No subject is more hotly debated than the extreme measures that our
government has taken after 9/11 in the name of national security.
Torture, extraordinary rendition, drone assassinations, secret detention
centers (or "black sites"), massive surveillance of citizens. But while
the press occasionally exposes the dark side of the war on terror, and
congressional investigators sometimes raise alarms about the abuses
committed by US intelligence agencies and armed forces, no high US
official has been prosecuted for these violations - which many legal
observers around the world consider war crimes.
The United States helped establish the international principles guiding
the prosecution of war crimes - starting with the Nuremberg tribunal
following World War II, when Nazi officials were held accountable for
their crimes against humanity. But the American government and legal
system have consistently refused to apply these same principles to our
own officials. Now Rebecca Gordon takes on the explosive task of
"indicting" the officials who - in a just society - should be put on
trial for war crimes. Some might dismiss this as a symbolic exercise.
But what is at stake here is the very soul of the nation.