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Conservative Leninists and the War on Terror

One long-standing hallmark of Western conservative thought is the emphasis on the rule of law.  Earlier generations of conservatives understood that, without such constraints, liberty would be imperiled and a free society would ultimately descend into tyranny.  As Lord Acton observed, “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”  Even during the 20th century, most conservatives were wary of unfettered pragmatism, and they viewed with horror the assertion of Vladimir Lenin and his communist followers that the end justifies the means.  To the contrary, conservatives stressed that even when the goals were worthy, the use of unconstitutional, illegal, or immoral means was not justified.

In recent years, though, a troubling number of prominent figures on the political right have seemingly abandoned that standard, especially with respect to national-security issues.  Instead, their sole guiding principle appears to be whether an initiative “works”—in the sense of producing the desired result.  Whether that initiative violates fundamental constitutional or moral standards is seen as irrelevant and, frankly, a somewhat quaint consideration.  By embracing ruthless pragmatism, these individuals come perilously close to being conservative Leninists.

Signs of such attitudes began to surface during the Cold War, and they were among the reasons why I left Young Americans for Freedom, the Young Republicans, and other conservative organizations.  Increasingly, I heard the argument that, because America confronted a dangerous, ruthless, and evil adversary, our country could not be squeamish about the tactics used to thwart that threat.  The policies U.S. officials pursued reflected a willingness to cut moral and legal corners to achieve the broader objective.  The cynical military coups that the Eisenhower administration executed to topple democratic, albeit left-leaning, governments in Iran and Guatemala were international manifestations of this attitude.  So, too, were lucrative military- and economic-aid programs to some of the most odious dictators on the planet, including Mobutu Sese Seko in Zaire, the shah of Iran, Nicaragua’s Anastasio Somoza, and Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines.  Domestically, most conservatives seemed comfortable with government programs that spied on, and even harassed, critics of U.S. foreign policy.

That tendency to disregard legal and moral considerations has resurfaced and become even more virulent in conservative political and policy circles regarding counterterrorism measures since the September 11 attacks.  In a series of memos to the President (the most infamous one being the August 1, 2002, “torture memo”) conservative legal scholars John Yoo and Jay Bybee, at the time lawyers for the Department of Justice, made sweeping assertions about presidential authority to wage the “War on Terror.”  Among other arguments, Yoo and Bybee contended that “enhanced interrogation techniques” (a term that was little more than a euphemism for torture) were not barred by the U.S. Constitution, treaties the United States had signed, or any federal statute.  Indeed, any congressional act that purported to limit the president’s power in that area would be invalid.

More broadly, Yoo and Bybee adopted a breathtaking interpretation of presidential power in the arena of national security.  Among other steps, they argued, the president could order the indefinite detention of any terrorist suspect—even a U.S. citizen arrested on U.S. soil—without a trial or even an evidentiary hearing.

How far John Yoo was willing to go in placing the president beyond any legal restraints became apparent in a December 2005 debate with a critic of the Bush administration’s policies.  When asked whether a president could order that the testicles of a suspected terrorist’s child be crushed in order to pressure the father, Yoo astonishingly declined to condemn such an outrageous idea as legally and morally offensive.  Instead he replied, “I think it depends on why the President thinks he needs to do that.”

The Bush administration sought to put most of the recommendations of the Yoo-Bybee memos into practice.  This is troubling on several counts.  The Geneva Conventions prohibit not only torture but, in equally categorical terms, the use of “violence,” “cruel treatment,” or even “humiliating or degrading treatment” of detainees.  Moreover, the War Crimes Act of 1996 made any grave breach of these prohibitions a felony.  A number of interrogation techniques that the Bush administration approved, most notably waterboarding and extended sleep deprivation, were rather clear violations.  The August 2002 memo even approved any CIA enhanced-interrogation technique that did not lead to organ failure or other severe, permanent physical damage.

