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Tuesday, December 21, 2004
Yglesias Connects the Dots
Matt says:
Laura Rozen looks at the latest developments on the torture front and remarks that it "is not at all inconceivable that some day not too many years off Rumsfeld and Bush will face arrest if they travel abroad for command responsibility for war crimes, like Pinochet." Indeed, not only is it conceivable, I think in some ways it has to be regarded as expected at this point. I only hope the good judges of the rest of the democratic world recognize that it would be counterproductive to hand down indictments before this crew has left office, as such action would only inflame the embers of brain-dead nationalism that have done so much to get them re-elected.
The really interesting thing about the spate of stories we've seen over the past two weeks isn't so much that widespread torture was taking place (we knew that already) but that large swathes of the security and intelligence establishment issued various protests. It's testament both to the basic integrity of most of America's security professionals and to the utter moral depravity of the people in the Bush-Gonzalez-Rumsfeld-Wolfowitz-Feith-Cambone chain that this happened. In a decent world, Al Gonzalez would face some rough questions about all this at his confirmation hearings, but I don't think we live in that world.
December 21, 2004 at 07:15 AM | Permalink
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Comments
I'd have to agree with Mr. Burt. In a "decent world" an investigation into the death of Ken Lay would be as public as the OJ Simpson trial.
Posted by: Chase Tolliver at Jul 10, 2006 12:17:29 AM
Well, in a decent world, would any of those creeps be in responsible positions?
I think what you mean is, "a world with even a shred of decency".
Posted by: John M. Burt at Dec 25, 2004 3:25:03 AM