Obama Promises to Follow Through on Gitmo Closure
November 17, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
In an interview tonight on “60 Minutes,” President-elect Barack Obama reiterated a promise, made often during his campaign, that he will close the detainee camp at Guantanamo Bay as part of an effort to rebuild “America’s moral stature in the world.” Read more
George W Bush could pardon spies involved in torture
November 16, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
George W Bush is considering issuing pardons for US spies embroiled in allegations of torture just before he leaves the White House.
Senior intelligence officers are lobbying the outgoing president to look after the men and women who could face charges for following his orders in the war on terrorism.
Many fear that Barack Obama, who has pledged to close the Guantanamo Bay detention camp and put an end to the policy of extraordinary rendition, could launch a legal witch hunt against those who oversaw the policies after he is sworn in on Jan 20. Read more
Battle in Bush administration over interrogation techniques
November 13, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
Moderates in the government are mounting one more drive to roll back many of the harsh detention and questioning policies pushed through by Vice President Dick Cheney.
Reporting from Washington — As the clock runs down on the Bush administration, moderates within the government are mounting what may be one last drive to roll back many of the harsh detention and interrogation policies pushed through by Vice President Dick Cheney. Read more
Will Obama “Change” The Bush Police State Or Expand It?
November 5, 2008 by Philip Dru · 1 Comment
Now that Barack Obama has become the 44th President of the United States we offer a challenge - will those who elected him be able to progress past their fawning idolatry and actually pressure Obama to deliver on his mandate of “change,” or will the architecture of the Bush police state remain in place while the American empire expands? Read more
Obama Foreign Policy May Keep Some Bush Initiatives
November 5, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
Nov. 5 (Bloomberg) — President-elect Barack Obama is committed to a foreign policy of intense diplomatic engagement with allies and adversaries alike and an international approach to curb nuclear proliferation and terrorism. Read more
Bush Administration Committed War Crimes Against Prisoners, Reveals Physicians for Human Rights
November 4, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
The Bush administration has committed war crimes in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay in its practice of torturing prisoners, according to the conclusions of a medical examination conducted by the organization Physicians for Human Rights. Read more
Next President Will Face Test on Detainees
November 3, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
They were called the Dirty 30 - bodyguards for Osama bin Laden captured early in the Afghanistan war - and many of them are still being held at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. Others still at the much-criticized detention camp there include prisoners who the government says were trained in assassination and the use of poisons and disguises. Read more
No charges but US may never release Guantánamo Chinese
November 2, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
Seventeen Chinese prisoners who have been held for nearly seven years in Guantánamo Bay will be informed on Monday that they could spend the rest of their lives behind bars, even though they face no charges and have been told by a judge they should be freed. Read more
Video | Cafferty File: Bush Trying to Pardon Himself
October 29, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
Cost of crash: $2,800,000,000,000
October 27, 2008 by Philip Dru · Leave a Comment
• Bank of England calls for reform
• Markets jittery after Asian losses
• Brown defends borrowing
Autumn’s market mayhem has left the world’s financial institutions nursing losses of $2.8tn, the Bank of England said today, as it called for fundamental reform of the global banking system to prevent a repeat of turmoil “arguably” unprecedented since the outbreak of the first world war. Read more


