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Patrick Buchanan
Pat Buchanan
25 May 2012
The Unraveling Myth of Watergate

It was, they said, the crime of the century. An attempted coup d'etat by Richard Nixon, stopped by two … Read More.

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18 May 2012
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Among the more controversial chapters in "Suicide of a Superpower," my book published last fall, … Read More.

 The Get-Cheney Squad

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"Men sleep peacefully in their beds at night because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf."

George Orwell's truth comes to mind as one reads that Eric Holder has named a special prosecutor to go after the "rough men" who, to keep us sleeping peacefully at night, went too far in frightening Khalid Sheik Muhammad, the engineer of the September massacres.

Yet, it seems now indisputable that those CIA interrogators, with their rough methods, got vital intelligence that saved American lives, as Dick Cheney has consistently contended.

According to The Washington Times, which reviewed the newly declassified CIA documents, those interrogators "produced life-saving intelligence that disrupted numerous terrorist plots."

They elicited the names of al-Qaida agents who planned anthrax attacks on Westerners and a massive bombing of Camp Lemonier, the U.S. base in East Africa. They got the names of 70 recruits al-Qaida deemed "suitable for Western attacks" and of the men who made the bomb used on the U.S. consulate in Karachi.

Iyman Faris, an al-Qaeda sleeper agent and truck driver in Ohio, is serving 20 years because of information the CIA got from KSM and associates. Other operations aborted include al-Qaida "plots to fly airliners into buildings on the West Coast, setting off bombs in U.S. cities and planning to employ a network of Pakistanis to target gas stations, railroad tracks and the Brooklyn Bridge."

What were the "inhumane" techniques CIA interrogators used to uncover these plans for the mass murder of Americans?

"Interrogators lifted one detainee off the floor by his arms, while they were bound behind his back with a belt," reports The Washington Post. "Another interrogator used a stiff brush to clean a detainee, scrubbing so roughly that his legs were raw with abrasions. Another squeezed a detainee's neck at his carotid artery until he began to pass out."

The CIA, we are told, used mock executions to frighten captives and threatened to kill KSM's children and rape his mother. Power drills were brandished in interrogation rooms.

Were any children killed? No. Was anyone's mother raped? No. Was the power drill used? No.

Was anyone executed in front of a witness to make him talk? No. It was faked, as Sean Connery faked it in "The Untouchables" to get an underling to blab to Eliot Ness, aka Kevin Costner, about how he could take down Al Capone's mob.

As for threatening to kill the children of our enemies, we did not do that in "The Good War." Instead, what we did was kill them in the thousands every night in air raids over Germany and Japan.

In the Tokyo firestorm of February 1945, the Dresden raid in March, and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August, we killed grandparents, mothers, fathers, wives, sisters, daughters and sons of the enemy in the scores of thousands on each of those days.

Can it be that the same United States that honored Col.

Paul Tibbets and put his Enola Gay, which dropped the bomb on Hiroshima, on display in its Air and Space Museum is going to prosecute a CIA agent for faking an execution and threatening, but never intending, to kill the children of Khalid Sheik Muhammad?

Why is Barack Obama allowing these prosecutions to proceed?

In 2004, career lawyers at Justice looked over the same reports and concluded that prosecutions would not serve the national interest. Obama has himself said he wants to move on.

Now, he and Holder may not like what was done back then, but who does? And where is the criminal intent? These agents are not sadists. They were trying to get intel to abort plots and apprehend terrorists to prevent them from killing us. And they succeeded. Not a single terrorist attack on the United States in eight years.

Do we the people, some of whom may be alive because of what those CIA men did, want them disgraced, prosecuted and punished for not going strictly by the book in protecting us from terrorists?

In its lead editorial Tuesday, "Following the Torture Trail," The Washington Post declaims, "The real culprits in this sordid story are the higher-ups, starting with former President George W. Bush and former Vice President Richard Cheney who led America down the degraded path of state-sponsored torture."

