War Prisoner Fiasco
http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=6590721
McCain (http://mccain.senate.gov/)
Biden (http://biden.senate.gov/)
Good senators. Bad problem: looks like we secretly transferred out some Iraqi prisoners in the past 6 months. At least this is according to Dana Priest from the Washington Post who got her hands on a confidential memo (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A57363-2004Oct23.html). Turns out it violates international treaties. Can't we do anything right?
Sen. McCain has it right: "The thing that separates us from the enemy is our respect for human rights."
Sen. Biden does too: "I think we should also need new leadership at the Justice Department too..."
Expect more of the same, I say. The situation in Iraq is deteriorating by the day. That means the stakes are high within the military machine to get results. This leads to "stretching" of the rules that create, govern and carry out protocol. With asses on the line all over the place it is no surprise that all levels will have individuals that venture into the land of the illegal.
WwWpWt (Wrong War at the Wrong Place at the Wrong Time)
Egan
1 Comments:
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/10/26/politics/26detain.html
According to the NYT the Bush admin now declares that some non-Iraqi's captured in Iraq can be treated outside the confines of the Geneva convention. This contradicts statements made in 2003 that combatants caught in Iraq would be treated according to provisions layed out in the Geneva Convention.
From the times: "As recently as May 2004, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld reiterated in public testimony the administration's view that 'everyone in Iraq who was a military person' as well as 'the civilians or criminal elements' who were detained by the American authorities would be 'treated subject to the Geneva Conventions.' "
Egan
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