Eric Holder: Well, Maybe Just a Little Forced Nudity and Solitary Confinement…
Eric Holder has written a letter to Russian Minister of Justice Alexander Valdimirovich Konovalov. In it, he claims to address the issues Edward Snowden raised in his application for asylum to Russia (I’m not sure he accurately represents the claim — in other asylum applications Snowden made a clear case he was charged with a political crime, which Holder doesn’t mention at all).
The letter assures Konovalov that the charges currently charged don’t carry the death penalty and the government wouldn’t seek the death penalty if he were charged with such crimes.
But it also offers this guarantee that Snowden won’t be tortured:
Second, Mr. Snowden will not be tortured. Torture is unlawful in the United States.
That’s it! The guy whose DOJ reviewed but chose not to charge a bunch of CIA torturers (and those who obstructed investigations into that torture) says torture is illegal here and therefore Snowden wouldn’t be tortured.
Assuming, of course, you believe the forced nudity and solitary confinement Bradley Manning was illegally (per the judge in his case) subjected to doesn’t amount to torture. I’m sure Vladimir Putin would agree, but much of the civilized world does not.
In other curious assurances, Holder promises that Snowden would have the right to counsel.
Any questioning of Mr. Snowden could be conducted only with his consent: his participation would be entirely voluntary, and his legal counsel would be present should he wish it.
I guess Holder ought to tell Dzhokhar Tsarnaev about this return to the good old days, because he asked for a lawyer several times under questioning before he got one.
These assurances are all very nice. But more and more, such assurances are easily disproven by our recent history. Again, I don’t think Vlad Putin gives a great shit about all that. But ultimately this increasingly shoddy recent history will hurt such claims in the international realm.
So Russia responds “Show me evidence you are prosecuting people who admitted torturing like GWB and then we can talk”.
Jose Padilla.
Bradley Manning.
John Walker Lindh, now legally gagged from speaking about it. Also was denied counsel.
So Putin says to Holder, “torture anyone today, US?” And Holder replies:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFsa62d5Ri4
Genius I swear. Putin’s playing right into our Commander-in-Chiefs elevendy dimensional hands, bringing back Boris and Natasha, getting the rabble roused. Now Mckayla Maroney is impressed. Led by fools.
Non-refoulement is an absolute prohibition. Is Holder really enough of an ignoramus as to think he can lie his way out of documented torture? …oh wait, Holder got his job by lying about the US government’s extrajudicial killing of Martin Luther King. Lying is what Holder’s there to do.
Let’s hope that Russia’s frisky legislators will rub Holder’s pornstachioed ferret face in the Big Lies he has plopped on the rug.
Plus, our super max prisons with their solitary confinement, solitary limited exercise, no human contact is considered torture by the EU int terms of human rights. Right?
The Holder thing is mostly for domestic consumption and is leading the NPR hourly new summaries. Good NPR, sit up, beg your listeners for money. Etc.
(Edited for typo)
What a truly sad day it is when the US Attorney General has to promise another government that it does not torture.
“forced nudity and solitary confinement”
but the real torture was sleep deprivation occasioned by having to answer a question from military prison guards every hour all night.
was manning kept shackled?
then there is whistleblower john kiriakou imprisoned in a special part of his federal prison called a “communications control unit”.
Of course, Holder could always have him renditioned, right? The administration, in spite of trying to convince citizens that black ops sites have been closed down, still has “friendly” nations who don’t seem to mind that we torture people. Don’t forget Holder’s infamous speech at Northwestern University where he informed the students that “due process” was whatever the administration decided it was. Meanwhile, it was the Obama administration who continued to prosecute, and eventually imprison, John Kiriakou for publicly disclosing that torture was official White House policy. We have a very sick group of people running our country.
@grayslady: Can’t Eric just get Snowden with a drone by saying he was standing next to a terrorist target on Tuesday*? Some kind of process there somewhere.
*blessed by moral rectitude death czar, hallowed be his process
@thatvisionthing: From wikipedia:
@orionATL:
YouTube: The Manning Cage, Melbourne Australia – Bourke Street Mall outside the General Post Office, June 1, 2013
And Le Show, May 5, 2013:
@thatvisionthing:
thanks. i hadn’t remembered these details.
from the way this is unfolding i am getting a bad feeling that snowden is about to be handed over to the u.s. or kicked out of russia.
@orionATL: Love Australia.
It’s only torture if we say it is – US Govt
We know how to waterboard people without torturing them! We know how to do mock executions with an electric drill without torturing them. We can wall slam, and slap silly without torturing! We play high volume music 24-7 to prevent sleep, and it isn’t torture. We can hold a person in a cell the size of a coffin without torturing them. We even know how to capture their wives and children and hold them secretly, without there ever being one wiff of torture!