David Addington, the general counsel in Vice President Dick Cheney’s office, chafed at legal restrictions because in his view they would hobble efforts “to quickly [sic] obtain information from captured terrorists.”  Addington strongly endorsed the most radical claim in the August 2002 memo: that the president could authorize any interrogation method.  Treaties, and even U.S. laws, forbidding “any person” to commit torture simply did “not apply” to the commander in chief, he argued.

In a May 2009 speech to the American Enterprise Institute, Cheney himself embraced such reasoning and vehemently defended the record of the Bush administration on pragmatic grounds: “In the years after 9/11, our government also understood that the safety of the country required collecting information known only to the worst of the terrorists.”  And in some cases, “that information could be gained only through tough interrogations.”  The intelligence officers “who questioned the terrorists can be proud of their work and proud of the results, because they prevented the violent death of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of innocent people.”  A bold claim, and one that former CIA director George Tenet had made previously: “I know that this program has saved lives.  I know we’ve disrupted plots.”

Cheney’s dismissive attitude toward criticism of the policies on moral or legal grounds was especially unsettling.  He recounted that one high-level Al Qaeda operative had said that he would talk as soon as he got to the United States and saw his lawyer.  “But like many critics of interrogations,” Cheney sneered, “he clearly misunderstood the business at hand.  American personnel were not there to commence an elaborate legal proceeding, but to extract information from him before al-Qaeda could strike again and kill more of our people.”

Other conservative figures echoed Cheney’s condemnation of moves by the Obama administration to investigate whether unlawful abuses of detainees had taken place.  House Republican leader John Boehner stated,

Our intelligence professionals have done a marvelous job keeping us safe.  Faced with threats never before seen in our history, they have provided our troops with crucial information they need to fight our enemies abroad and protect our citizens at home.  They deserve our gratitude . . .

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell was even more succinct: “I think it’s important to remember, from 9/11 until the end of the Bush administration, not another single attack on the U.S. homeland.  We were obviously doing something right.”

Conservative pundits likewise lined up behind the proposition that it was unpatriotic even to advocate an investigation into whether government employees may have violated the law and committed acts of torture.  Syndicated columnist Cal Thomas argued that the Bush administration’s approach clearly had been successful, and he scorned Obama and others who worried that the tactics may have violated fundamental American values: “History will show that this approach protected our ‘values’ against those who would destroy them.”  The American Enterprise Institute’s Reuel Marc Gerecht, though, made the most blatant Leninist defense.  Writing in the Wall Street Journal, he stated,

Regardless of whether one believes CIA-inflicted waterboarding, sleep deprivation or severe psychological coercion (suggesting that harm could come to a family member of a taciturn al Qaeda detainee) constitute torture, such actions may have produced an intelligence bonanza and saved thousands of lives.

A striking feature of the defense that Cheney and his ideological allies have put forth is the avoidance of any serious discussion of whether the measures were illegal and/or immoral.  Moreover, there is almost no willingness to address the point that at least some of the accused terrorists held at the Guantanamo Bay detention center and overseas facilities were innocent.  Indeed, the term “accused terrorists” is never used.  Proponents of enhanced-interrogation techniques invariably describe detainees as “captured terrorists” or simply “terrorists,” as though the guilt of every single individual were beyond dispute.

Yet that notion defies credulity.  There were several thousand people captured in Afghanistan, Iraq, and other locations.  The Guantanamo facility held more than 775 detainees at the peak, and many more were held at Abu Ghraib and various CIA “black sites” overseas.  Even assuming that CIA, FBI, and military personnel were scrupulous in trying to establish the guilt of individuals they captured, it is a certainty that some innocent people were caught up in the sweep.  Indeed, given the bitter clan and tribal rivalries in Afghanistan, and the equally bitter Sunni-Shiite-Kurdish animosity in Iraq, it is highly probable that a sizable number of parties were accused by personal or ideological enemies, even when they had no connection to Al Qaeda.

It is difficult enough to accept the reality that U.S. personnel committed acts of torture, even against bona fide terrorists.  But it is appalling that some of the people deprived of their liberty for months, and in some cases years, without trial—and subjected to torture—were in fact innocent.  Yet approximately 50 percent of the inmates held by the U.S. military at Abu Ghraib were ultimately released without being prosecuted.  A number of detainees at Guantanamo have likewise been quietly released.  In both cases, the implicit admission is that they were not terrorists.

