Jason Linkins

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Jason Linkins

The Huffington Post

Disclosure Of Torture Memo Fails To Grab Traditional Media's Attention

April 3, 2008 09:37 PM


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About Jason Linkins

Jason Linkins is a Political Reporter at the Huffington Post, covering media and politics. He's based in Washington, DC. Previously, he wrote for HuffPo's Eat The Press, and has also contributed to DCist and Wonkette.

What if they disclosed a torture memo and nobody cared? This week, an 81-page memo, authored by John C. Yoo, who was a deputy in the Office of Legal Counsel at the Department of Justice at the time of its creation, was declassified and made public. The memo, which, among other things, was used as the rationale for authorizing the torture of government detainees, has long been held to be a savage reimagining of the structure of the Executive Branch and its authority, hostile to the traditional checks and balances that circumscribe the President's authority. And that's stating the matter diplomatically. A less kind observer might conclude that the memo was a legal abomination which tortures the accepted body of Constitutional law along the way to glibly authorizing a Grand Guignol of authoritarian power that our nation's founders would find abhorrent. With these high stakes as the prologue, you'd have to imagine that the disclosure of the memo would be of pre-eminent importance to the media.

You'd be wrong. The extent to which this story, the questions it raises, and the impact it has on our lives failed to resonate in the sphere of the traditional media is distressing and disturbing. Non-traditional media did much better, but the fact that this matter did not acquire a portion of the mass-media megaphone makes one worry that by this time next week the matter will be forgotten. But in many quarters of the Fourth Estate, the waters of Lethe are already being poured.

On cable news, mentions of the memo's declassifications were few, brief, and undetailed. CNN's Headline News noted that the story was "one of the most popular stories at cnn.com," but apparently, that's not enough to warrant a lengthier report. MSNBC featured a brief mention on Morning Joe, and a near-noontime mention that was three sentences long and followed by a lengthy report on the hospitalization of an American Idol performer.

Only Fox News took the matter to the level of discussion, but even then, the report was largely short-sighted and full of equivocations and unsubstantiated claims. The major takeaway was that the memo noted that "constitutional protections do not apply to foreign prisoners being held outside the United States" and that interrogation "becomes torture when severe pain and suffering cause permanent or irreversible damage...death, organ failure, or the permanent impairment of a significant bodily function." (As you'll see below, the full ramifications of the memo were far more vast.)

Later in the day, Fox added, "Numerous presidents have ordered the capture and questioning of enemy combatants during virtually every major conflict in the nation's history. Recognizing this authority, congress has never attempted to restrain or interfere with the president's authority on this score." This sort of implies that if an action was taken in the past, it imbues a "rightness."

Along the way, Fox salted the coverage with equivocations. "A number of major Republicans and Democrats said this is a terrible mistake." None were named, and the wisdom of their position was unexplored. "Some constitutional scholars say the 81-page legal opinion must be placed in historical context...[it should be viewed as] a period piece." That's a classic "some say" assertion that again suggests that "history" trumps a moral foundation or factual evidence that indicates torture is ineffective. Finally, Fox lets Kit Bond have the last word, and it's a stupefyingly inane one: "Some are more interested in recycling old news and scoring political points with the ACLU."

Print coverage was more detailed but, at times, equally frustrating. The Associated Press led with a bland, but detailed story that stressed the memo's rationalizations on "harsh tactics." But while a later AP story on the declassification includes the ACLU opinion ("The recent disclosures underscore the Bush administration's extraordinarily sweeping conception of executive power.") but frustratingly limited its focus to warrantless surveillance, not torture.

The Washington Post gave the declassification A1 treatment, and featured quotes from several critics, but does very little to advance the critical argument: there's no lengthy analysis of the legal underpinnings of the anti-Yoo side of the matter, just strenuous objection. On the other hand, Yoo is allowed to contend, with no scrutiny, "Far from inventing some novel interpretation of the Constitution...our legal advice to the President, in fact, was near boilerplate."

