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to the Convention and ICCPR made by the United States, indicating that it considers itself bound
by the prohibition of cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment only to the extent that it means the
cruel, unusual and inhumane treatment or punishment prohibited by the Fifth, Eighth and/or
Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States.47 In this regard, he would like
to recall the concerns of the relevant treaty bodies, which deplored the failure of the
United States to include a crime of torture consistent with the Convention definition in its
domestic legislation and the broadness of the reservations made by the United States.48
A. Lack of clarity/confusing rules
46.
Beginning in 2001, the Administration of the United States, while officially reiterating its
adherence to the absolute prohibition of torture,49 has put in place a number of policies that
effectively weaken the prohibition. A concrete example is the memorandum of 1 August 2002
from Jay S. Bybee, then Assistant Attorney-General for the Office of Legal Council at the
Department of Justice and now federal judge, to Alberto Gonzales, then Counsel to the President
of the United States and now Attorney-General, which attempts to significantly narrow the
definition of torture and claims that the necessity of self-defence can justify violations of the law
prohibiting the use of torture.50 The Special Rapporteur notes that, as indicated in the response
by the United States Government to the questionnaire of 21 October 2005, this memorandum
was superseded by a Department of Justice memorandum dated 30 December 2004.
47.
However, several subsequent internal Department of Defense memoranda have sought to
widen the boundaries of what is permissible in terms of “counter-resistance techniques” (see also
section B below). On 16 April 2003, a memorandum was issued, authorizing 24 specific
techniques. Its introduction states that “US Armed Forces shall continue to treat detainees
humanely and, to the extent appropriate and consistent with military necessity, in a manner
consistent with the principles of the Geneva Conventions.”51 This formulation is ambiguous in
that it implies that military necessity may override the principles of the Geneva Conventions. In
this context, the Special Rapporteur also notes that in its reply to the questionnaire the United
States exclusively uses the term “torture” and makes no reference to “cruel, inhuman and
degrading treatment and punishment”.
48.
The debate in the Senate on 5 October 2005 is telling.52 Senator McCain, describing the
confusion that exists regarding authorized and unauthorized interrogation techniques, said:
“What this also means is that confusion about the rules becomes rampant again. We have so
many differing legal standards and loopholes that our lawyers and generals are confused. Just
imagine our troops serving in prison in the field.”53 The Special Rapporteur welcomes that the
acceptance made on 15 December 2005 by President Bush of the McCain amendment to the
Department of Defense Appropriations Bill prohibiting cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment
or punishment (CIDT) with regard to persons kept in detention by the Department of Defense
and in the custody or control of the United States Government worldwide, thereby clarifying the
confusing rules and codifying the prohibition of CIDT.54 He also considers a significant
progress the failure of the attempts of Vice-President Cheney and CIA Director Goss to explicitly
exempt the CIA from the legal prohibition of CIDT.