So, what did the Glorious Imperator have to say about this one? Seems pretty grim, I mean, if your own spy agency is destroying potentially sensitive, unconstitutional tapes which possibly contain blatant violations of international law on torture, you should probably know; right?
Eh... maybe not. According to ABC News,
Remember for a second that this is the same administration which produced the bobblehead Gonzales, who purjured himself to save the President's basic judicial validity (In collusion with Karl Rove's magically disappearing emails, and their borderline-illegal, conflict-of-interest use of Republican National Committee email inboxes), so the Bush Administration is already behind on the ball here.Bush: My first recollection of whether the tapes existed or whether they were destroyed was when Michael Hayden briefed me. There is a preliminary inquiry going on, and I think, I think you will find a lot more data. Facts will be coming out in an orderly fashion, and that is good. It will be interesting to know what the true facts are.
But wait, that's irrelevant. Actually, that's really... not unacceptable, compared to what was said by the President the LAST TIME something like this happened. We all remember the Plame scandal, where Karl Rove and Scooter Libby violated... laws... and the CIA's non-official cover rules by exposing Valerie Plame-Wilson as a CIA employee in a calculated political strike at her husband, Ambassador James Wilson (Before Libby was pardoned for being a good patsy. There are almost too many scandals to remember.).
Back then, Bush said:
"I don't know all the facts. I want to know all the facts. I would like this to end as quickly as possible. If someone committed a crime, they will no longer work in my administration."
Good work, asshat!
I'm not quite sure who presides over a more legitimate presidency, George Bush, or Robert Mugabe?
But there's more!!
The International Herald Tribune has a bit more on the story. Apparently, facts won't be so forthcoming as they were in the last case. In other words, despite the fact his administration clearly has no respect for the validity of the CIA, Bush doesn't want to have to pardon any more clearly guilty people. There's a legacy to think about! More important things to do, like veto health care for children, destroy Iraq, devastate America's credibility, and set us up for war with Iran!
In other words; Justice refuses to collaborate with the House of Representatives (Hey! Unconstitutional!) as long as they... well... plan on investigating the rather ridiculous destruction of tapes which would show the CIA torturing people to extract possibly unreliable information at what is essentially a concentration camp conveniently located in Cuba, so we can say that they don't really have rights since they're not on American soil! Is waterboarding torture? Nope, not as long as you can't see how they do it! If you did... hmm... maybe you'd change your minds, so no, we can't have that. No investigation for you, elected representatives of the people and their interests. You're too likely to compromise operational security, sort of like why there were no tours of Cambodian prison camps for western journalists (They were waterboarding people too, and it was torture then!).The Justice Department asked the House Intelligence Committee on Friday to postpone its investigation into the destruction of videotapes by the Central Intelligence Agency in 2005, saying the congressional inquiry presented "significant risks" to its own preliminary investigation into the matter.
(snip)
The Justice Department and the CIA's inspector general have begun a preliminary inquiry into the destruction of the tapes, and Attorney General Michael Mukasey said the department would not comply with congressional requests for information now because of "our interest in avoiding any perception that our law enforcement decisions are subject to political influence."
So, recap:
1. Violation of a court order
2. Violation of the constitution
3. Waterboarding IS torture.
It's all very simple.