10 Reasons to Move Cheney’s Book to the Crime Section
Former Vice President Dick Cheney was given a multi-million-dollar contract to write a book about his political career. According to Cheney’s media hype, the book, called In My Time, will have “heads exploding all over Washington.” The Darth Vader of the Bush administration offers no apologies and feels no remorse. But peace activists around the country are stealthily gearing up to visit bookstores, grab a stack of books, and deposit them where they belong — the crime section.
Here are 10 of Cheney’s many offenses to inspire you to move Cheney’s book and to insert these bookmarks explaining why the author of In My Time should be doing time.
1. Cheney lied; Iraqis and U.S. soldiers died. As vice president, Cheney lied about (nonexistent) weapons of mass destruction and Saddam Hussein’s (nonexistent) ties to the 9/11 attack as a way to justify a war with a country that never attacked us. Thanks to Cheney and company, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and over 4,000 American soldiers perished in a war that should never have been fought.
2. Committing war crimes in Iraq. During the course of the Iraq war, the Bush-Cheney administration violated the Geneva Conventions by targeting civilians, journalists, hospitals, and ambulances and by using illegal weapons, including white phosphorus, depleted uranium, and a new type of napalm.
3. War profiteering. U.S. taxpayers shelled out about $3 trillion for the Bush-Cheney wars in Iraq and Afghanistan — a major factor in our nation’s present economic meltdown. But Cheney and his cronies at Halliburton made out like bandits, getting billions in contracts for everything from feeding troops in Iraq to constructing the U.S. embassy in Afghanistan to building the infamous Guantanamo prison. Cheney was CEO of Halliburton from 1995-2000, leaving for the VP position with a $20 million retirement package, plus millions in stock options and deferred salary. Before the Iraq War began, Halliburton was 19th on the U.S. Army’s list of top contractors; with Cheney’s help, by 2003 it was number one — increasing the value of Cheney’s stocks by over 3,000 percent.
4. Violating basic rights. Cheney shares responsibility for holding thousands of prisoners without charges and without the fundamental right to the writ of habeas corpus, and for keeping prisoners hidden from the International Committee of the Red Cross. He sanctioned kidnapping people and simply rendering them to secret overseas prisons. His authorization of the arbitrary detention of Americans, legal residents, and non-Americans — without due process, without charges, and without access to counsel — was in gross violation of U.S. and international law. A fan of indefinite detention in Guantanamo, Cheney writes in his book that he has been “happy to note” that President Obama failed to honor his pledge to close the Guantánamo prison.
5. Advocating torture. Cheney was a prime mover behind the Bush administration’s decision to violate the Geneva Conventions and the U.N. Convention Against Torture and to break with decades of past practice by the U.S. military by supporting “enhanced interrogation techniques.” This led to hundreds of documented cases in Iraq and Afghanistan of abuse, torture, and homicide. The torture included the practice known as “waterboarding,” a form of simulated drowning. After World War II, Japanese soldiers were tried and convicted of war crimes in U.S. courts for waterboarding. The sanctioning of abuses from the top trickled down, as the whole world saw in the photos from Abu Ghraib, becoming a recruiting tool for al-Qaeda and sullying the reputation of our nation.
6. Trying to prolong the Afghan war. Not content with the damage he caused as VP, Cheney continues to encourage more grist for the war machine. In his book, he criticizes President Obama’s decision to withdraw, by September 2012, the 33,000 additional troops Obama sent to Afghanistan in 2009. He has also cautioned Obama not to pull out all the troops from Afghanistan at the planned date of 2014. “I don’t think we need to run for the exits,” he told Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace.
7. Abusing executive privilege. Cheney used executive privilege to refuse to comply with over a dozen congressional subpoenas related to improper firing of federal attorneys, torture, election violations, and exposing — for political retribution — the identity of Valerie Plame, a covert CIA operative working on WMD proliferation.
8. Spying on us. Cheney was the mastermind behind the National Security Agency’s warrantless wiretapping program that spied on thousands, perhaps millions, of American citizens on American soil. This massive government interference with personal phone calls and emails was in violation of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, the Federal Telecommunications Act, and 4th Amendment of the Constitution.
