Street Prophets

Stand Up Guy of the Day – Major David J.R. Frakt

Fri Jul 04, 2008 at 11:47:54 AM PDT

Hat tip to Michael Winship for his article, What Patriotism Is.  He highlights an example of what standing and speaking truth to power is – Major David J.R. Frakt exemplifies it in his defense of a Guantanamo Bay inmate, a suicidal young boy who was tortured by lengthy sleep deprivation.

From the closing argument of Major David J.R. Frakt in favor of dismissal of the case against Mohammad Jawad (but please read it all):

Why was Mohammad Jawad tortured? Why did military officials choose a teenage boy who had attempted suicide in his cell less than 5 months earlier to be the subject of this sadistic sleep deprivation experiment? Not that anything would justify such treatment, of course, but at least in the case of the other detainees known to have been subjected to sleep deprivation, they were believed to possess critical intelligence that might save American lives. Unfortunately, we may never know. I’ve asked to speak to the guards who actually carried out the program, and I’ve been denied. In the absence of information to the contrary, which the government would surely provide if it existed, we are left to conclude that it was simply gratuitous cruelty.

The government admits that Mohammad Jawad was treated “improperly,” but offers no remedy. We won’t use any evidence derived from this maltreatment, they say, but they know that there was no evidence derived from it because the government didn’t even bother to interrogate him after they tortured him. Exclusion of non-existent evidence is not a remedy. Dismissal is a severe sanction, but it is the only sanction that might conceivably deter such conduct in the future.

February 7, 2002. America lost a little of its greatness that day. We lost our position as the world’s leading defender of human rights, as the champion of justice and fairness and the rule of law. But it is a testament to the continuing greatness of this nation, that I, a lowly Air Force Reserve Major, can stand here before you today, with the world watching, without fear of retribution, retaliation or reprisal, and speak truth to power. I can call a spade a spade, and I can call torture, torture.

Today, Your Honor, you have an opportunity to restore a bit of America’s lost luster, to bring back some small measure of the greatness that was lost on Feb 7, 2002, to set us back on a path that leads to an America which once again stands at the forefront of the community of nations in the arena of human rights.

Sadly, this military commission has no power to do anything to the enablers of torture such as John Yoo, Jay Bybee, Robert Delahunty, Alberto Gonzales, Douglas Feith, David Addington, William Haynes, Vice President Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld, for the jurisdiction of military commissions is strictly and carefully limited to foreign war criminals, not the home-grown variety. All you can do is to try to send a message, a clear and unmistakable message that the U.S. really doesn’t torture, and when we do, we own up to it, and we try to make it right.

I have provided you with legal authority for the proposition that you have the power to dismiss these charges. I can’t stand before you and say that you are legally required to do so. But I can say that that it is a moral imperative to do so, and I ask that you do so. 


Major Frakt, I salute you for doing what you could to make it right.  You honor your uniform, our flag, and our Constitution by your service.  Thank you.  You are a Stand Up Guy by any measure.

Happy Independence Day – when we celebrate the actions of Stand Up Guys who founded our country in spite of great peril to self, family, and fortune.  Celebrate freedom -- and honor the acts of those who do the right thing, even to this day.


Tags: Stand Up Guy, Major David J.R. Frakt, Guantanamo Bay, torture, Mohammed Jawad (all tags)

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