Republicans holding Johnsen and Koh hostage to sustain torture cover up
A post by Jack Balkin at Balkinization:
Over at the Daily Beast Scott Horton tells us
that behind the fierce Republican opposition to the the Koh and Johnsen
nominations is a desire to prevent the Obama Administration from revealing key torture memos. Senate
Republicans are now privately threatening to derail the confirmation of
key Obama administration nominees for top legal positions by linking
the votes to suppressing critical torture memos from the Bush era. A
reliable Justice Department source advises me that Senate Republicans
are planning to “go nuclear” over the nominations of Dawn Johnsen as
chief of the Office of Legal Counsel in the Department of Justice and
Yale Law School Dean Harold Koh as State Department legal counsel if
the torture documents are made public. The source says these threats
are the principal reason for the Obama administration’s abrupt pullback
last week from a commitment to release some of the documents. A
Republican Senate source confirms the strategy. It now appears that
Republicans are seeking an Obama commitment to safeguard the Bush
administration’s darkest secrets in exchange for letting these
nominations go forward.
The
interesting question is why Republican senators are so deeply
threatened by the additional confirmation that the United States
engaged in torture. It cannot be diplomatic embarrassment about the
names of the countries that cooperated; these can be redacted. It
cannot be the revelation of particular techniques; these have been
thoroughly vetted in the press in the past several years.
The
real resistance, it appears, is to the public disclosure of an official
government document approving specific techniques that amount to
torture. This degree of specificity and the government's request for
approval of specific techniques does not appear in the original torture
memos already released to the public. It is one thing to read a memo
reading the torture statute ridiculously narrowly; it is another to
read a memo stating that the OLC has been asked whether techniques X,
Y, and Z violate the criminal law and reaching the conclusion that the
law permits them or else the law is unconstitutional. Reading such
memos brings us much closer to a specific government order to engage in
torture.
Perhaps Senate Republicans and their allies they fear
that, if such documents ever came to light, pressure for public
investigations-- including a truth commission-- and even the
appointment of a non-partisan special prosecutor to investigate
possible criminal prosecutions would become inevitable.
Who
would be implicated in these investigations is an interesting question.
I doubt that it would solely be limited to Republican politicians. Many
important and influential people would no doubt be discomfited by the
launching of an investigation that actually named names.
There
is no guarantee that the release of these documents will strongly shift
public attitudes about investigations. Perhaps nothing will come of it;
perhaps the public will be far too distracted by the economic crisis to
demand further investigation. But apparently well-informed people do
not wish to take that risk.
As
soon as these investigations began, many politicians who now are trying
to prevent release of these torture memos would feel compelled to pick
sides. They could continue to denounce any investigations, no matter
how deserved, as partisan witch hunts. But this would be far more
difficult to do once these documents are available for the public to
read and are widely reported by the press. Or, they might feel
compelled, in order to protect their own political futures, to pile on
and denounce people they have been shielding for so long. They too,
will be shocked, shocked to discover that torture has been going on.
One
thing is clear. Astute politicians must have judged that the disclosure
of these torture memos may significantly change the stakes of politics.
They fear that these memos will have a powerful effect on public
opinion.
That, however, is another reason not to give into this
form of political blackmail against Koh and Johnsen and release the
memos immediately. Once these documents are released, it will be harder
to keep out of government people who have condemned torture and
illegality for a very long time.
Comments