For solid pushback, WaPo customers needed to seek out Dan Froomkin, who devoted the bulk of his White House Watch column to the matter, and provided plenty of legal analysis from critics. And Froomkin absolutely got it right:

Yoo's memo is a historic document. It is the ultimate expression of Cheney's belief that anything the president or his designates do -- no matter how illegal, barbaric or un-American -- is justifiable in the name of national self-defense.

It is also an example of how enabling zealots to disregard the rule of law and the customary boundaries of human conduct leads to madness.



Outside of Froomkin, the best pushback from WaPo came from a participant in Dana Milbank's chat:

The (sadly) funny part of the Yoo memo is that it purports to uncover an exception to anti-torture treaties if you are torturing the prisoner in order to extract information about pending attacks. That is actually the exact reason for these agreements. It is like arguing that speed limits do not apply if you are in a hurry.
Two days after the release of the document, this represents the sum total of WaPo talent deployed to opine on this matter. Compared to the New York Times however, the Post has contributed volumes. Mark Mazzetti's April 2nd piece is more or less the equivalent of the Post's aforementioned A1 piece, and it was followed up today with a well-written, probing article. But the topic hasn't seemed to capture the imagination of any of the Times' editorial columnists (this is perhaps for the best, as Wednesday was Maureen Dowd's day and I hardly think anyone really wants to see her wheedle and deedle her way through the topic). Perhaps more gallingly, the Times website actually has a topic page related to Yoo that does not include today's article on the subject. By contrast, the blogosphere treated the matter with the concern that was warranted, and provided much more substantive analysis. As you might expect, Glenn Greenwald at Salon gives the matter lengthy attention and arrives at some important conclusions:
John Yoo's Memorandum, as intended, directly led to -- caused -- a whole series of war crimes at both Guantanamo and in Iraq. The reason such a relatively low-level DOJ official was able to issue such influential and extraordinary opinions was because he was working directly with, and at the behest of, the two most important legal officials in the administration: George Bush's White House counsel, Alberto Gonzales, and Dick Cheney's counsel (and current Chief of Staff) David Addington. Together, they deliberately created and authorized a regime of torture and other brutal interrogation methods that are, by all measures, very serious war crimes...


This incident provides yet more proof of how rancid and corrupt is the premise that as long as political appointees at the DOJ approve of certain conduct, then that conduct must be shielded from criminal prosecution. That's the premise that is being applied over and over to remove government lawbreaking from the reach of the law.



Remember how simple and glib the takeaway on Fox News was? Where the memo was said to limit the lifting on Constitutional protections to "foreign prisoners" and stressed a facile definition of what constituted torture? Contrast that with the fuller conclusion reached by Kevin Drum:

Basically, the president can authorize any action at all as commander-in-chief in wartime. Congress can't bind him, treaties can't bind him, and the courts can't bind him. The scope of power the memos suggest is, almost literally, absolute. And since this is a war without end, the grant of power is also without end.


Marty Lederman, at Balkinization, hints that the disclosure of the Yoo memo may only be the tip of the iceberg - a fact that the traditional media missed:

The memo cites numerous other, as-yet-unreleased memos that appear to contain equally outrageous legal analysis....Those memos should be released immediately. More importantly, I think Congress should strongly consider NOT CONSIDERING ANY ADMINISTRATION LEGISLATIVE PROPOSALS UNTIL ALL OF THE MEMOS HAVE BEEN DISCLOSED AND (APPROPRIATELY) REPUDIATED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. There is simply no excuse for Congress to have allowed itself to be manipulated like this, and to be kept in the dark about the extent to which the Administration has ignored legislative statutes and treaties. They must use some of the leverage at their disposal.


See also: 1115.org, Emily Bazelon at Slate, Marcy Wheeler at Firedoglake, Yglesias at The Atlantic. Additionally, take note of this item, posted last night on Unfogged: "I ignore news I'd rather just go away as well, but it's still funny that there's not a single mention of John Yoo either on Insty, or Powerline, or Hewitt." Funny, but not surprising.

It should be noted that there are print organs treating this matter with the attention it deserves. I'd point out Esquire, which provides Yoo a forum to respond to this week's news, and Harper's Scott Horton, who asserts, "these memoranda have been crafted not as an after-the-fact defense to criminal charges, but rather as a roadmap to committing crimes and getting away with it."

