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On Wednesday,
October 5, the Senate defied the White House and voted
overwhelmingly to impose new restrictions on interrogating detainees
in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Guantánamo. The vote was 90-9 in favor of
the amendments sponsored by Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., with 46
Republicans joining 43 Democrats and one independent in support of
the new prohibitions against the use of torture.
Despite this
near-unanimous bipartisan message against the use of torture,
President Bush has threatened to veto the entire Defense
Appropriations Bill if the McCain amendments are included. The
defense bill, which previously passed the House of Representatives
before the amendments were proposed, now goes to a conference
committee of both houses to resolve the differences between the two
bills.
There can be little
doubt that the current U.S. torture practices utilized in Guantánamo,
Iraq, and Afghanistan present us with one of the most serious moral
crises of our times. At this critical time in the policymaking
process, we must make our voices heard.
Take action
now!
Raise your voice
against U.S.-sponsored torture while Congress is considering the
annual national defense program authorization. The lawmakers are in
recess until October 17 and most House and Senate members will be in
their home districts.
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Write a
letter to the editor of your hometown newspaper expressing your
support for the anti-torture provisions of the Defense
Appropriations Bill. Read a sample
letter and guidelines for placing it in your newspaper.
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Call and
write your House and Senate members while they are in their home
districts and make it clear them that you expect them to support
the anti-torture amendments against an anticipated White House
offensive to kill the proposals in the conference committee.
If your letter
to the editor is published, please send us a copy or a link to the
newspaper’s website if it is published online. We will use it in our
Washington, D.C., advocacy efforts with your members of Congress.
Send to:
UUSC
Attn. Dick Campbell
130 Prospect Street
Cambridge,
MA
02139
dcampbell@uusc.org
Visit our online
Legislative Action Center
to obtain contact information, including hometown phone numbers of
your senators and representatives, and to send them an immediate
message by e-mail or fax.
Talking points for phone calls and
messages
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As a member
of UUSC and voter in (name of your hometown and state), I
vigorously protest U.S.-sponsored torture. Torture has been
abhorrent to our national values and legal system since the
framing of the Constitution.
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I urge you
to support the anti-torture amendments to the 2006 National
Defense Appropriations Bill proposed by Sen. John McCain of
Arizona. One amendment prohibits cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment of people under the custody or control of the U.S.
government. The other amendment establishes uniform standards
for the interrogation of Department of Defense detainees.
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Additionally, I strongly advocate that you withstand any
pressure from the Bush administration to weaken these amendments
or block them from becoming law.
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The torture
or degrading treatment of any human being, even in times of war,
is banned by our treaties as well as our domestic laws.
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Perhaps most
importantly, such misconduct endangers our own troops and
spreads hatred against
U.S.
citizens.
Background
The Defense
Appropriations Bill sets policy and spending levels for all military
activity.
The White House
threatened to veto the ENTIRE defense bill if the McCain amendments
were included. In a time of war, this is a high stakes maneuver. It
is a measure of how afraid the Bush Administration is of allowing
discussion or votes that challenge U.S.-sponsored torture activity.
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For a full
report on the Senate vote and the upcoming battle between the
White House and lawmakers, read a Washington Post
article,
“Senate, House to Clash Over Military Bill.”
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A recently
released report by Human Rights Watch sheds new light on our
country’s interrogation methods by citing interviews with three
U.S. Army soldiers – two sergeants and one captain – that our
troops subjected Iraqi detainees to severe beatings and other
acts of torture, often under orders from their superior
officers. For the full report, see
"New
Account of Torture by U.S. Troops."
Sen.
McCain’s floor speech
The following is an
excerpt from Sen. McCain’s Senate floor speech as when he offered
the amendments.
"Mr. President, let
me just close by noting that I hold no brief for the prisoners. I do
hold a brief for the reputation of the United States of America. We
are Americans, and we hold ourselves to humane standards of
treatment of people no matter how evil or terrible they may be.
“To do otherwise,
as I have noted, undermines our security, but it also undermines our
greatness as a nation. We are not simply any other country. We stand
for something more in the world – a moral mission, one of freedom
and democracy and human rights at home and abroad. We are better
than these terrorists, and we will we win. The enemy we fight has no
respect for human life or human rights. They don’t deserve our
sympathy.
“But this isn’t
about who they are. This is about who we are. These are the values
that distinguish us from our enemies." |