Transparency a welcome change in the White House

The release of White House memos concerning interrogation techniques for suspected terrorists incensed President Barack Obama’s political opponents this week, despite the fact that anyone who watches the news already knew about the torture.

Rather than berate the president for acknowledging it, Americans should be proud that the administration is officially setting the record straight.

There has been widespread reporting of the CIA’s use of waterboarding, stress positions, sleep deprivation and psychological terror for many months, with Americans and world citizens understandably divided over the moral and legal implications of the actions. In the past, the standard presidential tactic has been to offer contradictory statements and shifty explanations, all the while demanding the public’s trust. Now that the Obama administration is revealing past practices and limiting the future use of harsh interrogation techniques, Americans are getting a breath of fresh air.

Predictably, former administration officials are now opining that the country is less safe. Former Vice President Dick Cheney used the issue as an opportunity to attack President Obama politically Tuesday, saying the release of the interrogation memos was “a little bit disturbing.� This is the same Cheney who told us he knows where the weapons of mass destruction are in Iraq and that the insurgency there was in its “last throes� in May 2005.

While Obama earns brownie points from sane Americans by being honest about the conduct of U.S. interrogators, he also says he is not interested in punishing those who participated. On Tuesday, he said he would not support the prosecution of anyone who was following orders from the previous administration. Whether or not some of the decision makers face prosecution will be up to the Justice Department. One might imagine that Cheney has a personal interest in how this all plays out.

In the meantime, right-wing talking heads continue to blast Obama for exposing the dishonesty of the previous administration, as if no one knew they were hiding something in Guantanamo Bay. Cheney, Karl Rove and the rest of the Bush crew continue to present their lopsided arguments, presumably in hopes of avoiding jail time.

Thankfully, a certain degree of openness has been restored in the White House, which ultimately strives to set a good example for the rest of the world.

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