The whole purpose of setting up Guantánamo Bay is for torture
in a lengthy, blockbuster article, vanity fair provides a detailed examination of guantánamo in the context of former military attorney charles swift and the case of hamdan vs. rumsfeld...
escaping the rule of law... the motto of and, hopefully, the epitaph of the bush administration...
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The whole purpose of setting up Guantánamo Bay is for torture. Why do this? Because you want to escape the rule of law. There is only one thing that you want to escape the rule of law to do, and that is to question people coercively—what some people call torture. Guantánamo and the military commissions are implements for breaking the law. Why build a prison here when there are plenty of prisons in Nebraska? Why is it, when we see photos of Abu Ghraib, we think that it is "exporting Guantánamo"? That it is the "Guantánamo method"?
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[W]hy a military commission? Because if you torture someone, it is the only way you can get their statements in and not have to admit it in public.
—Lieutenant Commander Charles Swift, January 2007, to the author, Marie Brenner, in the article, Taking on Guantánamo, Vanity Fair, March 2007.
escaping the rule of law... the motto of and, hopefully, the epitaph of the bush administration...
Labels: Abu Ghraib, Charles Swift, Guantánamo, Hamdan vs. Rumsfeld, torture, Vanity Fair
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