9. Bomb, bomb, bomb Iran. When Cheney was CEO of Halliburton, the company skirted the law against investing in Iran by using a phony offshore subsidiary. Once VP, however, Cheney advocated bombing Iran. “I was probably a bigger advocate of military action than any of my colleagues,” Cheney said in response to questions about whether the Bush administration should have launched a preemptive attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities prior to handing over the White House to Barack Obama. Cheney thinks Obama is too soft on Iran, and he has said that the only way for diplomacy with Iran to work is if Obama also threatens to bomb the country. Negotiations are “bound to fail unless we are perceived as very credible” in threatening military action against Iran, he said. It seems that wars with Iraq, Afghanistan, and Libya, plus drone attacks in Pakistan and Yemen, are not enough to satisfy Cheney’s war addiction. But wait, there’s more…
10. Favored bombing Syria — and North Korea — instead of negotiating. One of the key anecdotes in Cheney’s memoir is his recollection of a session with the National Security Council in 2007, when he advised Bush to bomb a suspected Syrian nuclear reactor site. “After I finished,” he writes, “the president asked, ‘Does anyone here agree with the vice president?’ Not a single hand went up around the room.” Luckily, Cheney’s advice was dismissed in favor of a diplomatic approach (although the Israelis bombed the site in September 2007). As for North Korea, in his book, Cheney calls former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice naive for trying to forge a nuclear weapons agreement with North Korea.
Enough? Since President Obama is not interested in holding Cheney accountable, the least we can do is to show our disgust by dumping his books in the crime section and inserting this bookmark. And if you happen to be lucky and catch one of Cheney’s book signings, bring along a pair of handcuffs.
Read more by Medea Benjamin
- Why I Interrupted Obama Counterterrorism Adviser John Brennan – May 1st, 2012
- Obama Administration Silencing Pakistani Drone-Strike Lawyer – April 9th, 2012
- 10 Reasons to Keep an Eye on AIPAC – February 28th, 2012
- Jailed for Sailing to Gaza, Challenging the Blockade – November 4th, 2011
- 100 Days of Solidarity With Iraq – September 28th, 2011





Walter Cole
August 30th, 2011 at 12:25 am
Cheney´s book belongs right next to all those books written about the Holocaust.
My God, and Obama continues to expand the Bush-Cheney polities. What have we become?
Sally
August 30th, 2011 at 4:48 am
The author somehow FORGOT to mention that the American people APPROVED of those things Cheney was doing, which is why they elected Team Bush TWICE – the second time when Bush's torture chambers and other war crimes were already widespread public knowledge. But the important thing here is to promote the fallacy that the American people have no responsibility for their actions, that enabling war criminals to continue to operate torture chambers is no reflection on them! It's all the fault of propaganda! Or it's…..Rush's fault! Or….somebody else. And anti-war.com promotes that nonsense every bit as much as does FOX 'news.' Sad.
NavyVietnamWarVet
August 30th, 2011 at 7:09 am
Cheney is a WAR CRIMINAL.
And sadly – the American people are complicit in the war crimes being committed by the US.
Drake
August 30th, 2011 at 9:28 am
Not only is Cheney the great war criminal and war profiteer of our time, he is also an unabashed draft dodger.
RickR30
August 30th, 2011 at 11:31 am
All of this makes you want to become religious in the hopes that there is divine justice, since human justice doesn't seem able or willing to deal with creatures like cheney.
Die Wahrheit zählt
August 30th, 2011 at 11:33 am
Sally,
Was it really the American people or voters (they're not necessarily the same), who were at fault for Bush? Could it be that the power of the mainstream media, financed by large corporations and staffed to a great extent by those who toe the official line – demonize Iran, applaud Israel etc. – had something to do with it? Could it also be that those employed in the weapons and ancilliary industries, and government state agencies, know how to vote if they want to keep their jobs? In other words, could it be that the future of thousands of people depends on America continually threatening and waging war? How many of the voters really care about torture, atrocities, support for violent dictatorships, an Israeli controlled Congress etc. when they vote? Is there such a thing as real democracy in America?
andy
August 30th, 2011 at 6:25 pm
In a just world he would be tried as a war criminal.
the lion
August 30th, 2011 at 8:54 pm
The reality, Andy is that he wont be tried as a War Criminal, so I would take him being tried for almost anything, do an Al Capone on him!
War Profiteering would be the best one, RICO statutes allow for both Cheney and Halliburton/KBR to both be prosecuted in this significant crime, and it allows for siezure of Assetts, effecting a return to treasury of that which was effectively stolen. A Win win situation for the American People.