Feds tell Web firms to turn over user account passwords
Secret demands mark escalation in Internet surveillance by the federal government through gaining access to user passwords, which are typically stored in encrypted form.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57595529-38/feds-tell-web-firms-to-turn-over-user-account-passwords/
Feds put heat on Web firms for master encryption keys
Whether the FBI and NSA have the legal authority to obtain the master keys that companies use for Web encryption remains an open question, but it hasn’t stopped the usa government from trying.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-57595202-38/feds-put-heat-on-web-firms-for-master-encryption-keys/
@What Constitution?: Oh, and Holder didn’t just say we wouldn’t torture Snowden, he also apparently agreed we wouldn’t impose the death penalty. Of course, that’s small comfort with the Presidential Assassination Drone Program, and the part of the conversation with Putin about that went something like this:
http://wavs.unclebubby.com/wav/MOVIES/TRUELIES/ALLBAD.WAV
@newz4all: Wow! Thanks for the links. I don’t typically read CNET news, but Declan McCullagh is a respected writer, so I suspect the leaks were directly to him.
James Bamford: They Know Much More Than You Think
Today, as the Snowden documents make clear, it is the NSA that keeps track of phone calls, monitors communications, and analyzes people’s thoughts through data mining of Google searches and other online activity.
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2013/aug/15/nsa-they-know-much-more-you-think/?pagination=false
ProPublica: Six Ways Congress May Reform NSA Snooping
Although the House defeated a measure that would have defunded the bulk phone metadata collection program, the narrow 205-217 vote showed that there is significant support in Congress to reform NSA surveillance programs.
Here are six other legislative proposals on the table.
http://www.propublica.org/article/six-ways-congress-may-reform-nsa-snooping
One is left wondering why Holder [or anyone else] bothers to say anything, no one who is paying attention should believe them. They must think most people are pretty stupid or effectively propagandized, or apathetic or all three. And that may be a correct assessment. “Torture is unlawful in the United States.” He doesn’t say that “Torture by, or at the behest of, the United States Government, is unlawful.” He doesn’t say it won’t be done. He identifies no prosecution of torturers [above the rank of private, corporal or sergeant, and few of those. If something is ‘unlawful’ and it is done then the perpetrators of the unlawful acts are prosecuted. In the US they are immunized. Cheney directed medical experiments in torture. John Yoo and Jay Bybee were accomplices before, and likely during. The USG has no moral credibility having tortured regularly since the War Against Philippine Independence 1898-1906 when it ‘discovered’ the Spanish techniques of water torture.
@newz4all: Here is some followup on that CNET article:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2013/07/are-the-feds-asking-tech-companies-for-user-passwords/278126/
How does one define fascism ?
http://holt.house.gov/images/stories/Summary_of_the_Surveillance_State_Repeal_Act.pdf
Summary of the Surveillance State Repeal Act
The Surveillance State Repeal Act would:
1. Repeal the PATRIOT Act (which contains the telephone metadata harvesting provision).
2. Repeal the FISA Amendments Act (which contains the email harvesting provision).
3. Ensure that any FISA collection against a US Person takes place only pursuant to a valid warrant based on probable cause (which was the original FISA standard from 1978 to 2001).
4. Retain the ability for government surveillance capabilities to be targeted against a specific natural person, regardless of the type of communications method(s) or device(s) being used by the subject of the surveillance.
5. Retains provisions in current law dealing with the acquisition of intelligence information involving weapons of mass destruction from entities not composed primarily of U.S. Persons.
6. Prohibit the government from mandating that electronic device or software manufacturers build in so-called “back doors” to allow the government to bypass encryption or other privacy technology built into said hardware and/or software.
7. Increase the terms of judges on the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) from seven to ten years and allow their reappointment.
8. Mandate that the FISC utilize technologically competent Special Masters (technical and legal experts) to help determine the veracity of government claims about privacy, minimization and collection capabilities employed by the US government in FISA applications.
9. Mandate that the Government Accountability Office (GAO) regularly monitor such domestic surveillance programs for compliance with the law, including responding to Member requests for investigations and whistleblower complaints of wrongdoing.
Moderation…. Aka censorship?
I keep wishing I will wake up and be in the country I was born in.
Don’t forget what the US considers torture. It’s torture if the victim dies and not otherwise. Also who would trust anything the US says? The lies and deceit that has been the government’s modus operandi would dissuade the most ardent American patriot from trusting the government, let alone the president of a competitor nation or a whistleblower who doesn’t want to die.
Be careful folks there is a huge list of words, abbreviations and word combinations to avoid using on the internet due to NSA surveillance.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2150281/REVEALED-Hundreds-words-avoid-using-online-dont-want-government-spying-you.html
Scroll down to the bottom of the page.
The issue is as always power politics. Putin will do what’s right, or what he thinks is right, for Russia, and in this case it means hosting Obama in September. So it wd seem that Snowden will end up in jail for life, and, doubtless solitary confinement without his laptops.
For a change the bad guys are winning.