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Friday, 27 February 2009 12:07 |
By Jason Leopold Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy released the list of three witnesses who will testify at a hearing next week on forming a "truth commission" to investigate controversial Bush administration policies, such as torture and domestic surveillance. Thomas Pickering served as Under Secretary of State from 1997-2000, and served as Ambassador to the United Nations for President George H.W. Bush. He holds the personal rank of Career Ambassador, the highest in the United States Foreign Service. Pickering is a member of the International Institute of Strategic Studies and the Council on Foreign Relations. In a floor statement on Wednesday, Leahy said his March 4 hearing, “Getting to the Truth Through a Nonpartisan Commission of Inquiry," would examine the best way for an independent panel to probe how Bush exercised his “national security and executive power as related to counter-terrorism efforts.” “The past can be prologue unless we set things right,” the Vermont Democrat said. “The last administration justified torture, presided over the abuses at Abu Ghraib, destroyed tapes of harsh interrogations, and conducted ‘extraordinary renditions’ that sent people to countries that permit torture during interrogations. “The last administration used the Justice Department – our premier law enforcement agency – to subvert the intent of congressional statutes. They wrote secret law to give themselves legal cover for these misguided policies, policies that could not withstand scrutiny if brought to light.” On the same day, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, in an interview with Rachel Maddow on her MSNBC program Wednesday, called Leahy's investigative plan “a good idea,” but objected to an immunity proposal by Leahy that could prevent prosecutors from holding Bush administration officials accountable for crimes in a court of law. Pelosi, who refused to hold impeachment hearings when George W. Bush was President, signaled that she now prefers a proposal by House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers, who wants a “blue-ribbon panel” to probe the Bush administration but seeks a special prosecutor, too. Pelosi also said that when she was on the House Intelligence Committee during Bush's first term she was briefed about the CIA's "enhanced interrogation" techniques but only in the "abstract." She said she was never told the agency's interrogators intended to use such methods. Though Leahy has argued that a “truth commission” is the best way to expose the dark underbelly of Bush’s policies, other civil liberties experts say accountability requires bringing to justice perpetrators of serious crimes, no matter how high their government positions. On Tuesday, David Swanson of afterdowningstreet.org circulated a petition demanding Attorney General Eric Holder appoint a special prosecutor to launch a criminal investigation into the Bush administration’s actions. After Leahy’s Senate comments, the American Civil Liberties Union weighed in, urging both a special prosecutor and a congressional select committee. |
Let The Sun Shine In......
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