No Justice, No Peace
by Bob Herbert
The New York Times
February 23, 2006
If you talk to Maher Arar long enough, even on the telephone, you'll get the disturbing sense that you are speaking with someone whose life has been shattered like a pane of glass.
"Sometimes I have the feeling that I want to go and live on another planet," he told me. "A completely different planet than planet Earth. You know?"
Mr. Arar, thanks to the United States government, went through the almost incomprehensible agony of being tortured. Now he is trying to live with the aftermath of torture, which is its own form of agony.
On Sept. 26, 2002, Mr. Arar, a Canadian citizen born in Syria, was taken into custody by American authorities at Kennedy Airport in New York. He was locked in chains and shackles and accused of being "a member of a known terrorist organization."
There was no evidence to support the accusation, and no evidence has ever come to light. Nevertheless, as part of the hideous U.S. policy known as extraordinary rendition, Mr. Arar was shipped off to Syria, where he was kept in an underground rat-infested, grave-like cell, and tortured. (When I visited him in Ottawa last year, he told me how he had screamed and wept and begged both God and his captors for mercy.)
After 10 months, he was released. No charges against him were ever filed.
I called Mr. Arar last week after a federal judge in Brooklyn threw out a lawsuit in which Mr. Arar had sought damages from the U.S. government for his ordeal.
"I don't feel like I am the same person," he said. "I feel that my brain or my inner soul does not want to think about what's going on. My soul is trying to distract itself from reality."
The reality, he said, is that his life has been all but completely destroyed. He is fearful. He has become psychologically and emotionally distant from his wife and two young children. He has nightmares. He can't find a job. He spins dizzily from one bout with depression to another. And some former friends who are Muslim will no longer associate with him because "they're afraid to be the next target."
"I mean, you can tell, no one wants to hear about me," he said. "After 9/11, everyone branded with the terrorism label -- they're doomed."
Mr. Arar, now 35, made a comfortable living as a software engineer before he fell into the demonic embrace of the rendition program. Now no one will hire him. "They put it in a nice way," he said. "They've said to people: 'Listen, we believe he's innocent. But, you know, we don't want to hire him.' "
Mr. Arar's own psychological difficulties have compounded the external challenges he faces. "I was invited to go and speak in Vancouver, which is west of here," he said. "But I can't take the plane anymore. Psychologically I am so scared to fly. So I couldn't go."
He said he frequently lacks the confidence or motivation to perform even minor tasks, and often feels overwhelmed by the thought of something as ordinary as a scheduled meeting with the principal at his 9-year-old daughter's school.
He said his 4-year-old son, Houd, panics whenever he thinks his father is about to go out. "He always wants to come with me," said Mr. Arar. "He insists, and he cries if I can't take him. He's afraid that if I go, I won't ever come back."
So the nightmare that began with rendition continues with no end in sight. Mr. Arar is grateful that his wife was able to land a job last year with a political party. "It's not much money," he said, "but had she not found a job we would be in a very, very miserable situation. We're just barely surviving."
Unexpected emotional support has come from ordinary Canadians; strangers frequently come up to Mr. Arar on the street and shake his hand. "They might say, "We're behind you,' or, 'We support you,' " he said. "It means a lot to me."
The rendition program is one more example of the way the United States, using the threat of terror as an excuse, has locked its ideals away in a drawer somewhere. We don't even give them lip service anymore. A person like Mr. Arar is not seen as having any rights. He's not even seen as human. He was carted away in accordance with official U.S. policy, and treated like an animal.
"They are doing this to people and it is wrong, wrong, wrong," said Mr. Arar. "This is an evil practice, and I want them to acknowledge it. I want them to acknowledge that what they did to me was wrong."
The newly published photos from the Abu Ghraib file...
In Yoo's opinion, he wrote that at Guantánamo cruel, inhumane, and degrading treatment of detainees could be authorized, with few restrictions.
http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/060227fa_fact
nimh wrote:The newly published photos from the Abu Ghraib file...
How many conservative posters here asserted that all that was going on was "more like a kind of hazing" than anything else?
Nah...now they'll just go back to "the few bad apples".
How many conservative posters here asserted that all that was going on was "more like a kind of hazing" than anything else?
That's the problem with sound bites. People forget the context and eventually all that remains is the sound bite.
I read it today, and found it both inspiring (re Mora, and people like him prepared to stand up and be counted) and deeply infuriating and saddening.
They do with an American president sanctioning it.
Haven't you read ANY of the evidence?
He has never sanctioned any kind of interrogation which could result in a prisoner's death. Indeed, the cases of abuse discovered have been vigorously prosecuted.
Indeed, the cases of abuse discovered have been vigorously prosecuted.
Brandon9000 wrote:Indeed, the cases of abuse discovered have been vigorously prosecuted.
Yes, indeed. Vigorously prosecuted. And a few people even got sentenced to months in prison. Months.
Heck of a job.
FORT HOOD, Texas - Army Spc. Charles Graner Jr., who grinned in photos of Iraqi prisoners being sexually humiliated but told jurors, "I didn't enjoy what I did there," was sentenced Saturday to 10 years behind bars in the first court-martial stemming from the Abu Ghraib prison scandal.
You don't know what you're talking about:
Soldier Gets 75 Days in Afghan Abuse Case
The Associated Press
Tuesday, August 30, 2005; 11:17 PM
EL PASO, Texas -- An Army reservist was sentenced Tuesday to 75 days in prison, a reduction in rank and a bad conduct discharge after admitting that he assaulted a prisoner in Afghanistan.
Sgt. Anthony M. Morden was among five soldiers accused of mistreating the prisoner, known as Dilawar. Autopsy records show Dilawar's legs were so badly beaten that they would have been amputated had he lived.
"I never struck a detainee for fun or just to cause him pain," Morden told the judge. "I gave in to the stress I was feeling at that moment and made a terrible decision."
[...]
Lawyers for former Pfc. Willie V. Brand, who worked with Morden at Bagram, argued that he was only doing what he was taught and what soldiers senior to him were doing. Brand earlier this month was convicted and reduced in rank but escaped jail time.
Morden's parents appeared as character witnesses for their son. They said in a telephone interview with the newspaper that his punishment was unfair, noting light sentences given to some of the others convicted of similar charges in the same incidents.
"Those (lighter sentences) were a message to the judge that the proper punishment for any of these charges was a lot less," David Morden, the soldier's father, told the newspaper. "Obviously, I think that was a very unfair punishment to my son. There is inconsistency in the military justice system."
While the government is allowing torture, in violation of international law, I think the most extreme cases we hear about really are the result of "bad apples" and were not sanctioned by the government.
For instance, that Dilawar guy who was murdered. He was certainly tortured illegally at the behest of the government, but what killed him was the blows he received when he was not being officially tortured -- the ordinary guards thought it was funny that he called out to Allah every time they bashed his knees with a club, so they did it over and over for days. That was never done with the approval of the government.
It is sort of a fine line to draw, since the government deserves condemnation for having people tortured, and the most extreme cases of torture also need to be condemned. But I think the government itself is innocent of the most extreme cases.
It seems there are more than a "few" of these bad apples though.