When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean - neither more nor less." So said Humpty Dumpty to a bewildered Alice in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass. It appears that Dick Cheney believes exactly the same thing as he continues to redefine reality in order to exonerate himself for his war crimes. In an interview with the Mooney Times, Cheney says that waterboarding is not torture because they got lawyers to tell them it wasn't:
"I think there were a total of about 33 who were subjected to enhanced interrogation; only three of those who were subjected to waterboarding," Cheney told the paper, according to a transcript released by the Vice President's office Monday. "Was it torture? I don't believe it was torture. We spent a great deal of time and effort getting legal advice, legal opinion out of the Office of Legal Counsel, which is where you go for those kinds of opinions, from the Department of Justice as to where the red lines were out there in terms of this you can do, this you can't do. The CIA handled itself, I think, very appropriately."
I suppose, then, that Cheney thinks the United States should apologize to all those Japanese and German soldiers we convicted of war crimes for waterboarding during WW2? And to those American soldiers we've convicted of doing the same thing? Of course not. This new definition applies only to what he does, not to what others do. When others do it, it's torture; when we do it, it's okay. We're America and we don't do bad things, so when we do the things that others do that we call bad, they're not bad when we do them. QED.
But look at what Judge Evan Wallach, one of the nation's foremost experts in the laws of war and a former JAG officer, wrote a year ago:
The United States knows quite a bit about waterboarding. The U.S. government -- whether acting alone before domestic courts, commissions and courts-martial or as part of the world community -- has not only condemned the use of water torture but has severely punished those who applied it.After World War II, we convicted several Japanese soldiers for waterboarding American and Allied prisoners of war. At the trial of his captors, then-Lt. Chase J. Nielsen, one of the 1942 Army Air Forces officers who flew in the Doolittle Raid and was captured by the Japanese, testified: "I was given several types of torture. . . . I was given what they call the water cure." He was asked what he felt when the Japanese soldiers poured the water. "Well, I felt more or less like I was drowning," he replied, "just gasping between life and death."
Nielsen's experience was not unique. Nor was the prosecution of his captors. After Japan surrendered, the United States organized and participated in the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, generally called the Tokyo War Crimes Trials. Leading members of Japan's military and government elite were charged, among their many other crimes, with torturing Allied military personnel and civilians. The principal proof upon which their torture convictions were based was conduct that we would now call waterboarding....
As a result of such accounts, a number of Japanese prison-camp officers and guards were convicted of torture that clearly violated the laws of war. They were not the only defendants convicted in such cases. As far back as the U.S. occupation of the Philippines after the 1898 Spanish-American War, U.S. soldiers were court-martialed for using the "water cure" to question Filipino guerrillas.
More recently, waterboarding cases have appeared in U.S. district courts. One was a civil action brought by several Filipinos seeking damages against the estate of former Philippine president Ferdinand Marcos. The plaintiffs claimed they had been subjected to torture, including water torture. The court awarded $766 million in damages, noting in its findings that "the plaintiffs experienced human rights violations including, but not limited to . . . the water cure, where a cloth was placed over the detainee's mouth and nose, and water producing a drowning sensation."
In 1983, federal prosecutors charged a Texas sheriff and three of his deputies with violating prisoners' civil rights by forcing confessions. The complaint alleged that the officers conspired to "subject prisoners to a suffocating water torture ordeal in order to coerce confessions. This generally included the placement of a towel over the nose and mouth of the prisoner and the pouring of water in the towel until the prisoner began to move, jerk, or otherwise indicate that he was suffocating and/or drowning."
The four defendants were convicted, and the sheriff was sentenced to 10 years in prison.
If only Emperor Hirohito had taken the time to open an Office of Legal Counsel and paid lawyers to tell him it was okay, he could use this excuse too.

Ed Brayton is a journalist, commentator and speaker. He is the co-founder and president of 



Comments
And it means what I think it means. And it means it whether I pronounce it correctly or not. And if there's any doubt about what it means, I'll change my deshishon and change the meaning later. And when we put a bunch of words together, the possibilities of re-meaning them are multiplied according to this completely true theorem:
M = (W*D/P)* V
where M is Meaning, W is words, D is Desire, P is Political Value, and V is a Variable, which Arthur Laffer has taught us, is "some other thing we haven't thought of at the moment, but that will change the outcome in our favor".
And if that doesn't work out, we'll just make our own reality. Why not? We made our own constitution.
ice
Posted by: ice9 | December 29, 2008 9:51 AM
Humpty-Dumpty: An inspired analogy.
