Another great moment in Congressional history. This time from a recent House Foreign Affairs subcommittee hearing on "extraordinary rendition" that heard evidence from members of the European Parliament.
California's Dana Rohrabacher (GOP) dismisses opposition to the US policy of "extraordinary rendition" and says that if you find this policy distasteful "Well, I hope it’s your families, I hope it’s your families that suffer the consequences."
There is, naturally, more:
One person — if we let, if in order to protect the rights of one or two people, or five people or ten people, who are mistakenly abducted because their names were the same or because they went to a mosque that they didn’t know this thing was going on in the back room, if 10 of those people suffer those consequences, but in order for us to take 90 other people off the street who are intent and involved in plans that would slaughter tens of thousands of our citizens, I’m afraid that’s the price we pay in a real world. And the United States, we’re not ghouls. We’re not, we don’t, we’re not, we don’t want to torture somebody because he has a bad name. We want to get information from somebody that we think might want to kill our children and kill your children. And if you doubt our motives, you’re welcome to, I know there’s a lot of people who hate America, but when the pressure’s on, quite frankly, we have known all along that at times America has to go it alone, and people will try to find fault with us rather than trying to at least understand our morality.
Let us leave the morality or seemliness of this argument aside, for one moment. Those who favour despatching suspects to Syrian or Egyptian torture chambers are unlikely to be swayed by protestations that this brings shame upon the United States. After all, when times are tough a man's gotta do what a man's gotta do...
But the policy isn't just wrong in principle it's wrong in practice too. Though prospects for the liberalisation of the middle east look gloomier now than they did in the heady days of Lebanon's "Cedar Spring" (days which prompted even The Independent to splash with "What if Bush Was Right?") it remains the case that the most - indeed almost the sole remaining - element of the Bush administration's rationale for toppling Saddam was the belief that the long-term causes of resentment and extremism in the middle east could only be solved, or at least tempered, by political and economic liberalisation.
In speech after speech Mr Bush and Dr Rice insisted that the old days of favouring "stability" and propping up tyrants were over. Fine words, indeed, that allowed for the risky but refreshing gamble that though elections might empower extremists in the short-term, the long-term prospects for a safer, less feverish Middle East were enhanced by this process even if, as I say, it might actually lead to an increase in risk for the United States in the short to medium term.
Alas, "extraordinary rendition" reveals that this was just rhetoric. More fool me, I suppose, for hoping it might have amounted to something more substantial. People in the Middle East aren't stupid. They can see that an administration notionally dedicated to advancing opportunity is still asking dictators to do its dirty work for them. That being so, why should they draw anything other than the darkest conclusions from anything the President or Secretary of State says?
Remarkably, then, the "extraordinary rendition" (which has not, mind you, been so very extra-ordinary at all) undermines and refutes stated US policy. Are you with us or against us? Well, in key instances we know that the US is still in bed with the very people it argues are a root cause of the problem its other policies are trying to address. Ah yes, joined-up government...
Eliminating "extraordinary rendition" would not change everything overnight, of course. But this policy has been a disaster, in theory and in practice. It has dishonoured Washington while failing to advance US strategic interests an inch; indeed, quite the contrary, it has helped set US ambitions back.
There's plenty to dislike about the attitudes towards the US one sees in many European capitals these days. But this administration has brought much of this upon itself. No wonder it's pretty lonely being an Atlanticist these days.
[Hat tip: Think Progress]
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