A Shameful Day to Be a US Citizen
by aletho
AG Holder promises Russia not to torture Snowden
By Dave Lindorff | This Can't Be Happening | July 27th, 2013
I
have been deeply ashamed of my country a number of times. The Nixon
Christmas bombing of Hanoi and Haiphong was one such time, when
hospitals, schools and dikes were targeted. The invasion of Iraq was
another. Washington’s silence over the fatal Israeli Commando raid on
the Gaza Peace Flotilla–in which a 19-year-old unarmed American boy was
murdered–was a third. But I think I have never been as ashamed and
disgusted as I was today reading that US Attorney General Eric Holder
had sent a letter to the Russian minister of justice saying that the US
would “not seek the death penalty” in its espionage case against
National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden, promising that
even if the US later brought added charges against Snowden after
obtaining him, they would not include any death penalty, and vowing that
if Snowden were handed over by Russia to the US, he would “not be
tortured.”
So
it has come to this: That the United States has to promise (to Russia!)
that it will not torture a prisoner in its control — a US citizen at
that — and so therefore that person, Edward Snowden, has no basis for
claiming that he should be “treated as a refugee or granted asylum.”
Why does Holder have to make these pathetic representations to his counterpart in Russia?
Because
Snowden has applied for asylum saying that he is at risk of torture or
execution if returned to the US to face charges for leaking documents
showing that the US government is massively violating the civil
liberties and privacy of every American by monitoring every American’s
electronic communications.
Snowden
has made that claim in seeking asylum because he knows that another
whistleblower, Pvt. Bradley Manning, was in fact tortured by the US for
months, and held without trial in solitary confinement for over a year
before being finally put on trial in a kangaroo court, where the judge
is as much prosecutor as jurist, and where his guilt was declared in
advance by the President of the United States — the same president who
has also already publicly declared Snowden guilty too.
It
is incredibly shameful that we US citizens have to admit that we live
in a country that tortures its prisoners, that casually executes people
who are mentally retarded, who are innocent, who had defense attorneys
who slept through their clients’ trials, whose prosecutors slept with
the judge, who were denied access to DNA evidence that could have proven
their innocence, or who were convicted based upon the lies of
prosecutors and prosecution witnesses.
This
country’s “justice” system has become so perverted and politically
tainted that the rest of the world, including Russia, knows that Snowden
is telling the truth when he says he cannot hope to receive a fair
trial here. Indeed, Congress has passed laws, and the President has
signed laws, giving this government the power to lock someone like
Snowden up indefinitely without trial, to torture him, and even to kill
him, not through a jury decision on capital punishment, but simply on
the basis of a secret “finding” by the President that he has aided or
abetted terrorism.
No
wonder Russia and several other countries, including Venezuela, Bolivia
and Nicaragua, have offered or are considering offering Snowden asylum.
And
no wonder that, in its obsession with getting its tyrannical hands on
him, this government is willing to promise (for what a promise from the
US government is worth) not to kill him or torture him.
Shame and anger are the only appropriate responses to that letter from Holder.
If
this were a country that honored the rule of law, Attorney General
Holder would not need to promise not to torture. He would need only to
point to the US Constitution, with its ban on “cruel and unusual
punishment.” He would not need to promise a fair trial to Snowden, with
no capital punishment on any charges. He could point instead to the
Constitution’s promise of a presumption of innocence and of a public
trial by a jury of the accused’s peers, to make the case against the
granting of asylum.
In
such a country, someone like Snowden, with the help of a crack legal
team, would have a fair shot at proving to a jury his innocence of the
government’s frivolous espionage charges. He’d have a fair chance of
convincing at least one juror of his absolute innocence of any crime,
making his conviction impossible.
But that is not what this country is, especially today.
In
today’s US courts, we know the “Justice” Department would seek to bar
testimony about Snowden’s motives in leaking the documents he downloaded
from the NSA’s computers. They would ask the judge to limit defense
arguments and testimony in the case to the narrow issue of whether or
not he downloaded and leaked files, not to whether those files exposed
Constitutional violations and needed to be brought to the public’s
attention. Our judges, nominated by presidents and confirmed by
senators, Democrat and Republican, who want jurists who favor government
secrecy and who generally side with the government against the people,
can be counted on to grant the government’s motions.
In
such circumstances, a defendant like Snowden, facing charges of
espionage or theft of government secrets, has no ability to defend
himself. The trial would be like in a Lewis Carroll event: “Verdict
first, trial later!”
Hopefully
President Vladimir Putin will not be pressured by the US into
pretending that Snowden has nothing to fear in going back to face
“justice” in the US.
It
is bad enough that we Americans have to hang our heads in shame as our
Attorney General pretends, against all evidence to the contrary, that
there is still a fair legal system operating in the US, and that the US
respects human rights and the rule of law.
We should not have to also endure yet another kangaroo court trial, this time of Edward Snowden.
Snowden
should be granted asylum in Russia, or should be allowed to travel to
one of the other countries of his choice that have had the courage to
offer him asylum.
If we’re going to have trials on the issue of spying in the US, let them be of Holder himself, and of President Obama.
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