Why do we still host and support this corrupt group of third world anti-american assholes?

UN torture envoy: US must prosecute Bush lawyers
Apr 24 11:17 AM US/Eastern
By VERONIKA OLEKSYN
Associated Press Writer
VIENNA (AP) - The U.S. is obligated by a United Nations convention to prosecute
Bush administration lawyers who allegedly drafted policies that approved the use
of harsh interrogation tactics against terrorism suspects, the U.N.'s top
anti-torture envoy said Friday.
Earlier this week, President Barack Obama left the door open to prosecuting Bush
administration officials who devised the legal authority for gruesome
terror-suspect interrogations. He had previously absolved CIA officers from
prosecution.
Manfred Nowak, who serves as a U.N. special rapporteur in Geneva, said
Washington is obligated under the U.N. Convention against Torture to prosecute
U.S. Justice Department officials who wrote memos that defined torture in the
narrowest way in order to justify and legitimize it, and who assured CIA
officials that their use of questionable tactics was legal.
"That's exactly what I call complicity or participation" to torture as defined
by the convention, Nowak said at a news conference. "At that time, every
reasonable person would know that waterboarding, for instance, is torture."
Nowak, an Austrian law professor, said it was up to U.S. courts and prosecutors
to prove that the memos were written with the intention to incite torture.
Nowak also said any probe of questionable CIA interrogation tactics must be
independent and have thorough investigative powers.
"It can be a congressional investigation commission, a special investigator, but
it must be independent and with thorough investigative powers," Nowak said.
On Thursday, Obama's press secretary suggested Obama does not care for an
independent panel.
Last week, the Obama administration released secret CIA memos detailing
interrogation tactics sanctioned under Bush.
The memos authorized keeping detainees naked, in painful standing positions and
in cold cells for long periods of time. Other techniques included depriving them
of solid food and slapping them. Sleep deprivation, prolonged shackling and
threats to a detainee's family also were used.
Nowak said Saturday that Obama's decision not to prosecute CIA operatives who
used questionable interrogation practices violates the same U.N. convention. But
at that point he did not specifically address the issue of how the convention
would apply to those who drafted the interrogation policy and gave the CIA the
legal go-ahead.