After Torture and Militarization: Accountability and Reform
Because of Philippe Sands, a London-based international criminal lawyer and professor, American wheels of justice have begun to grind in the direction of the nation's most senior lawyers; the men who designed and then covered up the legal authorization for the use of torture by the U.S. Military. After testifying on Capitol Hill to Rep. John Conyers' House Judiciary Committee, Philippe Sands joined Col. Lawrence Wilkerson (ret.) and me to explain, examine and discuss what exactly happened, and the burgeoning case against the lawyers for Secretary of State Don Rumsfeld, Vice President Dick Cheney, CIA Director George Tenet, and President George W. Bush.
Drawing from his recently-released book, Torture Team, and his article in this month's issue of Vanity Fair, Philippe revealed a powerful indictment of the actions of the White House from 2001-2006. For the full event video, click here.
Ultimately, however, the question of accountability for these actions, which Supreme Court Justice Kennedy wrote may amount to "war crimes," in his 2006 concurring Hamdan opinion, must be complemented with a robust new committment to stregthen the American system against future perversions of America's considerable power.
Col. Wilkerson, in his remarks, discussed one such option that would restore balance within America's national security architecture . In short, he would promote the Assistant Secretaries of State for each region of the world to Under Secretary of State, send them out of Foggy Bottom and into the field and then make the regional combattant commander, (CENTCOM, SOUTHCOM, PACOM, etc.) report to the Under Secretary of State for that region. Col. Wilkerson, of course, makes the point more eloquently:


















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