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It's Time To Defund Torture

Posted by Digby, Hullabaloo at 4:22 AM on April 22, 2008.


Hit them where it hurts---the pocketbook.
blackwater350

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Congressional candidate Darcy Burner has a post up at Open Left today talking about Blackwater:


It's high time we picked a fight over this.

Blackwater's contract was just renewed by the State Department. The supplemental appropriation that's about to be brought up before the House includes ongoing funding for Blackwater's activities in Iraq. If we're going to fight this, we need to fight it now.

It is not just that too many of Blackwater's employees in Iraq conduct themselves in ways that are counterproductive and deeply immoral. It is not just that there is no accountability for the company or its employees either in Iraq or here. And it is not just that the Iraqis have clearly and unambiguously called for Blackwater to leave.

Blackwater is a threat to the core underpinnings of our democracy. Who is this private army loyal to? Because they aren't ours. They don't wear our flags on their clothing -- they wear the symbol of Blackwater.
Burner provides a list of House and Senate sponsors for a bill which would defund the security contractors and requests that we begin calling our reps and asking them to join. (And guys, if the Blackwater style contractors are defunded, so is the war. They can't run it without them.)


For those of you who have been as appalled by the latest revelations about the Bush torture regime, I remind you that contractors are intimately involved with it. Blackwater and subsidiaries handled many of the rendition planes. Contractors were intimately involved in torture and abuse in Afghanistan and Iraq:

Civilians working for private military contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan are alleged to have committed serious incidents of abuse including assault, torture and sexual abuse, some of which occurred at Abu Ghraib prison. While reports of alleged incidents of abuse by civilians have been forwarded to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Eastern Virginia, there have been no convictions and only one indictment, though at least 20 cases were forwarded by the Department of Defense and the CIA to the Department of Justice since the beginning of the conflict in Afghanistan.

[...]

Incidents of torture involving civilian contractors at Abu Ghraib were documented in the US Army’s Fay and Taguba reports investigating Abu Ghraib. These reports implicated employees of two companies, CACI International (based in Arlington, VA) and Titan Corp (based in San Diego and recently acquired by L3 Communications). Steve Stefanowicz of CACI reportedly directed the use of dogs at Abu Ghraib, ordered that a prisoner not receive his prescription pain killers, made a male prisoner wear women’s underwear, failed to report abuse, and lied to investigators. Daniel Johnson, also employed by CACI, allegedly directed and participated in prisoner abuse and interrogated a prisoner in an “unauthorized stress position,” according to descriptions in the Fay report and alleged in a lawsuit brought by the Center for Constitutional Rights. Johnson is the contractor alleged to have directed military personnel Sgts. Ivan Frederick and Charles Graner to torture a detainee during an interrogation. Three Titan employees were accused of abuses in the Fay and Taguba reports including allegedly raping a male juvenile detainee, making false statements about interrogations and failing to report detainee abuse.
General Michael Hayden admitted under oath In February that security and intelligence contractors are still directly involved in the torture --a legal quagmire which was undoubtedly designed to protect them from prosecution.

From WIRED:
FEINSTEIN: I'd like to ask this question: Who carries out these [enhanced interrogation] techniques? Are they government employees or contractors?

HAYDEN: At our facilities during this, we have a mix of both government employees and contractors. Everything is done under, as we've talked before, ma'am, under my authority and the authority of the agency. But the people at the locations are frequently a mix of both -- we call them blue badgers and green badgers.

FEINSTEIN: And where do you use only contractors?

HAYDEN: I'm not aware of any facility in which there were only contractors. And this came up...

FEINSTEIN: Any facility anywhere in the world?

HAYDEN: Oh, I mean, I'm talking about our detention facilities. I want to make something very clear, because I don't think it was quite crystal clear in the discussion you had with Attorney General Mukasey.
The article goes on to question whether or not the so-called "black sites" have now been completely outsourced, something we don't have the answer to.

Look, it's going to take some very serious congressional and hopefully, Department of Justice, investigation into what went on with this torture regime. But the first step is to defund the Blackwater security contractors, right now. End it. Full stop. This is a fight we need to have.

* I would also add that we should have known that Blackwater and its ilk were a bad idea from the earlier experience we had in Bosnia with DynCorp, which was involved in white slavery. Fool me once, won't get fooled again ...


.

Digg!

Tagged as: torture, bush administration, human rights

Digby is the proprietor of Hullabaloo.


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leftbank
Posted by: markw4786 on Apr 22, 2008 6:04 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who do you expect to disarm them...the Democratic controlled Congress? PLEASE!!! They have their heads so far up Bush's ass they stink.

