Professor takes heat at UCI
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Andrew Edwards
Professor John Choon Yoo was outnumbered.
Yoo, a law professor at UC Berkeley and former Justice Department
official, was invited to UC Irvine to speak Monday on the role of law
in counterterrorism policy, but more than 400 people signed a
petition asking that the invitation be canceled.
The controversy over Yoo’s appearance at the school stemmed from
his role in drafting an August 2002 memo that interpreted a 1994
federal anti-torture law. The document defined physical torture as
acts that cause pain comparable to serious injury, such as organ
failure or death.
Critics of the Bush administration have charged that legal
theories outlined in that and other memos paved the way for alleged
abuses of prisoners at Abu Ghraib in Iraq and Camp X-Ray in
Guantanamo Bay.
Yoo’s position is that Al Qaeda terrorists are not subject to the
full protections of the Geneva Convention.
“The Geneva Convention [is] a treaty between nation states ... Al
Qaeda is not a nation state,” he said.
The petition against Yoo’s visit, part of the campus’ Chancellor’s
Distinguished Fellows Series of lectures, was written by UC Irvine
history professor Mark Le Vine, who said Yoo’s controversial
background seemed inappropriate for the series.
“[He’s] not distinguished in the sense that I understand
distinguished,” Le Vine said.
The petition asked that Yoo take part in a debate instead of
merely giving a lecture, and though his speech was not canceled, Yoo
agreed to face off against Le Vine and two other critics Monday,
hours before his lecture. No one who supported his views was on the
panel.
“As long as I get a fair opportunity to express my views, I don’t
care how many people there are,” Yoo said.
For more than 90 minutes during Monday’s panel discussion, Yoo
quietly jotted down notes while Le Vine, history professor Cecilia
Lynch and attorney Stephen Rohde, who sits on the ACLU’s California
board of directors, accused him of excusing torture and neglecting
his academic responsibilities.
“War crimes make no exceptions for lawyers,” Rohde blasted. “You
too, professor Yoo, may be indicted as a war criminal.”
Rohde made that statement while alleging Yoo’s writings could be
considered part of a conspiracy to abuse prisoners. Lynch charged Yoo
with ignoring his duty to consider other interpretations of the law.
“For lawyers, it is their responsibility to give all sides of an
argument,” she said.
During his turn to speak, Yoo was sporadically heckled by a mostly
hostile audience. He declined to make specific comments regarding
what kinds of interrogation techniques constitute torture and said
his memo was not an endorsement of a policy allowing activities short
of torture but was only an interpretation of law.
He did say interrogations were “the only way to stop 9/11-style
attacks,” because intelligence officials have to rely on information
gleaned from terrorists to assess threats.
Yoo is not the only speaker associated with U.S. military policy
to be a part of this year’s lecture series. Patriot Act architect
Viet Dinh spoke in January. Visits are scheduled for Hans Blix,
former chief United Nations weapons inspector, and former Spanish
Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar, one of the few world leaders who
supported the invasion of Iraq.
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