The “ends justifies the means” defense of the Bush administration’s War on Terror tactics proves faulty even on its own terms.  Contrary to the assertion by proponents of enhanced-interrogation techniques, there is serious doubt about their effectiveness.  In his AEI speech, as on so many other occasions, Cheney failed to provide specifics about terrorist attacks that were foiled or to offer any evidence that those techniques saved thousands, much less hundreds of thousands, of lives.

Moreover, several former officials with experience in interrogation have disputed the claims that significant amounts of valuable information were obtained.  Even the validity of information provided by high-level Al Qaeda operative Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the veritable poster boy for the effectiveness of torture, is now uncertain.  As reported by Vanity Fair, one former senior CIA official, who read all of the interrogation reports on Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, concluded that “90 percent of it was f--king bullsh-t.”  Former CIA officer Robert Baer makes the obvious point that “you can get anyone to confess to anything if the torture is bad enough.”

Even worse, there are indications that such harsh tactics have made the overall terrorist threat worse.  Matthew Alexander, the senior interrogator in Iraq on a task force charged with finding Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, made a most sobering observation in The Daily Beast:

I listened time and time again to captured foreign fighters cite the torture at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo as their main reason for coming to Iraq to fight.  Consider that 90 percent of the suicide bombers in Iraq are those foreign fighters, and you can easily conclude that we have lost hundreds, if not thousands of American lives because of our policy of torture and abuse.

Fortunately, not all conservatives have succumbed to the temptation to disregard moral and legal constraints on the grounds that terrorism poses a serious threat to the well-being of the American people.  Testifying before the House Committee on Armed Services, former State Department official William H. Taft IV, grandson of Robert A. Taft, the leading conservative political figure of his era, provided a reminder of the importance of adhering to principle in troubling times: “It is when we are enraged—when our blood boils—that we most need to adhere to the rule of law as we have established it, not change it to suit our convenience.”  That is an appropriate rebuke to Dick Cheney, John Yoo, and other conservatives who seem all too willing to embrace Leninist tactics.

This article first appeared in the February 2010 issue of Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture.


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11 Responses »

  1. Gerecht's "conjectural bonanza" argument also justifies our practice of pre-emptively incinerating innocent herdsmen and their families from the sky. You got to cut some beets to make borscht, right?

  2. As in all else, the policy of "the end justifies the means" became prevailing U.S. government policy with Lincoln. Any manner of immoral, cruel, and dishonest acts were justified in "preserving the Union."

  3. Differnce between Cheney and Oliver North is that in the case of the latter at least we knew why and it made some sense.

  4. There's a reason I've referred to these establishment "conservatives" as Neo-Trots and Busheviks for some time now. There's nothing really conservative about them in the traditional meaning of the term. They're really believers in the same utopian gnosticism - achieved via the power of the almighty state - that Leninists, Stalinists, Maoists and other assorted Marxists are. "Conservative Leninists" also works pretty well as a description of their real nature.

    Our native Neo-Trots (Frum, Gerecht & Co.) and Busheviks have a slightly different program for bringing about heaven on earth: endless wars to make the Umma safe for feminism, sodomy and Wall Street bankstas. This is done in the name of "national security" of course. The interesting thing to note is the complete disappearance of the formerly loud sector on the left that was ostensibly against the imperial wars. Now that their Mau-Mau Messiah is seated atop the Cherry-Blossom throne, the ongoing wars are suddenly just and necessary. One half of our bi-factional ruling cartel tends towards massive Soviet-style statism while the other half favors the the same thing with a thin veneer of free enterprise and faux-patriotism. Old George Wallace told the truth decades ago: "There's not a dime's worth of difference."

