This story is from January 7, 2005. I’m posting it to provide background for you to inspire you to write your senators about opposing the Gonzales confirmation for US Attorney General.
Mr. Gonzales’s Testimony
A Washington Post Editorial.
The message Mr. Gonzales left with senators was unmistakable: As attorney general, he will seek no change in practices that have led to the torture and killing of scores of detainees and to the blackening of U.S. moral authority around the world. Instead, the Bush administration will continue to issue public declarations such as those Mr. Gonzales repeated yesterday – “that torture and abuse will not be tolerated by this administration” – while in practice sanctioning procedures that the International Red Cross and many lawyers inside the government consider to be illegal and improper…
Alberto R. Gonzales missed an important opportunity yesterday to rectify his position, and that of President Bush, on the imprisonment and interrogation of foreign detainees. At the Senate Judiciary Committee’s hearing on his nomination to be attorney general, Mr. Gonzales repeatedly was offered the chance to repudiate a legal judgment that the president is empowered to order torture in violation of U.S. law and immunize torturers from punishment. He declined to do so. He was invited to reject a 2002 ruling made under his direction that the infliction of pain short of serious physical injury, organ failure or death did not constitute torture. He answered: “I don’t have a disagreement with the conclusions then reached.” Nor did he condemn torture techniques, such as simulated drowning, that were discussed and approved during meetings in his office. “It is not my job,” he said, to decide if they were proper. He was prompted to reflect on whether departing from the Geneva Conventions had been a mistake, in light of the shocking human rights abuses that have since been reported in Iraq, Afghanistan and the Guant