ThinkProgress Logo

Security

BREAKING: New Evidence of Koran Desecration and Administration Deception

From today’s White House press breifing:

QUESTION: Scott, there’s an FBI memo that’s been released today through a Freedom of Information request. It dates from August 23, 2002, and recounts the interrogation — the interview of a detainee at Bagram. And in this memo, the FBI recounts that this detainee says he had nothing against the United States, but the guards in his detention facility do not treat him well, their behavior is bad; about five months ago, the guards beat the detainees and they flushed a Koran in the toilet.

White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan’s response:

I mean in terms of if there’s any abuse of detainees, we take any such allegations very seriously.

But Pentagon spokesman Larry DiRita said, prior to this month, there were no investigations regarding Koran desecration:

QUESTION: [H]ave there been or are there current investigations of possible similar desecrations [of a Koran] elsewhere — (inaudible)?

[Snip]

MR. DI RITA: Those types of allegations have not previously been — there’s — we’ve not previously included that in any kind of previous investigations into detainee operations, because there haven’t been credible allegations to that effect.

Why didn’t the Bush administration take this detainee’s allegation of abuse and Koran desecration seriously? If they didn’t investigate, how do they know his allegation isn’t credible?

UPDATE: AP just filed a story.

Voinovich’s Behavior Should Be Encouraged

On Tuesday, Senator George Voinovich circulated a letter to his colleagues urging them to vote against the Bolton nomination. While Bush has called Bolton a “seasoned diplomat,” Voinovich laid bare the truth that Bolton would be a “controversial and ineffective ambassador.” Voinovich wrote in his letter, “In these dangerous times, we cannot afford to put at risk our nation’s ability to successfully wage and win the war on terror with a controversial and ineffective ambassador to the United Nations.”

Over on the DNC blog, George Voinovich’s act has been portrayed as a “profile in cowardice.” It is understandable that ardent partisans still hold grudges against Voinovich’s decision to allow the Bolton nomination to proceed through the Foreign Relations Committee without an up or down recommendation, but for those of us who are seriously concerned about Bolton becoming the next ambassador to the UN, we should be encouraging Voinovich’s most recent act of dissention. The truth is it will take bipartisan members of Congress to overturn Bush’s nomination. Voinovich, who has been described as someone who “really cares about public management,” will necessarily have to lead that effort if it is to be successful. To criticize him now throws up the white flag before we have engaged in the battle; it is cutting the legs out from under the leader who is putting his political capital on the line.

The vote of the committee is over. The vote on the Senate floor is not. If senators who are inclined to demonstrate their independence for justified and conscientious reasons are treated as “cowards,” I don’t imagine that many of them (who are increasingly showing their independence) will see the benefits of turning against Bush. Voinovich has stayed true to his promise that he would fight against the Bolton nomination when it went to the Senate floor, and as for me, I’m right behind him because there’s too much at stake and Bolton is most certainly “unfit to serve.

Switch to Mobile
ThinkProgress Signup Overlay Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress

Sign Up