A  WikiLeaks cable shows that when Spain considered a criminal case   against ex-Bush officials, the Obama White House and Republicans got   really bipartisan.
— By David Corn, Mother Jones, Dec 1, 2010
— By David Corn, Mother Jones, Dec 1, 2010
In  its first months in office, the Obama  administration sought to protect  Bush administration officials facing  criminal investigation overseas for  their involvement in establishing  policies the that governed  interrogations of detained terrorist  suspects. A “confidential” April  17, 2009, cable  sent from the US embassy in Madrid to the State Department—one of the   251,287 cables obtained by WikiLeaks—details how the Obama   administration, working with Republicans, leaned on Spain to derail this   potential prosecution.The previous month, a Spanish human rights group  called the  Association for the Dignity of Spanish Prisoners had  requested that  Spain’s National Court indict six former Bush officials  for, as the  cable describes it, “creating a legal framework that  allegedly permitted  torture.” The six were former Attorney General  Alberto Gonzales; David  Addington, former chief of staff and legal  adviser to Vice President  Dick Cheney; William Haynes, the Pentagon’s  former general counsel;  Douglas Feith, former undersecretary of defense  for policy; Jay Bybee,  former head of the Justice Department’s Office  of Legal Counsel; and  John Yoo, a former official in the Office of  Legal Counsel. The human  rights group contended that Spain had a duty  to open an investigation  under the nation’s “universal jurisdiction”  law, which permits its legal  system to prosecute overseas human rights  crimes involving Spanish  citizens and residents. Five Guantanamo  detainees, the group maintained,  fit that criteria. 
Soon after the request was made, the US embassy in Madrid began   tracking the matter. On April 1, embassy officials spoke with chief   prosecutor Javier Zaragoza, who indicated that he was not pleased to   have been handed this case, but he believed that the complaint appeared   to be well-documented and he’d have to pursue it. Around that time, the   acting deputy chief of the US embassy talked to the chief of staff for   Spain’s foreign minister and a senior official in the Spanish Ministry   of Justice to convey, as the cable says, “that this was a very serious   matter for the USG.” The two Spaniards “expressed their concern at the   case but stressed the independence of the Spanish judiciary.”
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