In light of the Washington Post revelations, Bush administration officials insist they will not tolerate the use of torture at home or in any foreign prisons. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said: “We’re doing everything we can to protect America but we obviously do everything we can to do it in a way that’s consistent with our legal obligations.” Yet there are no indications the Bush administration has dropped a controversial proposal that would exempt CIA agents from a Senate ban on torture. Speaking in New York yesterday, President Jimmy Carter criticized the Bush administration’s stance: “The insistence by our government that the CIA or others have the right to torture prisoners in Guantanamo and around the World is just one indication of what this administration has done that’s a radical departure from past policies.” Carter also lashed out at the Bush administration’s justifications for the war on Iraq. Carter said: “I think that the claims that Saddam was involved in 9/11 and the claims that he had massive weapons of mass destruction that would threaten our country were manipulated at least to mislead the American people into going to war.”
Carter Criticizes Bush Administration on Torture, Iraq War
HeadlineNov 03, 2005