The 1949 Geneva Convention was an attempt by the major Western powers to deal with the atrocious treatment of war prisoners during World War II. In Part 1, Article 2 of the Convention, the protection of war prisoners and detainees is provided for with an initial definition of war. Essentially, if two or more of the signers to the Convention engage in a conflict, the protections against torture and inhumane treatment are in full force. Certainly, the coalition forces in Afghanistan and Iraq feature several signatories of the Convention. In addition, Article 3, Section 1 provides a list of those acts prohibited during war time. Included on this list are "outrages upon personal dignity, in particular humiliating and degrading treatment." The Bush Administration could hardly argue that stripping prisoners naked, taking degrading photos, or unleashing dogs upon helpless prisoners are acts of humane treatment.
While Articles 4 and 5 of the Convention's general provisions allow room for interpretation based on the potential threat of a particular prisoner of war, most of the provisions and the spirit of the document lean against the interrogation camps favored by the Bush Administration. The Supreme Court, the American public, and political leaders on both sides agree that maintaining the higher ground against feckless thugs is more important than what little information is received by dubious methods. If Congress passes the interrogation bill as is, the Bush Administration will need to tread lightly with their wide legal berth lest another Abu Ghraib sink a weakening mandate for the war on terror.
Published by Nicholas Katers
Nicholas Katers is a graduate of University of Wisconsin-Green Bay (BA, 2003) and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (MA, 2007) in History and currently a freelance writer. You can find his work in the In... View profile
- Guantanamo Bay: The Interrogation Practices and Facilities Violate International Lawhow the interrogation facilities and practices at Guantanamo Bay have led to an abuse of human rights and violations of international law
- Operation Hollywood: The Pentagon's Intervention in TinseltownDavid Robb, a Hollywood journalist, has recently released a book detailing the influence the Pentagon exerts on Hollywood. In detailing the production of many movies a pattern of censorship and propaganda emerges.
- Torture is a Problem, Not a SolutionOn January 15, 2005, the BBC quoted outgoing U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge as saying that the U.S. did not condone the use of torture to extract information from terrorists, but that under an "extreme set...
Torture is WrongThe House Armed Services Committee has passed HR 6054 which allows secret evidence to be used against detainees and which guts U.S. compliance with the Geneva Convention's ban o...
President Bush and "The War on Terror"My personal views on President Bush's War on Terror and how the funds spent on his war effort could have been put to better use elsewhere.
- Bush vs. Iraq: How the war on terror became a war on Iraqi human rights
- John McCain's Bias Against Waterboarding and Ignorance to the Geneva Convention?
- The Legacy of Abu Ghraib: Was it Really Torture?
- Geneva Convention on Military Tribunals for Terrorists
- Al-Qaeda on Trial: Geneva Conventions and Federal Law on the Use of Military Tribu...
- History and Sights for Your Visit to Geneva
- Advice for President Obama About the War