But if you want a sense of the very real urgency the disclosure of these memos warrant - how this affects our day-to-day lives, we return to Greenwald:

While Yoo's specific Torture Memos were ultimately rescinded by subsequent DOJ officials -- primarily Jack Goldsmith -- the underlying theories of omnipotent executive power remain largely in place. The administration continues to embrace precisely these same theories to assert that it has the power to violate a whole array of laws -- from our nation's spying and surveillance statutes to countless Congressional oversight requirements -- and to detain even U.S. citizens, detained on American soil, as "enemy combatants." So for all of the dramatic outrage that this Yoo memo will generate for a day or so, the general framework on which it rests, despite being weakened by the Supreme Court in Hamdan, is the one under which we continue to live, without much protest or objection.


This is a terribly critical point to note. The rationale put forth by Yoo, which the Bush administration cleaved to with full-force, is an ongoing rationale. This story is well on its way to fading from the sight of the traditional media, but its larger ramifications will continue to loom and continue to affect our lives. Just as the media has abandoned a larger inquiry into the faulty strategic underpinnings that sent us into the Iraq War, a blind eye is steadily being turned to the lack of moral underpinnings that form the Bush administration's vision of executive power. We cannot let this happen. Attention must be paid.


 

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In the Beginning there was the WORD...and the word was GOOD.., in the End there was BUSH-IT...and the bush-it was BAD..!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:32 PM on 04/10/2008


"Remember how simple and glib the takeaway on Fox News was? Where the memo was said to limit the lifting on Constitutional protections to "foreign prisoners"" - yeah,

seriously, was Yoo's memo placed in a broader context than the 'declared war' scenario? Or is that like a news report on an apple pie recipe that does no more than 'clarify' that it's NOT about apples. (nevermind oranges)

Still wondering when anyone that 'knows somebody' is gonna get around to challenging the "legal" concept of war on terror

--in the first place

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:29 AM on 04/10/2008


Stop throwing the Constitution in my face," Bush screamed back. "It"s just a goddamned piece of paper!" I"ve talked to three people present for the meeting that day and they all confirm that the President of the United States called the Constitution "a goddamned piece of paper".
Attroney General Alberto Gonzales, while still White House counsel, wrote that the "Constitution is an outdated document. By DOUG THOMPSON Dec 5, 2005 Capital Hill Blue
By John Yoo-UC Berekeley News-Jan,4 2005
Sept. 11, 2001, proved that the war against Al-Qaida cannot be won solely within the framework of the criminal law. The attacks were more than crimes " they were acts of war. Responding to the attacks and protecting the United States from another requires a military approach to the conflict.
One of the first policy decisions in this new war concerned the Geneva Conventions ... Gonzales concluded in a draft January 2002 memo to the president that Al-Qaida and the Taliban were not legally entitled to POW status.

John Yoo uses begins his case (and it is a case he is building) by throwing out all laws that bind military rules of engagement but states that it is action which "Requires a military approach to the conflict". The action doesn't come under "The framework of the criminal law" but they apply the criminal codes of law to the prisioners by using the "Government" as it's Warden under the framework of the criminal law. Talk about Ad hoc.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:15 PM on 04/07/2008


Believe it our not, War Crimes are not tried on CNN. But, let's not let a little thing like War Crimes muddy the halls of Congress, either. Congress has more important things to do.

Checks and balances? Just another casualty of the Bush Administration.
Stand aside and watch the War Criminals scurry into the fog of yesterday's news.

We, the people, are going to the mall this afternoon. Hey, do you want to go along?

