Glenn Greenwald has some amazingly compelling remarks to make in his latest blog post in today's Salon.com
(Ironically I'd commented just yesterday to Bill Michtom's excellent post, "wouldn't the media's complicity make them eligible to stand in the dock along with cheney, bush, addington, yoo, gonzalez, and the whole crew who designed this heinous matter)
The NYT's nice, new euphemism for torture
(updated below)
In today's New York Times, William Glaberson describes a proposal being circulated by the Obama administration to enable Guantanamo detainees to be put to death upon a mere guilty plea, i.e., without the need for a full-blown trial. The article describes the purpose of the proposal this way:
The proposal would ease what has come to be recognized as the government’s difficult task of prosecuting men who have confessed to terrorism but whose cases present challenges. Much of the evidence against the men accused in the Sept. 11 case, as well as against other detainees, is believed to have come from confessions they gave during intense interrogations at secret C.I.A. prisons. In any proceeding, the reliability of those statements would be challenged, making trials difficult and drawing new political pressure over detainee treatment.
The primary reason to avoid trials upon a guilty plea is to prevent public disclosure of the details of the torture we inflicted on these detainees. Despite that, the word "torture" never once appears in this NYT article. Instead, according to the NYT, detainees in CIA black sites were merely subjected to "intense interrogations." That's all? Who opposes "intense interrogations"?
This active media complicity in concealing that our Government created a systematic torture regime -- by refusing ever to say so -- is one of the principal reasons it was allowed to happen for so long (though see Jake Tapper's imperfect though still far superior formulation today on his ABC News blog about an Obama DHS appointee who just withdrew his nomination because of his possible "knowledge of and role in approving brutal interrogation techniques -- some of which qualify under international law as torture -- used by CIA officials against detainees").
The steadfast, ongoing refusal of our leading media institutions to refer to what the Bush administration did as "torture" -- even in the face of more than 100 detainee deaths; the use of that term by a leading Bush official to describe what was done at Guantanamo; and the fact that media outletsfrequently use the word "torture" to describe the exact same methodswhen used by other countries -- reveals much about how the modern journalist thinks. These are their governing principles:
There are two sides and only two sides to every "debate" -- the Beltway Democratic establishment and the Beltway Republican establishment. If those two sides agree on X, then X is deemed true, no matter how false it actually is. If one side disputes X, then X cannot be asserted as fact, no matter how indisputably true it is. The mere fact that another country's behavior is described as X doesn't mean that this is how identical behavior by the U.S. should be described. They do everything except investigate and state what is true. In their view, that -- stating what is and is not true -- is not their role.
The whole world knows that the U.S. tortured detainees in the "War on Terror." Yet American newspapers refuse to say so.
UPDATE: As the excellent blog NPR Check routinely documents, NPR is one of the worst offenders of using obfuscating language to white-wash what the Bush administration did, as illustrated by one routine NPR report last week regarding Obama's efforts to suppress photographic evidence of torture (h/t archtype):
The contortionists at NPR are mighty busy these days being super, extra careful not to use the word torture to describe - well - torture. Keeping the English language in such painful stress positions leads to some rather interesting remarks. On ATC Wednesday I caught Bob Siegel stating,
"The infamous Abu Ghraib photos served as early evidence of harsh treatment of detainees. Today the White House announced its decision to fight against the release of other similar photos. The photos show the alleged abuse of detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan."
It's all merely "alleged," and it's everything but "torture." And then there'sthis:
Liane Hansen has a little chat with "Retired Army Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez, who was in charge of the ground forces in Iraq when some of those techniques were used at the Abu Ghraib prison." During the interview Sanchez relates the following:
"We got a little bit of an insight into what they [CIA] were doing when they did drop off what came to be known as Iceman at Abu Ghraib in the fall of 2003....we clearly understood that they were using some very, very aggressive techniques, and in fact had wound up with this man dead in the course of an interrogation....he was brought to Abu Ghraib and handed off to my conventional forces there at the prison, and we eventually wound up repatriating him to his family to be taken care of and interred."
HOLY CRAP! Sanchez is describing the fact that the CIA and US forces tortured a man to death. Hansen doesn't express shock, disgust, surprise...anything. She manages a brief interruption to ask who "Iceman" was, but that's it.
Another chapter in the banality of evil.
As governments have long recognized, language is very potent, and euphemisms can thus mask and even justify the most heinous and barbaric acts. But in our country, our leading media institutions use these methods at least as vigorously as political officials do in order to obscure, rather than illuminate, what our government does."
