The Bush administration and dissident Republican Senators have resolved their dispute on the interrogation and trial of prisoners in US custody. Both sides say President Bush has dropped his insistence on being allowed to re-interpret the Geneva Conventions. But in a major victory for the White House, the President will not have to follow the conventions themselves but only how they are interpreted under the congressional War Crimes Act. President Bush will also be allowed to interpret the Geneva conventions for practices the Washington Post says fall “between cruelty and minor abuse.” White House counselor Dan Bartlett explained: “We proposed a more direct approach to bringing clarification. This one is more of the scenic route, but it gets us there.” In another victory for the Bush administration, prisoners tried by military courts will only have limited access to the evidence used against them. The prisoners will be allowed to see summaries of the evidence. But even those will be subject to major redaction from prosecutors. The agreement also bars defendants from invoking the Geneva Conventions in any habeas or civil action involving government officials. The so-called compromise is already coming under criticism. In an editorial today, the Washington Post writes: “[T]he agreement means that U.S. violations of international human rights law can continue as long as Mr. Bush is president, with Congress’s tacit assent.” The agreement is expected to go before Congress next week.
Bush, GOP Senators Reach Prisoner Treatment Compromise
HeadlineSep 22, 2006