I Do Not Wish to Be Associated With Torture
As a matter of conscience, I am
returning the Intelligence Commendation Award medallion given me for "especially
commendable service" during my 27-year career in CIA.
I Do Not Wish to Be Associated With
Torture By Ray
McGovern
t r u t h o u t | Letter
Thursday 02 March
2006 Hon. Pete Hoekstra,
Chair House Permanent Select Committee on
Intelligence Washington,
DC Dear Congressman
Hoekstra: As a matter of
conscience, I am returning the Intelligence Commendation Award medallion given
me for "especially commendable service" during my 27-year career in CIA. The
issue is torture, which inhabits the same category as rape and slavery -
intrinsically evil. I do not wish to be associated, however remotely, with an
agency engaged in torture. Reports
in recent years that CIA personnel were torturing detainees were highly
disturbing. Confirmation of a sort came last fall, when CIA Director Porter Goss
and Dick Cheney - dubbed by the Washington Post "Vice President for Torture" -
descended on Sen. John McCain to demand that the CIA be exempted from his
amendment's ban on torture. Subsequent reports implicated agency personnel in
several cases of prisoner abuse in Iraq, including a few in which detainees died
during interrogation. The obeisance
of CIA directors George Tenet and Porter Goss in heeding illegal White House
directives has done irreparable harm to the CIA and the country - not to mention
those tortured and killed. That you, as Chair of the House Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence, show more deference to the White House than
dedication to your oversight responsibilities under the Constitution is another
profound disappointment. How can you and your counterpart, Sen. Pat Roberts,
turn a blind eye to torture - letting some people get away, literally, with
murder - and square that with your
conscience? If German officials who
were ordered to do such things in the 1930s had spoken out early and loudly
enough, the German people might have been alerted to the atrocities being
perpetrated in their name and tried harder to stop them. When my grandchildren
ask, "What did you do, Grandpa, to stop the torture," I want to be able to tell
them that I tried to honor my oath, taken both as an Army officer and an
intelligence officer, to defend the Constitution of the United States - and that
I not only spoke out strongly against the torture, but also sought a symbolic
way to dissociate myself from it.
We Americans have become accustomed to letting our institutions do our sinning
for us. I abhor the corruption of the CIA in the past several years, believe it
to be beyond repair, and do not want my name on any medallion associated with
it. Please destroy this one. Yours
truly, Ray
McGovern Ray McGovern works for
Tell the Word, the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour in
Washington, DC. He was an analyst at the CIA for 27 years, and is on the
Steering Group of VIPS.
Posted: Thu - March 2, 2006 at 08:47 PM