But why is Obama yielding to the clamor of a left that will not be satiated until Cheney and Bush are indicted as Class A war criminals? Is that in the national interest? Is it in Obama's interest to tear his country apart to expose and punish these CIA agents?

In the 1960s, Robert Kennedy and the boys at Justice set up a "Get Hoffa Squad" to take down Teamsters boss Jimmy Hoffa. It was a vendetta that succeeded.

This vendetta will not. For, on the issue of national security, as Barack will painfully discover, he is not more trusted than Dick Cheney or the rough men at the CIA who did the harsh interrogations of terrorists, to keep us sleeping peacefully at night.

Patrick Buchanan is the author of the new book "Churchill, Hitler and 'The Unnecessary War." To find out more about Patrick Buchanan, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 CREATORS.COM


Comments

5 Comments | Post Comment
I follow Pat Buchanan's thought train very closely on many topics (his book "Churchill, Hitler and the Unnecessary War" is brilliantly done - which means, I suppose, that I agree with him), but the logic of allowing men and women to torture those suspected of wrongdoing is a very slippery slope. So, I have to disagree with Pat on this column.

For the record, since Pat brought up the topic of Paul Tibbets, history will show that the dropping of the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki was needless and wanton killing of civilians. Tibbets died this past summer, and no one suggested that he be held responsible.

Holder's work will not fix the past. What it will do is let those in charge know that - like the Nuremberg findings - one can still be held accountable for one's actions, even if just following orders.

The Global War on Terror was stupid policy, stupidly carried out. The invasion of Iraq was stupid policy, stupidly carried out. I'm no genius, but I'm starting to detect a trend here.

I want to know how far up the chain of command that Holder gets. I - and many who think like me - will be watching.

Good luck to him on that.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Jim Szpajcher
Fri Aug 28, 2009 1:31 PM
Buchanan: Your casuistry is beyond equal. These "tough good men" won't seem so when they come after you!!
Comment: #2
Posted by: alf1052
Fri Aug 28, 2009 2:14 PM
What Buchanan is saying is that the ends justifies the means. I assume Buchanan is an atheist and not a Christian, perhaps he believes in Eugenics too. Jesus told us to love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you (Luke 6). In Romans Paul tells us if your enemy is hungry, feed him; if thirsty, give him drink. In doing this, you will heap burning coals on his head." Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good. If we are truly a Christian God fearing nation, why should we do something contrary to Jesus' teachings? If we resort to torture wouldn't Muslim extremists simply see us as con-artists, not really practicing what we believe? Here in this instances, it's even sadder. Giving in to torture, we kill our ideals, who we are, what we are supposed to represent to the rest of the world.
Comment: #3
Posted by: CJ
Sat Aug 29, 2009 2:55 AM
There are about 4 million Iraqis out there whose lives were utterly ruined by Cheney's lying scheme to get even with whatever that phantom is he struggles with every night as he tries to sleep. Somebody should ask them what they think Cheney deserves. Too bad we can't ask the tens of thousands of Iraqis who were outright killed.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Masako
Sat Aug 29, 2009 9:18 AM
Mr. Buchanan - I must disagree with your column, for although you made some good points, it somewhat sounds like a justification for war ... or wars. And I know that you were against our neocon aggression stratgeies. When we invade AND torture, I think we are creating more problems for years to come. You know this better than I do. Torture may work at times, but in the end, at most times, a one-sided transaction nearly always comes to bite you in the you-know-what. All of the issues we are facing in the Middle East are perfect examples. So, I'd love to see you again tell everyone that unnecessary aggression never pays off, that improving economic relations will help both sides, that why should we care what they do as long as it doesn't impact US (don't confuse with israel) and we can maintain a healthy current and long-term trade and economic relationship? These are simple questions with very simple answers. Unfortunately, some are portraying themselves as experts and while charging the govt $250 per hour for consultation, they also help make sure the govt gives at least $4bil in free money and even more in weapons to israel. For what???? ... who knows!
Comment: #5
Posted by: Ali Mogharabi
Thu Sep 3, 2009 12:44 AM
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