ap

Skip to content
Author
PUBLISHED:
Getting your player ready...

Washington – With time running out before Congress recesses next week, the White House appeared Tuesday to be offering dissident Republican senators a compromise on detainee legislation that would leave the language of the Geneva Conventions untouched if lawmakers preserve the CIA’s terrorist-interrogation program.

Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, an administration ally, described the proposal in broad terms, saying “that’s essentially what it does” but stressed that “this is still a negotiation in flux.”

Cornyn said any deal could hinge on whether the Justice Department can provide the CIA with a legal opinion “that, yes, what you’re doing is clearly within bounds and will not expose you to liability.”

The Bush administration wants to ensure that certain harsh CIA interrogation practices aren’t ruled illegal, such as “water-boarding,” which simulates drowning.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that U.S. treatment of detainees must respect standards of the Geneva Conventions, the post-World War II international treaties that guarantee human rights and standards of justice for prisoners of war.

In another sign of the administration’s compromise terms, George Shultz, secretary of state under President Reagan and well-connected to current policymakers, released a statement saying: “I believe that there is a compromise that leaves the Geneva Convention alone and achieves the specificity that the administration wants.”

Although such terms would mark a significant concession by Bush, no deal appeared imminent with the key Senate Armed Services Committee Republicans: Chairman John Warner of Virginia and Sens. John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina.

Each declined to confirm details of the administration’s overture or their response, citing the touch-and-go nature of the ongoing talks.

Warner said: “Until such time as words are put down to paper and people agree on it, I would not try and prejudge who’s giving in, who’s doing this, or one thing and another.”

Graham said he was “very pleased with the tone and the progress” of the negotiations.

He had released a statement late Monday saying the senators “share the president’s goal of enacting legislation preserving an effective CIA program to make us safe, upholding Geneva Convention protections for our troops and passing constitutional muster.”

A White House spokeswoman also declined to confirm any details.

Even as the private discussions continued, prospects looked dim that a final deal could be sealed between the Senate and the House of Representatives by the end of next week, when Congress is scheduled to recess until after the November elections.

RevContent Feed

More in News