  5. A sobering essay. Thank you Mr. Carpenter.

  6. I would like to thank Clyde Wilson for laying bare the root. The sacrifice of 500,000 young men "to preserve the union" qualifies as a national abomination, a founding evil. That Abraham Lincoln has been yoked with George Washington for generations in the shared sensibilities of America is a national disgrace, is an indelible reproach to the art of history, and has left our country with a withered leg.
    There can be no restoration until that idol has been toppled.
    Thank you Professor Wilson, may you prosper in wisdom and courage, and God bless you.

  7. I understood the argument for torture of terrorists to be that the terrorists are in a category of being a danger to society far worse than criminals, and therefore the ethics for dealing with terrorists, are not the same as the ethics for dealing with criminals. I don't think those who favor using torture would argue "the ends justifies the means", but rather argue for what is ethical in dealing with terrorists. Those in favor of using torture may argue that this is a new historical situation for the U.S. for which the U.S. is working out new ethics.

    The argument for capital punishment is that some criminals are a danger to society, and should be executed in order to defend society. However, John Paul II wrote that execution is only appropriate "in cases of absolute necessity, in other words, when it would not be possible otherwise to defend society. Today, however, as a result of steady improvement in the organization of the penal system, such cases are very rare, if not practically nonexistent."

    In working out a new ethics for dealing with terrorists, those arguing for the use of torture of terrorists in order to defend society may keep in mind that terrorists are persons endowed by God with the dignity of being created in God's image and of being redeemed by God.

    Are terrorists still a danger to society once they are imprisoned?

  8. "I understood the argument for torture of terrorists to be that the terrorists are in a category of being a danger to society far worse than criminals"

    There is no argument for torturing "terrorists". The argument is in favor of torturing persons whom the government *accuses* of being terrorists, which is also - by definition - an argument in favor of torturing innocent persons *suspected* of terrorism.

    Either way, torture - of anyone - by the U.S. government is illegal, and our laws mandate prosecution of alleged torturers.

  9. That the morality of torture (an ugly word beneath which uglier reality hides)remains, must remain, under discussion testifies to what happens when Uncle Sugar's excellent bureaucrats have defecated into the well.
    What is important to remember is that torture requires more than a victim, the justice of whose cruel deserts are indeed not so easily settled. It requires the whole shebang of enlightened administration from the Oval Office right on down to the god fearing family man who turns the radio up, strips, wakes up, dresses in women's underwear, slaps around, waterboards, humiliates, and otherwise destroys the will of the 'monster' he has been given to tame. It is nice work if you can take it.
    What I personally cannot fathom is why, after such an excellent piece of work has been done, the victim is not dragged through the streets of Washington so that everyone can enjoy what degradation looks like.

  10. "Those in favor of using torture may argue that this is a new historical situation for the U.S. for which the U.S. is working out new ethics."
    The purpose of torture has always been to get to the truth. The rack, the screw, the dunk tank- -- all of these ancient mechanical practices were designed to arrive at a true confession from the suspect. Our civilization has from time to time attempted to revive the old practice but has normally given it up after realizing that folks having a limb twisted nearly off or gasping for air between water dunks, are likely to say or do anything to get some relief. The investigative method becomes exposed again for what it is --unreliable and is then soon abandoned. We Catholics have sat through endless hours of history classes listening to some old bag who knew nothing of our Holy Religion drone on endlessly about the ruthlessness of our old Church torturing and killing its way to power etc. etc.. Never satisfying its lust for cruelty until the populace could no longer tolerate it, banned together, revolted, killed all the evil doers and priests, banished religion from public discourse and having lived enlightened and civilized lives ever since etc.. I simply see in this recent renewal and thirst for human cruelty and torture by the now "enlightened ones" simply another lesson in historical fairy tales which they embraced the last time.

  11. Our culture used to be based on the thinking of men like William Blackstone, the 17th-Century English judge who said, "Better that ten guilty persons escape than that one innocent suffer."

    Now, instead, we have would-be opinion leaders who would check "fully agree" to this question on the questionnaire:

    "Better that a thousand innocent men should die than to leave one guilty man alive"

    - Feliks Dzerzhinsky

    Leninists indeed.