Administration of Torture: A Documentary Record from
Washington to Abu Ghraib and Beyond.
by Boylan, James
Administration of Torture: A Documentary Record from Washington to
Abu Ghraib and Beyond By Jameel Jaffer and Amrit Singh Columbia
University Press 439 pages, $29.95
ALTHOUGH THE TITLE OF this collection is not explicitly defined, in
the past "administration of torture" has referred, not to
bureaucratic arrangements, but to actual infliction of pain. And the
United States, this black-bound volume makes clear, has inflicted a
great deal of pain on its captives abroad, despite presidential denials
and the government's at least rote adherence to the web of
international agreements prohibiting torture. On behalf of the American
Civil Liberties Union, staff attorneys Jameel Jaffer and Amrit Singh
provide a compendium of truly incriminating documents, released in
response to a lawsuit filed by the ACLU and four allied organizations
against the Department of Defense. The catalog--another testament to the
quiet power of the Freedom of Information Act--starts with the notorious
January 2002 memorandum to President Bush from White House Counsel
Alberto R. Gonzales, seeking to excuse the United States from the Geneva
Conventions in handling prisoners taken in the "war on
terror." It then runs through 369 pages of reproduced
documents--policy memorandums, depositions, transcripts of testimony,
even autopsies. Most names and many details are blacked out, but what
remains is incriminating, showing that interrogators at Guantanamo, in
Iraq, and in Afghanistan inflicted severe damage on prisoners that
sometimes even led to their deaths--that, in short, they inflicted
torture, if the term has any meaning at all. An extended introduction by
Jaffer and Singh provides a guide to the documents, of which hundreds
more are available on the ACLU Web site at http://www.aclu.org/
safefree/torture/torturefoia .html. One searches almost in vain for a
glimmer in the darkness of this maze of quasi-sanctioned abuse and
misconduct. A single exchange stands out. Following an e-mail message
distributed on August 14, 2003, asserting that "The gloves are
coming off ... we want these individuals broken," a lone, anonymous
soul responded: "We need to take a deep breath and remember who we
are.... We are American soldiers, heirs of a long tradition of staying
on the high ground. We need to stay there." Words, apparently,
hardly anybody wanted to hear.
JAMES BOYLAN is the founding editor of the Columbia Journalism
Review and professor emeritus of journalism and history at the
University of Massachusetts--Amherst.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Columbia University, Graduate School
of Journalism Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.