As I read, I wondered who was this unnamed Department of Homeland Security person and clicked on Glenns link "see Jake Tapper's imperfect though still far superior formulation today on his ABC News blog about an Obama DHS appointee who just withdrew his nomination," and laughed when I read:
"President Obama's nominee to be U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Under Secretary for Intelligence and Analysis withdrew his name from consideration Friday after it became clear lawmakers would question his involvement in interrogation and detainee policies under President George W. Bush.
Philip Mudd, currently a top official at the Federal Bureau of Investigation, said he was bowing out because he knew "this position will require the full cooperation with Congress and I believe that if I continue to move forward I will become a distraction to the President and his vital agenda."
Mudd seemed a name to be supremely surreal (and ironic) to be involved in torture.
You betcha!


Salon.com
Comments
I know this is NO laughing matter, but when I opened the link, I actually said to myself:
"OH, my G-d, this reads like a second rate fiction novel"
Mudd, indeed - LOL.
Torture is BS, and we are hypocrites to the bone.
Have journalists become such cowards that they no longer care about the truth?
Be gone dimwit.
If you're good he might even reward you with a custom made scuplt, a statue of yourself in sh*t, but why would you want that, you already have the real thing, YOU,
Take the gun and use it to shoot whatever brains cells may possibly still exist in your vapid vacuous head.
Matane, sh*t for brains.
It is clear that mainstream media reporters are avoiding to call 'torture' 'torture'. I think that their problem is that would be kicked out of their newspaper and television posts, if they would start telling truths.
The problem is that mainstream medias are trying to tell that all the Internet articles, which are not backed by mainstream printed articles are just crap. So where are the ways to get any reliable news out of the torture cases?
I think that now the best way is to demand Congress to put up an investigation team to find out what is really happening in the jails.
The prisoners should at once be moved to more reliable jails. Again a prisoner in Gitmo committed suicide. He was never charged in any law court for any crime related to his arrest. This is clearly criminal.
I'd be the proud to be the FIRST to rate it.
;-)
also, re: the Thai airport story, you might blog that one. It sounds outstanding! Also, what are you up to in Japan? I have a friend who moves to the prefecture closest to North Korea (I can't remember the name of it) in a month and a half to teach English.
If he has any problems or just needs a friend to talk to let him know I am always here for him.
We can SKYPE or email.
My experience in a dozen other countries including Taiwan, Thailand, and India shows me that culture shock is a beach and MUCH MUCH more so here than any place else I know of.
I've been arrested by their predecessors 4 times, beaten and tear gassed so many times that I've lost count.
What are they gonna do come here extradite me and try me on charges of excessive invective - LOL - anything really IS possible in their power hungry grubby little hands.
The Times continues to abuse the English language in its determination to not call torture by its proper name.
Today it uses "intense interrogations" in the article on the Obama administrations attempt to, once more, circumvent our Constitution, our treaty obligations and the US Code.
It is bad enough for our government to hide reality by obfuscating with legal and language stratagems. It is abdication of journalistic standards and responsibilities for the Times to assist it.
Then I read the Greenwald column you have blogged, Mark.
I have to write to them directly. Glenn, fortunately, doesn't. ;-)
Neither of us is doing any good yer, however.
It's VERY simple You ain't the CEO of GE, or Goodyear or a former torturer turned good guy.
Follow the money trail, tis said, and it is more true now than ever before.
You wanna be heard, come up with the big bucks and they'll listen. Piss on us little peons.
Insanity run amuck.
Thanks for coming by and I hope my mini-rant doesn't deter from future visits.
Caracella. It's unlikely that you've understood anything written in this post. It's way above your head, but you can't resist behaving like a child. Trash what you don't understand.
I imagine that Fuck Off, is almost within your limited powers of understanding.
Makinjapan. I loved this post. Don't pay attention to Cretins. You lower yourself, by acknowledging his existence. You are worth much more than that :0)
Maggie
"peter lagios/newblog, the stalker v caracellas, the alterego" still exists.
Once again, thanks for coming by and I am looking forward to more of the great stuff You've written - shiver me timbers!
If you already know (and you do) that this gentleman is inferior to you, don't let his jealousy affect you. You don't speak to worms, do you? Why then are you talking to him.
Even an insult feeds his ego. He has the rest of his life in front of him, and that's enough of an insult..........and a waste of good oxygen.
Maggie