February 22 is George Washington’s birthday. Commemorating his birthday, Scott Horton, an adjunct professor at Columbia Law School, has a moving post on Balkinization. The post, entitled “A Tale of Two Georges” mourns the mockery of George Washington’s legacy made by the current George Bush Administration. Choice paragraphs:

Washington’s rules on the treatment of prisoners were doctrine of the United States Army for 227 years. From Washington’s perspective, they were not marginal matters. Rather, they defined the United States in relationship to the rest of the world. As David Hackett Fischer writes in his Pulitzer Prize-winning account, Washington’s Crossing: “In a desperate struggle [he] found a way to defeat a formidable enemy… [He] reversed the momentum of the war. [He] improvised a new way of war that grew into an American tradition. And [he] chose a policy of humanity that aligned the conduct of the war with the values of the Revolution.”

But early in 2002, a later George W, one who knew no military service, decided he knew better than the Founding Father. The Ghosts of Abu Ghraib makes clear that what transpired in that notorious Iraqi prison was not the misdoings of a few “rotten apples,” but rather the foreseeable consequence of policies shaped at the highest levels of the Bush Administration. We should keep in mind that Abu Ghraib itself contained abuse that was mild compared with incidents that occurred elsewhere, including more than one hundred deaths in detention - a significant portion of which are linked to torture.

Read the whole thing…