Bukhara on the Potomac
Opinion: The bug box is a bizarre footnote in the dark and painful chapter of the Bush-Cheney administration.
During the days of the “Great Game,” when Russian and British adventurers and intelligence operatives sought to outdo and thwart each other’s imperial ambitions in central Asia, one of the most notorious incidents concerned the “bug pit” of Bukhara.
Queen Victoria was but a teenager when Great Britain sent the Army of the Indus into Afghanistan and quickly captured Kabul. A British officer named Charles Stoddart was sent on to Bukhara, in what is now Uzbekistan, to assure the emir he had nothing to fear from Britain, and to try and make an alliance against the Russians. Known for his depravity and cruelty, the emir had Stoddart thrown into a 20-foot pit filled with insects and other vermin.
A couple of years later, a fellow officer named Arthur Conolly made his way to Bukhara in the hopes of obtaining Stoddart’s release, only to be thrown in prison himself. After the disastrous British defeat and retreat from Afghanistan in 1842, Stoddart and Conolly were dragged up into the sunlight and beheaded.
Fast forward 160 years, and there is another foreign army in Afghanistan — an American one.
This time the Americans have caught an Al Qaeda operative whose importance they were to greatly exaggerate. Abu Zubaydah had given the FBI and the CIA what he knew, but the Americans still thought he was holding out. And so the torture began, the slamming against walls, the keeping him naked in a freezing room — an old technique from Vietnam days — and water-boarding.
Somehow his tormentors found out that Abu Zubaydah, who may have been suffering from mental illness, was afraid of insects. And so came the idea worthy of the old khanates of central Asia: Put Zubaydah in a small, dark “containment box" with an insect he thinks is poisonous.
The suggestion was sent up the line to the emirs of the Bush Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel. Jay Bybee, who is now a judge for the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, approved the bug box, as we now know, but the technique was never actually used.
I have no idea whether Jay Bybee, John Woo, Alberto Gonzales, David Addington, then-Vice President Dick Cheney, or any others in the pro-torture business at the time knew anything about Stoddart and Conolly and the incident that was considered barbaric throughout the civilized world. But Bybee’s ruling was partly based on intent. “To violate the (torture) statue an individual must have the specific intent to inflict severe pain or suffering,” Bybee opined. “The absence of specific intent negates the charge of torture.”
I could not disagree more with your conclusion that legal action should not be brought against the administration figures who authorized this barbarity!!
We are a nation founded on ideals and the rule of law. No one is above the law. Let the DOJ follow the evidence and prosecute ALL that broke the law.
The proposed Truth Commission would yield the same results as the 9/11 Commission…i.e. a politically acceptable conclusion that does not address the problem.
Vic Brown
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