The US Believes It’s Okay to Threaten Teenagers with Rape
Carol Rosenberg tweets:
Omar Khadr’s military judge just ruled that ALL of his confessions from Afghanistan to #Guantanamo will go to trial. None suppressed.
The Toronto-born captive’s defense had wanted his interrogations excluded on grounds they were not voluntary. Col. Patrick Parrish disagreed
#Khadr‘s war court judge also agreed to use at trial a homemade video of the 15-year-old allegedly building, planting mines in Afghanistan
So in spite of the fact that Joshua Claus threatened Omar Khadr with rape and potentially death, our military “justice” system does not believe that taints Khadr’s confession.
So nice to see our Kangaroo Court is living up to billing. It shames the US terribly in the process.
Update: it sounds like Khadr’s lawyer takes the same lesson from this I do:
Omar #Khadr‘s Canadian lawyer, Edney, calls Army judge “a disgrace” for admitting the Canadian’s admissions as a 15-year-old at trial.
What a shock! Obviously, Col. Parrish has his orders.
Once this gets in front of a real judge, that decision will be revisited.
You would think America could be a better job of maintaining the appearence of fairness than this. He could have rejected the confessions, then introduced the evidence via hearsay from some heavily decorated soldiers and a CIA asset behind a curtain.
Boxturtle (Can we please stop this farce and proceed directly to the hanging?)
Each time I think our country has sunk to a new low, we go even lower.
JOSHUA CLAUS
We haven’t gone any lower with this. We appear to have actually used rape in Abu G.
All we’re doing here is covering it up, like a good housecat. Dig a (black) hole. Crap in it. Cover it up. Walk away and deny all knowledge ’cause all cats think their crap don’t stink. Wait for a human to come and clean it up.
Boxturtle (ya know, the parallels are striking)
I don’t think we used rape to convict and execute prisoners there, though.
Maybe, but… from a Talk Left posting on Aug. 6, 2006:
The Times article by Nick Turse and Deborah Nelson also notes:
More on prisoners (Richard Pyle at AP, 5/6/04):
For the record, the article notes that 29 Americans, too, were subjected to “tiger cage” treatment by the North Vietnamese.
As for the use of rape by the U.S. military, I find almost every quote worth mentioning too graphic and depressing to quote here, but interested readers can study, State Rape: Representations of Rape in Viet Nam, by Karen Stuhldreher, Political Science Department, University of Washington, Seattle
What??? You mean My Lai was not an aberration?
Bob in AZ
God, one could write an encyclopedia of the awful crimes the U.S. committed in Southeast Asia. I know the other side wasn’t always so humane either. But there was one outstanding difference… it was their country and we were the invaders!
Same in Afghanistan. Same in Iraq.
Sadly, after reading about this type of conduct that is now the order of the day, I am starting to think that the U.S. deserves to have its roads dug up, it’s libraries closed and its light turned off.
I’m sure the Lurking Mod would take out anything I could say right now about Col Parrish, except that this decision is monstrous and unspeakable.
Torture Nation. Get used to it. This is the nation we live in. It will take a hell of a lot of social upheaval to change things at this point. I’m not very into the idea of instability, but I will welcome it and the sacrifices it will entail, because I wish my children and their children to have a better world.
The only other compensatory thought about this future time of social struggle, that it might come soon enough that criminals like Claus, enablers like Parrish, and the politicians that sponsor them, will find themselves on the other side of the razor-lined fence someday.
They have to rule that way; if they do anything else, the house of cards built upon torture crumbles not just with Khadr, but with every tribunal to come. And it is especially critical to ratify and normalize the conduct with Khadr because of his juvenile/child soldier status.
It is who America is now.
It’s sad, pathetic, and maddening, how low the Republic has fallen under the craven. These are not the folks who could have composed our Republic, let alone improved on it. There has not been a single significant proposal under the Obama administration that would drastically improve this country and its moral esteem in the eyes of the world, let alone the world itself.
And while everyone’s in the mood, the Center for Justice and Accountability has told its supporters that the complaint against Major John Leso, one of the BSCT torturers at Guantanamo was turned down because supposedly the NY State Office of Professional Discipline lacked jurisdiction.
The CJA complaint against Leso can be read here. The NY OPD dismissal is not online yet. In the tortured logic of the OPD, Leso’s conduct did not constitute the practice of psychology, which they only define as helping people. Hence, they have no jurisdiction over Leso’s behavior at Guantanamo as supposedly it was not the practice of psychology. The fact that the military demanded a psychology license as a prerequisite for the position — and Leso was a military psychologist, who worked at Walter Reed Hospital before transfer to Gitmo — is not evidence that “some or all of the activities performed for that employer constitute the practice of a profession.”
Under these criteria, you could murder someone and not be held responsible for loss of license, as murder is not the practice of psychology, as defined in the NY state code.
Quick action by the New York State Office of Professions, heh? The complaint was only filed about a month ago. The decision is signed by former district attorney and Democrat, Louis J. Catone.
The outrages mount up.
Canada is complicit in this. The Harper government has fought tooth and claw to avoid repatriation of Khadr.
Yes, the Canadian government (though not all of it, and not every court) is doing its best to prove it’s a great junior partner to the Americans.
Cui bono?
you know, we were yelling and screaming for an impeachment when and because bush was doing this
interesting how much more we put up with obama since he is on our “team”
Article 15 of the Convention Against Torture: “Each State Party shall ensure that any statement which is established to have been made as a result of torture shall not be invoked as evidence in any proceedings, except against a person accused of torture as evidence that the statement was made.”