding, in which the subject is made to believe
that he is drowning.
A 2005 report by the deputy commander of the U.S. Southern Command, which has
jurisdiction over Guantanamo, such techniques were reviewed and deemed "humane."
"The problem is, they have hijacked the term 'humane,' and pumped it full
of meaning that no one else in the world shares," according to Horton.
"They take words that we think we all understand and they give it a secret
and opposite meaning."
He pointed to statements by Snow and other senior officials Tuesday as evidence
that England's memo may indeed have no substantive impact on the treatment of
detainees.
"It's not really a reversal of policy," Snow told reporters, while
Pentagon spokesman Brian Whitman stressed that, "Humane treatment has always
been the standard for detention and interrogation operations of the Defense
Department."
Similarly, Daniel Dell'Orto, a senior Pentagon lawyer, insisted Tuesday at
a Senate hearing on the future of the military tribunals that the administration
already complies with Article 3. "The memo
doesn't indicate a shift
in policy," he said. "It just announces the decision of the court."
He added that U.S. military forces currently hold roughly 1,000 detainees worldwide,
including some 460 at Guantanamo.
Those statements were clearly of concern to Ari Cover, an expert at Human Rights
First (HRF) who noted that the England memo, which endorses Article 3, refers
directly to Bush's 2002 directive that explicitly denied Article 3 protections
to al-Qaeda and Taliban detainees even while it insisted that they would be
treated "humanely."
"My question is, how do these two memos square with each other?"
he said. "I'm hopeful that they're at least saying we're going to comply
with the Supreme Court, and hopefully it's a lot more than that."
He suggested that the lack of clarity may reflect the continuation of an internal
debate within the administration between hardliners, led by Vice President Dick
Cheney, who oppose Geneva protections for suspects in the war on terror, and
the State Department and uniformed military who have long supported them.
In this view, Tuesday's announcement may indeed have been PR designed mainly
to persuade Congress that the administration is acting in good faith and that
only minor changes to the Pentagon's military tribunals are needed to satisfy
the court's concerns.
It may also be designed in part to quiet popular outrage in Europe including
appeals by a number of leaders there that Guantanamo be closed at U.S. detention
practices in advance of Bush's trip next weekend to the Group of Eight summit
in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Still, activists remain hopeful that Tuesday's announcement indicates that
the pro-Geneva faction within the administration has gained the upper hand.
"I think it's moving back towards where it should have been all along,"
said Katherine Newell-Bierman, who covers detention policy for Human Rights
Watch. "I think the military wants this; they want standards that reflect
their values and training."
(Inter Press Service)
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