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The prosecution of torturers has nothing to do with retribution or
the politicization of policy differences and everything to do with
honoring the sacrifice, in altogether too many cases the ultimate
sacrifice, of our parents and relatives who defeated Nazi Germany in
World War II. Our parents did not serve and sacrifice so Nazi tactics
would be implemented, defended, admired, paid for, and rewarded by the
United States Government.
As confirmed by a recent official unanimous bipartisan Senate
report, the torture tactics of Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan were
brought to America by George W. Bush whose grandfather helped finance
Hitler. George W. Bush is the fifth in a line of politicians who have
betrayed our country.
First, Nelson Rockefeller, as Assistant Secretary of State for
Latin American Affairs during World War II, arranged for the Standard
Oil Company, in which he and his family held substantial amounts of
stock, to sell oil to the Nazis through South America. This oil fueled
the Nazi war machine which killed uniformed American soldiers, sailors,
and aviators.
Second, Richard Nixon, as a Presidential candidate in 1968, was
recorded on audiotape encouraging the South Vietnamese government to
thwart the peace proposals being made to end the conflict in Vietnam by
the President of the United States of America, Lyndon Johnson. Nixon's
treachery resulted in the continuation of the war and the consequent
deaths of thousands of uniformed American soldiers, sailors, and aviators.
Third and fourth, Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush, as,
respectively, candidates for President and Vice President in 1980,
encouraged the Iranian government to continue to hold Americans hostage
at the U.S embassy in Tehran in return for a promise of weapons if
Reagan won the election. After Reagan was inaugurated he kept his
promise and secretly delivered the weapons to what Reagan referred to as
the terrorist government of Iran. In 1986, in violation of an explicit
Congressional ban on support to terrorists in Nicaragua and as reported
by a major American television network, Reagan and George Herbert Walker
Bush caused weapons to be delivered to the terrorists in Central America
in exchange for illegal drugs which were then unlawfully imported into
the United States. The terrorists supplied by Reagan and George Herbert
Walker Bush in Nicaragua murdered many people. The number of people who
died in the United States as a result of the illegal drugs Reagan and
Bush caused to be imported unlawfully into the United States is not
known.
Barack Obama solemnly swore that he would preserve, protect, and
defend the Constitution of the United States which, due to the
application of Article VI and the Convention Against Torture, requires
prosecution, if supported by the evidence, of those who engaged in or
enabled torture. A prosecution by the Obama Administration's Justice
Department (or a Special Prosecutor) would not involve retribution
(political or otherwise) of any type, kind, or description. Each
prosecution would just be Barack Obama faithfully executing that which
he solemnly swore to do as required before the people of the United
States let him begin executing the duties of President.
The investigations and, as appropriate, prosecutions exemplify a
forward looking focus on the future which Barack Obama seeks. While
evidentiary protocols may require some recitation of past events, the
prosecutions are really a way for this generation of Americans to look
forward to the future, to remind the sixth person in the line running
from Rockefeller to Nixon to Reagan to George Herbert Walker Bush to
George Walker Bush and to those who may be nominated by or serve with
the sixth person and that person's successors that torture is
unacceptable and will have substantial personal criminal consequences,
and to say clearly: "Never again."