Oh, and let's give John Yoo a jingle. Maybe he can join us.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:02 AM on 04/07/2008

Good thing they got those children out of there before the FBI and ATF agents could attack them with tanks, chemical weapons and a spectacular burning to death treatment.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 07:14 PM on 04/05/2008

You know, after watching how effective Keifer Sutherland was in "24" using torture, they realized that they needed to violate the Constitution and endanger any US troops who might be in harm's way so they asked Yoo to put together whatever justification for torture that he could. See, it really is the Hollywood types who run things! After all they showed our President how it worked. Yeah, that's it, it's Hollywood's fault! You don't expect our happy-go-lucky richie rich the Decider and Chimp-in-Chief to consider, let alone be responsible for the consequences of his actions do yoo?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 05:40 PM on 04/04/2008

We ARE, what WE allow and embrace, individually or collectively.., and we ALL have been "dancing" to the Dark-Side beat which went from soothing Melodies to Jive lip-sync....
The disc-jockey from Hell(bush) is NOW controlling the tunes and it's the same depressing music....
Why is it that we continue "dancing" to these obnoxious tunes.., when it's the citizen's player..?

Do not cower from the gods of oppression, do not become their toilet-tissue....

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:40 PM on 04/10/2008


I've not seen much in "The Press" about those RightWing/EvangoWing Law schools that are churning out freaky Dominionist "Lawyers". Somebody, or some group, has told the MSM to lay-off them. Pat Robertson's lawyer is behind a lot of that subversion. It is not hard to find a "Lawyer" willing to Swear to Anything for enough Money.

I think that group is called the "Alliance Defense Fund", or some such.

Brick

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:36 PM on 04/04/2008

who cares about torture when the media can fawn over obama!!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:27 PM on 04/04/2008

Yeah, like when the nheadlines claimed he advocated an invasion of Pakistan because he said he'd hit bin Laden if he could and Musharaf wouldn't.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:04 AM on 04/05/2008

Does anyone notice that no right winged freepers have come to this forum. Talk about a bunch of chickenshit chickenhawks.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:53 PM on 04/04/2008

John Yoo and David Addington should start their own law school for despots and dictators. They have a lot of practice with establishing a despot.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 04/04/2008

What would the name it? School of the Americas?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 06:12 PM on 04/04/2008

Yes, that would be it or School of Imposing Democracy by Strong Man Rule.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 05:42 AM on 04/07/2008

Meanwhile in Nepal:

"Nepal"s Maoist insurgents have come out of the jungle and will take part in elections to choose a special assembly to rewrite the Constitution. That bold experiment will give this nation of 27 million an opportunity to cement peace and install a fully elected government . . .

. . . The Maoists insist they do not want to go back to war, but neither have they renounced armed struggle. Judging by the campaign, critics here and abroad say they do not trust that yesterday"s insurgents will act as democrats in the future." (NYT)

God Forbid we let the goldang commies have guns and democracy at the same time.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:04 AM on 04/10/2008

One cannot confront or defeat an illusive enemy.., especially, if there's no definitive portrait.

Look at the portrayal of the enemy at "youtube.com", Search: "warning to the world parts 1-9".., "see" the enemy.., pass the "word"....

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 04/04/2008

WE had rules of engagement during the Vietnam war which was an "Undeclared war" and we didn't have a President who said out loud that the Constitution was "Just a piece of goddamn paper" and it's a good thing for John McCAin or it could have been a lot worse for him. I"ve said it before and I"ll keep repeating it until he is out of office...A Government that is GOOD is a constitutional Government and a Government that serves the self-interest of a Ruler/President is tyrannical!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:29 PM on 04/07/2008

When will America Wake UP? There is no real democrats or republicans in office anymore. Just Big Money and who it pays for. All the Media is bought and paid for and the media isn't going to expose the Big Moneys plans and ethics. Join the March for freedon this april 15th. Its a march for freedom and revolution to take our country back. We need masses in DC. A

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:21 PM on 04/04/2008

When are John Yu, Alberto Gonzales, and David Addington going to be disbarred? These men personally witnessed torture at GITMO and created the rationalization to protect Bush-Cheney against legal responsibility. This is not the roll of any attorney, who graduates from a law school in this country. John Adams defended the British soilders involved in the Boston Massacre, and proved to Great Britain that British troops could get a fair trial, and they did. Adams paid dearly for this in his law practice. Great Britain latter insulted the columnist by retrying the same men in England.