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» RE: leftbank Posted by: clvngodess
Pelosi won't allow it...
Posted by: rinthy on Apr 22, 2008 6:55 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but I've thought for a very long time that we should simply cut the war budget by whatever we pay Blackwater and their ilk. What could be so unpatriotic about that that a politician would be afraid to vote for it?
Turns out Pelosi's staff doesn't have a clear idea of the Speaker's position on that but they'll 'get back to me.'

That was two years ago. I must have missed their calls. It's not as though I didn't get an answer to my question, though. I read that The Speaker is about to push another mega-fund bill for the war, with no mention of excluding mercenary pay.

And BTW, wouldn't it be possible to repeal the Bremer law protecting mercenaries from prosecution? Surely that immunity is, itself, illegal. Surely, the Criminal Court has the authority to arrest the perps and put them on trial for war crimes. Don't they? Just asking. Does anyone out there have any answers?

Oh, and Feinstein and Boxer, my senators? Also mute.

Rinthy

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WHINSEC / SOA operating costs?
Posted by: BlueBerry PickN on Apr 22, 2008 7:15 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
THIS ARE THE CONGRESS-FUNDED OPERATING EXPENSES FOR the School of the Americas:

Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation
(Successor to School of the Americas) Fort Benning, Georgia


enjoy!!

"Google's new FEATURE-rich query environment': 'School of the Americas' = "Google MalWare Alert!", March 22, 2008


the Rest of the World is watching... & in the REST of the World?

The US is the MINORITY.
Pay attention. We are.

The Republicans would have you believe that peace, security & prosperity are a 'zero-sum game'. It isn't a question of the *brown or yellow* people coming to get Americans.

Its a question of "why does the US get to Eat the World & leave us in poverty & hunger?"

Yes, there are food & resource crises. Why? because Americans are burning food so they can cruise around to fast-food outlets. Its bio-alcohol/fuel speculation that's pricing food out of reach.

Watch "The End of Suburbia" ... petroleum doesn't just MOVE the food , people & resources... its the foundation of most artificial fertilizers, harvest & irrigation...

SURPRISE!

"History Will not Judge this kindly": America's torture hobby supports a Consumer Culture

~~~
Spread Love...

BlueBerry Pick'n
can be found @
ThisCanadian com
~~~
"We, two, form a Multitude" ~ Ovid.
~~~
"Silent Freedom is Freedom Silenced"
"do no harm"

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RE: good luck
Posted by: Lauren on Apr 22, 2008 8:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just called my congresswomen's office. The woman sounded kinda nervous taking my call.

I have to actually remind myself people are just starting to grasp the idea that they have helped torture people. (Since I have been tortured, it makes phone calls especially awkward. Like McCain, I know how to do it.) They probably are going to be especially nervous about calls from the press about it. They denied I was part of the press for a long time, but nearly everybody is over that by now too.

Everybody but me. I have been trained that I can't be effective, but I just go and do it anyway, then I suffer from a bunch of emotional turmoil crap. That is very upsetting and functions like a feedback loop. It is really important to avoid it, but I can't avoid it so I get really mad, angry, lots of yelling and screaming. I have been yelling and cursing at the TV lately.

It sure will be a pleasure to see the Bush team brought to justice.

I can't wait to hear back from them on this topic. Number one to me, them too. Blackwater has congress running scared.

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Huffington's spin
Posted by: Lauren on Apr 22, 2008 9:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Per FREDERICK P. HITZ,

For the CIA, the consequences are even graver and more down to earth. It is a wounded culture searching for ways to again become relevant in the fight against terrorism. It had no meaningful past experience in the hostile interrogation world. It took the Office of Legal Counsel memos of August 2002 and March 2003 as a direction to enter upon a new experiment, and it will doubtless be held individually responsible i.e. the working case officer-interrogators will be held responsible, for what will be considered criminal acts.

Lets hope, for their sake, that the individual liability insurance policies they had to purchase if they wanted any protection will keep them from having to go to jail or that they receive a presidential pardon a la Iran Contra.


This commentary seems divorced from reality to me, is this the norm for the 'liberal' Huffington Post?

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Pitchforks and torches, storm the "gated" communities, eat the rich.
Posted by: thekidde on Apr 22, 2008 3:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Plug a Blackwater goon and then have a Starbucks before moving on to a banker, hedge fund dickhead, or greedy CEO - peace out.

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Defund torture?
Posted by: willymack on Apr 22, 2008 4:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hell, we've got to defund, defang, and render all the bushie crooks DEFUNCT.

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