Dick Cheney has a special fondness for cruel, degrading, and inhumane treatment. While his office staff is embroiled in a Watergate-size scandal, Cheney still found time last week to hold several closed-door meetings, where he pleaded to be allowed to continue torturing prisoners.
The vice president made his comments at a regular weekly private meeting of Senate Republican senators, according to several lawmakers who attended. Cheney often attends the meetings, a chance for the rank-and-file to discuss legislative strategy, but he rarely speaks.
In this case, the room was cleared of aides before the vice president began his remarks, said by one senator to include a reference to classified material…
Cheney also has met several times with McCain, including one session that CIA Director Porter Goss attended in a secure room in the Capitol.
However, McCain has remained unmoved. In fact, he appears to have been emboldened:
McCain has now pledged to to add the torture ban to all major Senate legislation until it becomes law.
Fareed Zakaria, states the obvious in a Newsweek column entitled, Pssst … Nobody Loves a Torturer:
It must be intimidating to have the Vice-President and the Director of Central Intelligence take you into a private, secured room, and try to pitch an exemption to a ban on cruel, degrading, and inhumane treatment. It must be somewhat akin to facing down pure evil. But John McCain has faced pure evil before. John McCain has been tortured and beaten, and subjected to cruel conditions, and dehumanizing isolation.
I don’t go out of my way to praise Republicans too often. I will never understand why McCain forgave Bush for slandering his wife and child in South Carolina. But I have nothing but the utmost praise and admiration for the courageous stand McCain is taking now. He wins my Profile in Courage Award.