Carter Says U.S. Tortures, Violates International Law

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America tortures prisoners in violation of international law, President Jimmy Carter said yesterday, adding that President Bush makes up his own definition of torture. “Our country for the first time in my life time has abandoned the basic principle of human rights,” Mr. Carter said on CNN. “We’ve said that the Geneva Conventions do not apply to those people in Abu Ghraib prison and Guantanamo, and we’ve said we can torture prisoners and deprive them of an accusation of a crime.”

Mr. Bush, responding to an October 4 report by the New York Times on secret Justice Department memorandums supporting the use of “harsh interrogation techniques,” defended the techniques Friday by proclaiming: “This government does not torture people.”

Mr. Carter said the interrogation methods cited by the Times, including “head-slapping, simulated drowning, and frigid temperatures,” constitute torture “if you use the international norms of torture as has always been honored — certainly in the last 60 years since the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was promulgated.

“But you can make your own definition of human rights and say we don’t violate them, and you can make your own definition of torture and say we don’t violate them,” Mr. Carter said.

In an interview that aired yesterday by the British Broadcasting Corp., Mr. Carter ripped Vice President Cheney as “a militant who avoided any service of his own in the military.”

Mr. Carter went on to say Mr. Cheney has been “a disaster for our country. I think he’s been overly persuasive on President George Bush.”

In the CNN interview, the Democratic former president disparaged the field of Republican presidential candidates.

“They all seem to be outdoing each other in who wants to go to war first with Iran, who wants to keep Guantanamo open longer and expand its capacity — things of that kind,” Carter said.


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