Citizen G'kar: Musings on Earth

December 15, 2005

House Supports Ban on Torture

It all sounds good, but there is a big loophole. This legislation is not legally binding. And it endorses the Field Manual. That Field Manual has an proposed addendum circulating that authorizing torture the US has been routinely using.
Washington Post
The vote specifically instructed House negotiators to include McCain's language, word for word, in the fiscal 2006 defense appropriations bill, a decision that is not binding but carries significant political weight. The House also supported a McCain provision that would require officials in any Defense Department detention facility to follow the interrogation standards in the Army's field manual on interrogations. That manual is currently being revised.


The vote sends a clear signal to the Bush administration that both chambers of Congress support the anti-torture legislation and want the government to adopt guidelines that aim to prevent damage to the U.S. image abroad. The White House has been aggressively pushing to create exceptions for CIA operatives and to water down McCain's language to keep it from limiting interrogators' options. But it appears that the administration and House Republican leaders lost some leverage yesterday.

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