Forget all the hoopla: George W. Bush is still going to have to issue a flurry of pardons at the end of his term. The White House and a group of dissident Republican senators led by John McCain of Arizona may have reached a compromise on how to authorize the CIA’s controversial interrogation tactics for captured terrorism suspects. But the hastily conceived legislation — like so much recent law expanding federal statutory authority — will likely fail to do what its shills and chief architects promise it will do: control the future excesses of CIA interrogators and provide CIA operatives with immunity for excesses committed between September 11, 2001 and the passage of this legislation. Under the bill, certain “extreme” tactics like sleep deprivation, forced hypothermia, and biological experiments would be outlawed — and rightfully so. But at the same time, the president would be given the authority to define what other coercive methods may be used, even if they conflict with the Geneva Conventions. This gaping hole in the legislation was carved out by the Bush administration and congressional negotiators in response to the Supreme Court’s June Hamdan opinion, in which the high court ruled that interrogators who violated international standards could be held accountable under domestic criminal law. As the Washington Post reported on September 25, presidential national-security adviser Stephen J. Hadley wanted to ensure that prosecution could be brought for future interrogations only, and even then only for the most clearly outrageous tactics.
But what about prosecutions for rough interrogations that occurred between 9/11 and the bill’s enactment? In August, “Freedom Watch” predicted Bush would have to rely on the presidential pardon to exonerate those officials and field operatives who tortured detainees at the behest of the Commander in Chief (“Pardons Are Forever,” News and Features, August 18). In the new “compromise” bill, there is enough ambiguity in the distinction between torture versus “merely coercive” techniques — neither the bill’s supporters nor critics can be certain, for example, whether “water-boarding” would be allowed or not — that CIA agents following the boss’s orders might still have reason to fear prosecution once a new administration takes office in January 2009. The president won’t be tossing away the pardon pen just yet.
After all, one of the hallmarks of modern-era federal criminal statutes is that ordinary people, often ordinary lawyers and judges, cannot figure out what is and is not a crime. The inability — or perhaps tactical unwillingness — of Congress to speak clearly plagues this legislation. Pardons remain Bush’s only surefire way to protect those who zealously, or at least dutifully, follow his more dubious orders.
Related:
Pardons are forever, Spy vs. Spy, Courting disaster, More
- Pardons are forever
Prediction: Before leaving office, President Bush will issue a shockingly large number of presidential pardons to operatives who, with the administration’s blessing, ventured far outside the law to wage Bush’s “war on terror.” Who might need - and get - a pardon?: Legal advisers, high-level officials, covert operatives. By Harvey Silverglate
- Spy vs. Spy
When Washington bigwigs want to dispose of a particularly nasty piece of trash, they break the news late in the day Friday.
- Courting disaster
With the price of food and gasoline running at punishing levels, it is no surprise that the economy has replaced the disastrous war in Iraq as the issue with which voters are most concerned.
- Faithless Rendition
It’s ironic, and probably auspicious for its box office, that Rendition comes out a week after the Supreme Court refused to hear the case of Khaled el-Masri.
- Fighting words
Imagine that suicide bombers have just blasted three American shopping malls.
- Taxi to the Dark Side
In 2002, an Afghani jitney driver named Dilawar took off with two customers and disappeared.
- Cheney's latest crime
As if there were any doubt, the latest CIA scandal once again reminds the nation that whatever former vice-president Dick Cheney touched turned to slime.
- Flashbacks: October 27, 2006
The Boston Phoenix has been covering the trends and events that shape our times since 1966. These selections, culled from our back files, were compiled by Dan Peleschuk, Ian Sands, and Eva Wolchover.
- Alito: public enemy
How much damage will a conservative Court do?
- What smell?
It’s always summer to George W. Bush, our lazy, hazy, crazy commander in chief who puts in shorter presidential work weeks than Woodrow Wilson did after he was paralyzed by a stroke.
- California’s shame
The politics of division as practiced by lame-duck president George W. Bush at the connivance of his onetime Svengali Karl Rove are not dead.
- Less

Topics:
This Just In
, Politics, U.S. Politics, George W. Bush, More
, Politics, U.S. Politics, George W. Bush, John McCain, Law, Espionage and Intelligence, Central Intelligence Agency, Criminal Law, torture, Stephen Hadley, Less