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Vague Torture Guidelines Offer Little Hope

Suzanne Ito,
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July 20, 2007

President Bush Friday afternoon that outlines his administration's interpretation of . As the Supreme Court held last year, when it struck down another Bush policy on detainees, Common Article 3 applies to the treatment of Taliban and al Qaeda fighters.

The reaffirms what Bush laid out in the Military Commissions Act: the U.S. will conform to all statutes that prohibit "cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment." The new, nebulous guidelines prohibit "acts intended to denigrate the religion, religious practices, or religious objects of the individual" ( might fall in there) and acts that are "beyond the bounds of human decency, such as undertaken for the purpose of humiliation [like at Abu Ghraib, perhaps?]..."

The guidelines are still too vague. Does the CIA consider cruel and inhuman? You won't get an answer from the White House: it will neither confirm no deny that it tortures at all, much less give a straight answer as to which "interrogation techniques" are banned under this new order and which are still permitted. The that White House officials don't consider sleep a necessity, raising the question of whether the president is approving sleep deprivation.

But as ÀÏ°ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û senior legislative counsel Chris Anders points out, this executive order is "only as good as the people applying it. If any of the recent past presidents, Republican or Democrat, were applying this order, we wouldn't have any doubt that it means an end to torture and abuse by the CIA."

But President Bush? We're skeptical, to say the least.

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