Wednesday, August 09, 2006

Who couldn't see this coming...

The Washington Post is reporting that the Bush administration is prepparing to amend the War Crimes act to allow senior administration officials and CIA officers a free pass on the cruel and degrading behavior that they condoned in the Global war on Terror.

To wit:

Officials say the amendments would alter a U.S. law passed in the mid-1990s that criminalized violations of the Geneva Conventions, a set of international treaties governing military conduct in wartime. The conventions generally bar the cruel, humiliating and degrading treatment of wartime prisoners without spelling out what all those terms mean.

The draft U.S. amendments to the War Crimes Act would narrow the scope of potential criminal prosecutions to 10 specific categories of illegal acts against detainees during a war, including torture, murder, rape and hostage-taking.

Left off the list would be what the Geneva Conventions refer to as "outrages upon [the] personal dignity" of a prisoner and deliberately humiliating acts -- such as the forced nakedness, use of dog leashes and wearing of women's underwear seen at the U.S.-run Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq -- that fall short of torture.

"People have gotten worried, thinking that it's quite likely they might be under a microscope," said a U.S. official. Foreigners are using accusations of unlawful U.S. behavior as a way to rein in American power, the official said, and the amendments are partly meant to fend this off.


As an aside, Isn't the law supposed to make it more difficult to break existing laws? Isn't it designed so that people are held accountable for their actions? Well, it is, and apparently that scares the shit out of this administration.