Why Donald Rumsfeld Must Go (and so must Bush)


Responsibility for the abuse of prisoners at the Abu Ghraib prison rests squarely in the lap of Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, whose policies outlined two years ago set the stage for the actions by prison staff, officers, and military interrogators that CBS and others have brought to light since "Sixty Minutes" aired its story on the abuses last Sunday.

From the Washington Post today:

THE HORRIFIC abuses by American interrogators and guards at the Abu Ghraib prison and at other facilities maintained by the U.S. military in Iraq and Afghanistan can be traced, in part, to policy decisions and public statements of Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld. Beginning more than two years ago, Mr. Rumsfeld decided to overturn decades of previous practice by the U.S. military in its handling of detainees in foreign countries. His Pentagon ruled that the United States would no longer be bound by the Geneva Conventions; that Army regulations on the interrogation of prisoners would not be observed; and that many detainees would be held incommunicado and without any independent mechanism of review. Abuses will take place in any prison system. But Mr. Rumsfeld's decisions helped create a lawless regime in which prisoners in both Iraq and Afghanistan have been humiliated, beaten, tortured and murdered -- and in which, until recently, no one has been held accountable.

The lawlessness began in January 2002 when Mr. Rumsfeld publicly declared that hundreds of people detained by U.S. and allied forces in Afghanistan "do not have any rights" under the Geneva Conventions. That was not the case: At a minimum, all those arrested in the war zone were entitled under the conventions to a formal hearing to determine whether they were prisoners of war or unlawful combatants. No such hearings were held, but then Mr. Rumsfeld made clear that U.S. observance of the convention was now optional. Prisoners, he said, would be treated "for the most part" in "a manner that is reasonably consistent" with the conventions -- which, the secretary breezily suggested, was outdated.

More: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A5840-2004May5.html

Today Sen. Tom Harkin and House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi called for Rumsfeld to resign. Since Rumsfeld cannot carry out policies without the approval of the President, BOTH of them must go! If Bush DIDN'T know about what was happening, he SHOULD have. As Harry Truman said, "The buck stops here."

Stop passing the buck, Mr. President! This happened on your watch. Oh, I forgot ... you aren't watching.

Posted: Thu - May 6, 2004 at 04:31 PM          


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