Lt. Commander Charles Swift a navy JAG officer Assigned to defend a Guantánamo detainee, joined up with legal scholar Neal Katyal and sued the president and secretary of defense over the legality of the new military-tribunal system. When the Republican Congress, overrode their 2006 Supreme Court victory, Swift"s naval career ended. Lt. Commander Swift placed his own honor and that of the Navy as well as the rule of law in the tradition of John Adams our 2nd President, patriot, and founding father, over his naval career defending a detainee, he was assigned and was punished for it. So, I ask again, when are John Yu, Alberto Gonzales, and David Addington going to be prevented from practicing the law that they perverted? Why is John Yu teaching constitutional law at Berkley, when he clearly dose not understand it?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:14 PM on 04/04/2008

Yeah - WTF!

He's at friggin BERKLEY! They protest a marine recruiting station out there, and just let the literal mastermind of the "legal" underpinnings of torture wander in to his cushy little job without a word - TEACHING LAW .... like to other people ... who will then practice what he teaches.

WTF!

People shouldn't gather in D.C. on the 15th - they should protest at Berkley! Berkley HATES bad press.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 03:00 AM on 04/08/2008

Three cheers, BPCentrisAmerican: "Why is John Yu teaching constitutional law at Berkley, when he clearly dose not understand it?" Great question, maybe someday we will get an answer.

I, too, followed a little bit of Swift's distinguished service, and he should be awarded a top position in Obama's Administration.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 04/04/2008

Oh, he understands it alright and tried to apply a new law by throwing out the old laws and that's the scary part because our Government has defined the "War on Terrorism" as a Global war. IF you go to the following website you will notice that John McCAin is on the advisory board and on staff is a person named Shirin Farhadi I would ask the real identity of this person because I think it ties to the Iranian Chalabi and Amir ABbas FAkhravar. There is a lot of things the public doesn't know but these people got us into a war in Iraq based on false intellegence and misrepresentation. SO why are we still there?http://www.terrorfreetomorrow.org

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 AM on 04/08/2008

Goddamn America's use of torture!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:10 PM on 04/04/2008

Has anyone noticed the rise in torture porn movies as this whole thing began to take shape in the US?

Is Hollywood trying to soften us up on this horrific issue?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:43 PM on 04/04/2008

Yes. Disgusting, isn't it?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:12 PM on 04/04/2008

it certainly is - but what do we expect. The media is in the pockets of the puglies and vice versa. Notice how you never hear any smut about the Media Execs?

I can;'t wait for these bastards to leave the white house and hopefully we can restore democracy to this country.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:40 PM on 04/04/2008

24

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 04/04/2008

Facism is alive and well in America, thanks to the "loyal" opposition! They all share the blame, every single member of congress and the administration. It is the American people who share in the remainder of the blame for doing nothing about it, shall we remember those who voted for GW Bush in 2004? A bunch of traitors to America, all. History will not be kind to these.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 04/04/2008

Funny with a title like that its at the near bottom of the main page.

This is HUGE news.

Anyways props to TPM, The Young Turks, Olberman, and now HuffPo for pushing this story.
I doubt it will die, maybe if something else comes out in short time, it will hit headlines.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 PM on 04/04/2008

Torture and other Republican topics are to be hidden from the masses. The Republican media understands that revealing such events might hinder the cash-flow of business. If a news story doesn"t enhance profits and someone"s bottom line, then there is no point in publishing the story. That"s why celebrities get so much coverage. It sells product.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 PM on 04/04/2008

Maybe we need some sort of anti-Peabody award show to wake-up america...I bet Brittany's avaliable to host.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 PM on 04/04/2008

Wasn't the reason for the US taking an anti-torture stance was to provide the strongest argument for the protection of our own troops when they get captured?

This administration is run by war dodging persons who are sending other American citizens into war with the very least protection they can provide. This is just another lack-of-armour story, where the leadership of this country demonstrates once more that they do not care about the welfare of our troops. Our and our mass media, in not reporting more on this, also demonstrate that it is far more important to protect the party in power than to care about the welfare of our troops.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 AM on 04/04/2008

I have been hoping that the reason these criminals have not been impeached is that they can be brought up on trial for the many crimes they have committed while in office. I suppose that's wishful thinking as the Democrats have yet to show a backbone, but it is the right thing to do.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 AM on 04/04/2008