Ten Questions for Alberto Gonzales


  1. Are there any circumstances under which you believe the President of the United States could legally authorize torture?
    Alberto Gonzales approved a now-infamous memo which contended the president "wasn't bound by laws prohibiting torture and that government agents who might torture prisoners at his direction couldn't be prosecuted by the Justice Department." Despite the fact that the United States ratified the United Nations Convention Against Torture - which states "no exceptional circumstances whatsoever, whether a state of war or a threat of war, internal political instability, or any other public emergency, may be invoked as a justification of torture" - the memo stated the president had the authority "to approve almost any physical or psychological action during interrogation, up to and including torture." Once the memo was made public, Gonzales backtracked, saying the memo contained "unnecessary, over-broad discussions" about "abstract legal theories." He also said the policy was "under review, and may be replaced, if appropriate, with more concrete guidance addressing only those issues necessary for the legal analysis of actual practices." The Justice Department recently released a new memo redefining the U.S. stance on torture. The new policy, however, does not address the question of whether the president is entitled to disregard laws and treaties.
    Sources: Torture memo | UN Convention Against Torture | Abstract legal theory | New policy silent on presidential powers
  2. Has your position on the Geneva Conventions changed since evidence of widespread detainee abuse at U.S. prisons was uncovered? If not, which provisions of the Geneva Conventions do you still consider "quaint" or "obsolete"?
    The Geneva Conventions of 1949, signed and ratified by the United States, are the primary instruments of humanitarian law used to protect those involved in international armed conflicts. A January 25, 2002 memorandum issued by Alberto Gonzales claims the war on terrorism "renders obsolete Geneva's strict limitations on questioning of enemy prisoners and renders quaint some of its provisions." The memo pushes to make al Qaeda and Taliban detainees exempt from the Geneva Conventions' provisions on the proper, legal treatment of prisoners. The memo also expresses concern, however, that failing to apply the Geneva Conventions "could undermine U.S. military culture which emphasizes maintaining the highest standards of conduct in combat, and could introduce an element of uncertainty in the status of adversaries." The evidence of detainee abuse in Iraq, Afghanistan, and elsewhere have borne these concerns out.
    Sources: Text of January 25, 2002 memorandum | Newsweek piece on the significance of the memo | FBI agent justified relied on high-level administration documents to justify interrogation methods 'beyond the bounds of standard FBI practice.'
  3. In your view, what limits did the September 14 joint resolution passed by Congress place on which countries the president could invade?
    On September 14, Congress passed a joint resolution authorizing President Bush to respond to the 9/11 terrorist attacks, but narrowing the scope of the authority to only countries specifically connected to the attacks. On September 25, just 11 days later, the Justice Department sent a memo to Alberto Gonzales which "essentially argued that what Congress authorized didn't matter." The memo argued there were "no limits" on Bush's powers to respond to the attacks and, in the first known statement of Bush's pre-emptive doctrine, the memo "startlingly" argued Bush could deploy military force preemptively against any country he suspected of harboring terrorists "whether or not they can be linked to the specific terror incidents of Sept. 11." It also said his decisions were "for him alone and are unreviewable." Gonzales's response to the memo is unknown.
    Source: Secret memo justifying the invasion of Iraq
  4. Do you still believe that the president can order the indefinite detention of U.S. citizens, without judicial scrutiny, now that the Supreme Court has rejected that position?
    The Supreme Court ruled last June that citizens and non-citizens detained by the government -- even those deemed "enemy combatants" by the Bush administration -- have the right to challenge their detention in front of a neutral arbiter. The court sharply rejected President Bush's position that, as commander-in-chief during a time of war, he has the unilateral power to detain individuals indefinitely without due process of law. Justice Sandra Day O'Conner wrote: "A state of war is not a blank check for the president." The Supreme Court's decisions were a rejection of the Bush administration's legal justifications for the harsh treatment of prisoners. In an 8/1/02 memo written for Alberto Gonzales, the Bush administration argued that the president had the authority, pursuant to his commander-in-chief power, to authorize torture and other harsh interrogation tactics for the purpose of extracting information from detainees. Justice John Paul Stevens traced the rationale for his decision in the Guantanamo case all the way back to King John's promise in the Magna Carta of 1215 that, "no free man should be imprisoned...save by the judgment of his peers or by the law of the land." The analysis "traced the limits on executive power through English common law, on through the Federalist Papers and down a long line of precedents forged in some of the darkest hours of the nation, including the Civil War and World War II."
    Sources: SC decision | 8/1/02 Memo | Washington Post analysis
  • [more] Questions from the Center for American Progress. Isn't there someone else besides a torture apologist available to lead the Justice Department? - BW