Ice9, I think you mean to multiply by Political Value, not divide. (Then again, building formulas isn't my strong point.)
I think the key cognitive error of Cheney/Bush is that they think who they are determines the quality of their actions, rather than vice-versa. Because they're "good people," the actions they take are necessarily good. And they cannot conceive that a stronger argument exists that because their actions are bad they are necessarily bad people.
Posted by: James Hanley | December 29, 2008 10:12 AM
Not ignoring institutionalized hypocrisy? You're getting very close to being an America Hating Atheist Commie Lib Muslim, Ed.
Posted by: tincture | December 29, 2008 10:12 AM
Cheney's modified Nuremberg Defense:
"I was just following my lawyer's orders". =DJ
Posted by: DingoJack | December 29, 2008 10:26 AM
Ed: I think you mean Tojo, not Hirohito. Still, good nab.
I'm curious if Justice Jackson had anything to say about Legal Positivism as a defense during the Nuremberg trials? Because that is all that Cheney is asserting, that a memorandum saying an act is legal makes it legal. He is mistaken.
Someone with better research skills shoul look that up!
Posted by: kehrsam | December 29, 2008 10:42 AM
Also, if you stack the Office of Legal Counsel with people who know what you want to hear and are hellbent on finding a way to make sure you hear it, how much weight can really be given to the OLC's opinions?
Posted by: Dave | December 29, 2008 10:52 AM
With every act he makes and nearly every word he utters, he paints himself as ever more despicable. Bushisms are just the stupid showing through. Cheneyisms are the mean and crazy jumping out.
Posted by: Mike | December 29, 2008 12:20 PM
And of course, trying to prosecute them for war crimes when they leave office would just be "vindictive and petty".
Posted by: Hayate Yagami | December 29, 2008 1:17 PM
What convoluted logic! It's truly incredible how Cheney can spout this kind of garbage with a straight face and fully expect to be believed. What Darth Cheney didn't mention was that waterboarding has been suspended, a tacit admission of it's illegality.
Posted by: Raymond Minton | December 29, 2008 4:02 PM
The man is so full of shit I'm surprised he doesn't burst. I noticed he failed to mention how the White House replaced the OLC head who subjected himself to waterboarding and other "enhanced interrogations" and found that they could constituted torture with someone who was put on probationary status until he enthusiastically gave the green light to torture away, at which point he became full time OLC head.
Posted by: Hume's Ghost | December 29, 2008 5:55 PM
Daniel Levin was the acting OLC, and Steven Bradbury is the one who reissued torture authorizations for those curious.
Posted by: Hume's Ghost | December 29, 2008 6:00 PM
This pathetic excuse for a human being sent all our people to Iraq, mostly assuage his guilt about being a draft dodging coward....
He is forgotton
Posted by: frank | December 29, 2008 6:30 PM
Nixon once said that something is not illegal when the president does it.
So why are any of you surprised?
Posted by: Alchemist | December 29, 2008 9:04 PM
Because Nixon was wrong. And we foolishly thought that everyone other than Nixon knew that.
Of course Cheney got his start via the Nixonians.
Posted by: James Hanley | December 29, 2008 9:45 PM
cheney is a little mam with a complex like hitler and should be tried as a war criminal by the world court and hung as they did at neuremburg. he is evil, and could have served in vietnam, but had cowardly opted out, just like bush who should recieve the same.
Posted by: andy girouard | December 30, 2008 2:16 PM
frank:
This pathetic excuse for a human being sent all our people to Iraq, mostly assuage his guilt about being a draft dodging coward....
I'm not sure what inspired Vice President Real President's behavior during 'Nam, but consider this well-known tidbit:
"When Cheney became eligible for the draft, during the Vietnam War, he was a supporter of the U.S. involvement in the war but did not serve in the military. Instead, he applied for and received five draft deferments. In 1989, The Washington Post writer, George C. Wilson, interviewed Cheney as the next Secretary of Defense; when asked about his deferments, Cheney reportedly said, 'I had other priorities in the '60s than military service.'"
(Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Cheney , quoting E.J. Dionne Jr.,"Murtha and the Mudslingers", The Washington Post, 1/17/06)
Five deferments. Five.
Look, my Dad volunteered to go into the Army during World War 2 and did so despite being rejected on his first attempt because of severe (but correctable) nearsightedness. And this asshat gets to send troops out to die and get maimed on false pretenses in Iraq after safely sitting out an earlier war because he had "other priorities in the 60's"?
The word "reprehensible" isn't strong enough.
Posted by: Chris Krolczyk | December 30, 2008 5:59 PM