[Oe List ...] Torture, the president and SMU
KarenBueno at aol.com
KarenBueno at aol.com
Sat May 10 17:01:12 EDT 2008
Torture, the President and SMU
Appalling admission underscores criticisms of library site
By the Rev. Dr. Andrew J. Weaver
On April 11, three days after the Southern Methodist University (SMU) chief
executive wrote a letter extolling the benefits to the school of hosting the
George W. Bush Presidential Library, President Bush admitted that he had been
involved from the beginning in the torture of prisoners suspected of
terrorist activities.
SMU President R. Gerald Turner sent a letter on April 8 to delegates to the
South Central Jurisdictional Conference of The United Methodist Church (UMC)
lauding supposed financial advantages to the school and other virtues of the
Bush library and partisan think tank.
President Bush says he knew … details about how high-value al Qaeda suspects
would be interrogated by the Central Intelligence Agency.
On April 11, ABC News reported: “President Bush says he knew his top
national security advisers discussed and approved specific details about how
high-value al Qaeda suspects would be interrogated by the Central Intelligence
Agency.” According to White House sources, the discussions about torture
techniques were so detailed that some of the “interrogation sessions were almost
choreographed.”
Vetoed legislation
A month earlier, on March 8, Bush vetoed legislation banning waterboarding
and other methods of torture used by government employees. The legislation
would have limited CIA agents to 19 less-aggressive tactics outlined in the U.S.
Army Field Manual. The president stated that the government “needs to use
tougher methods” than the U.S. military to wrest information from terrorism
suspects.
This statement is appalling, given that Steven Miles documents in Oath
Betrayed: Military Medicine and the War on Terror that at least 19 prisoners have
been tortured to death by the U.S. military.
Waterboarding has a long and sickening history. It was used as a means of
torture and coerced baptism during the Protestant Reformation and Spanish
Inquisition to convert Jews, Mennonites, witches and other suspected heretics.
Torture is a crime against humanity and a violation of every human rights
treaty in existence.
Waterboarding consists of immobilizing an individual on his or her back with
the head inclined downward. Water is then poured over the individual’s face
to force the inhalation of water into the lungs. As the victim gags and
chokes, the terror of imminent death becomes pervasive.
Torture is a crime against humanity and a violation of every human rights
treaty in existence. It represents a betrayal of the deepest values of the UMC
that founded and built SMU.
In the supposedly “less enlightened” 18th century, John Wesley explicitly
preached against the torture of prisoners of war:
"War itself is justifiable only on principles of self-preservation.
Therefore it gives us no right over prisoners, but to hinder their hurting us by
confining them. Much less can it give a right to torture, or kill, or even to
enslave an enemy when the war is over."
No sign of contrition
President Bush claims to be a “proud Methodist,” but shows no sign of
contrition or regret or repentance for his support of torture. To the contrary, he
continues to try to justify himself and protect those in our government who
have used and continue to use torture.
Lutheran pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer, who died while being incarcerated by
Nazi Germany, rightly called the cowardliness of Christians to make evil-doers
accountable for their wicked deeds “cheap grace.”
It is a defilement of our church to build a monument on a UMC campus to “
celebrate [President Bush’s] accomplishments,” as the project was described in
the New York Times by Don Evans, chair and a chief fundraiser for the George
W. Bush Foundation. This monument to a man who approves torture will
permanently damage the UMC’s credibility to share the good news of Jesus Christ.
____________________________________
Editor’s note: Andrew Weaver is a United Methodist minister and research
psychologist living in New York City. He is a graduate of The Perkins School of
Theology at SMU and organizer of _www.protectSMU.org_
(http://www.protectsmu.org/) . Weaver has co-authored 14 books including: Counseling Survivors of
Traumatic Events (Abingdon, 2003) and Reflections on Grief and the Spiritual
Journey (Abingdon, 2005).
The United Methodist Church General Conference, the denomination's top
policy-making body, voted overwhelmingly 844 to 20 to refer a petition for the
library’s rejection to the South Central Jurisdiction of the denomination where
Southern Methodist is situated. A vote on the petition is expected at the
jurisdictional conference this July.
Date: 5/9/2008 12:00:00 AM
©2005-2008
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