In contrast to submerging the head face-forward in water, waterboarding precipitates a gag reflex almost immediately. It can cause extreme pain, dry drowning, damage to lungs, brain damage from oxygen deprivation, other physical injuries including broken bones due to struggling against restraints, lasting psychological damage or, ultimately, death.
The truth is out.
This is, was, America under the Bush Administration.
It has come to light that Condoleezza Rice, Head Footsoldier and Goosestepper to the Terrorist-in-Chief,George W Bush, verbally approved the CIA's request to subject alleged al-Qaida terrorist Abu Zubaydah to waterboarding way way back in July 2002.
The extent of her involvement and subsequent endorsement of torture were released by the Senate Intelligence Committee, and provide a detailed glimpse into how the CIA's interrogation program was conceived and approved at the highest levels in the Bush White House. This new information shows that Rice lied....yes, a lying Bush official, how odd...when she testified in writing last fall to the Senate Armed Services Committee.
Of course, I imagine her spin is that the lie was necessary to keep the country safe.
According to the reports, Condoleezza Rice personally conveyed the Bush administration's approval for waterboarding of Zubaydah to then-CIA Director George Tenet. But then last fall Rice lied when she said that she only "attended" meetings where the interrogation program was discussed; she, of course, could not recall the details. But, here's the rub, Condoleezza Rice completely, utterly, totally omitted direct role in approving the program....in writing!
How you gonna spin that Condi! Can't say that your own written testimony is taken out of context or misunderstood, can you?
Days after Rice gave approval, the Justice Department began to allow the use of waterboarding. Alleged al-Qaida terrorist Abu Zubaydah underwent waterboarding at least 83 times in August 2002.
There was plenty of outrage over the use of torture. There were internal legal reviews that the harsh methods, particularly waterboarding, might violate federal laws against torture and the U.S. Constitution, but the Bush administration lawyers continued to validate the program.
The CIA voluntarily dropped the use of waterboarding, which has a long history as a torture tactic, from its arsenal of techniques after 2005.
A spokesman for Rice declined comment when reached Wednesday.
I'm very disappointed to hear this. I always kind of liked Condi, as a strong, intelligent woman. I thought she bucked the party line a little bit more than most (like Colin Powell), and I'm sorry to hear that she didn't.
ReplyDeleteThis is going to get worse before it gets better. News, this morning, said the Pentagon has to release about 2,000 photos of prisoner abuse due to ACLU lawsuit.
ReplyDeleteBeth - that's what happens when you (Condi) sell your soul to the Devil (Cheney).
ReplyDeleteThat's true, Mark. I wanted to believe Condi wasn't like the others, but sadly she is. They need to pay for what they did. I hope we can recover from what these people have done to our country.
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