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Torture vs. Interrogation
I wanted to as this question, because I hear a lot of people in the news and otherwise discussing enhanced interrogation as torture. The following is described as enhanced interrogation by SERE: (Survival , Evasion, Resistance and Escape). Most of these, if not all were prohibited by the 2005 Detainee Treatment Act:
Prolonged isolation Prolonged sleep deprivation Sensory deprivation Extremely painful "stress positions" Sensory bombardment (such as prolonged loud noise and/or bright lights) Forced nakedness Sexual humiliation Cultural humiliation (such as desecration of holy scriptures) Being subjected to extreme cold that induces hypothermia Exploitation of phobias Simulation of the experience of drowning, i.e., waterboarding. So my questions is this: You have an enemy who has information you need to save lives and he refuses to share what he knows. How do you get it? If you would like, you can reference the 2006 Army Field Manual. http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm34-52.pdf |
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At first I'd like to point out, as it's not immediately obvious, that the SERE you reference was originally developed as a training program for soldiers to resist such types of "enhanced interrogation" or "torture" when it is done to them. It is not a training program on how to perform such tactics. Developed during the Korean War and extended to the Vietnam War, such tactics were used against our soldiers to torture fake confessions out of them in order to bolster their propaganda.
I'd call it torture, since from my general knowledge I think psychological torture is just as harmful if not more harmful than the standard run-of-the-mill physical torture. Calling it anything else to me is just trying to make it sound more benign so that it's easier to argue that it's ok, since "we're not talking about torture here, this is ok!" |
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My question remains: How do you get the information legally? |
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Well, the founding fathers warned against suspending civil liberties in times of war. But, if one looks back to our history of military conflict, liberties have been suspended during nearly every single conflict. It's certainly a complex issue.
My understanding is that these tactics were not used to learn past information, but rather to learn intelligence that would assist the military in the future. |
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My guess is you have an agenda with this thread, so get with it already. :lol: |
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But beyond this, you do good cop bad cop, and they don't give up the information as many simple criminals don't when interrogated using those methods, especially if they must be goven ample amounts of sleep and comfortable living conditions (our own accused criminals often don't get that). Then what? My agenda is that there needs to be an answer to a real situtation, not simply a criticism. Getting rid of enhanced interrogation techniques does not sudden erase the problem that existing techniques were not working. So if you remove certain techniques, how then do you get the information you need if approved techniques don't work? |
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Pretty much all that I've heard in recent reports, now that much of the Bush era people and memos are coming out and speaking up, are saying that torture wasn't needed, and that we were getting information without torture. Not to mention, much like regular physical torture, they all seem to say that "enhanced techniques" don't get you the facts, it just forces the one being abused to tell you what you want to hear. |
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From what I understood from the memos was that there was an escalation of interrogation tactics. They didn't simply start out with waterboarding, but instead there were opinions asked for and received each time a enhanced technique was suggested. I did not read the memos word for word, so I may be incorrect in my extrapolation, though.
To say that there was not a escalation of tecniques used, does not follow the evidence in the memos as I understand them, and also makes the supposition that the CIA and other interrogator's aim was to be sadistic, and not to gain information through the simplest means posible (those means that did not require legal opinion) and then escalate the means depending on the results of previous techniques. Also, we have to recognize that waterboarding was done to three people, who were all of a high level within the enemy organization, which increase the chances that they had sensitive informaation that they refused to share. If it was the CIA's normal methods, wouldn't far more detainees have been waterboarded? Myself, I'm curious to see if and when the memos and evidence regarding the results of the interrogations are released, and what they say. I am conflicted over waterboarding as while it is without a doubt an extraordinarily unpleasant experience, it does not cause pain or mutilate. Also, the detainees were told ahead of time that they would not die as a resut. So to me when you say waterboarding is torture, its lumping it into the realm of castration, bone breaking, pulling out fingernails, etc. I think that diminishes the word. Is it legal or moral? That's another issue. Personally, if the documents regarding waterboarding show it to be an affective means of extracting information (all evidence to this point for and against the technique has been completely anecdotal), I would still be tolerant of it's use in extreme situations, but not as a normal part of interrogating. If it proves to be ineffective (meaning in full transparency there is no evicence it supplied crucial intel) I see no reason the ever do it again. |
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I was going to say 'use whatever means necessary, smash their faces in, pull their teeth out, fuck the geneva convention, torture the basterd... in a war situation anyway' and I kind of think that sometimes if I am being honest.
But after taking a step back and thinking about it I remembered something, something very prominent in the U.K, November 5th. Bonfires and fireworks and shit in rememberance of 'The Gunpowder Plot' when a man named Guy Fawkes or Guido Fawkes allegedly tried to blow up the houses of parliament. Check out his signature both before - ![]() And after torture - ![]() I researched this years ago as part of a school history project and it still leads me to think that a man would sign anything after being tortured and if he didn't then it was more than likely because, he was dead. Now just to make some comments on some of the initial points. Prolonged isolation - Not torture in my mind, some people like it. Prolonged sleep deprivation - One of the ultimate and worst forms of mental torture known to Ric ;) Sensory deprivation - jedi training Extremely painful "stress positions" - ouch... torture, the same as beating someone up Sensory bombardment (such as prolonged loud noise and/or bright lights) - sounds like a nightclub not torture :p (torture really!) Forced nakedness - can be embarassing but you can always embrace it :lol: not torture Sexual humiliation - what you mean rape and shit? Torture man. Cultural humiliation (such as desecration of holy scriptures) - not torture, take it like a man, you are in prison. Being subjected to extreme cold that induces hypothermia - torture Exploitation of phobias - not torture, some people do this to overcome their phobias, it's just mean, funny if you do it to someone though. Go on go and get a spider and take it to your mum :lol: Simulation of the experience of drowning, i.e., waterboarding. - torture In conclusion I dont know really, it depends what one considers torture. And in which situations it should be used but then as I said, is torture the best way or will a man succumb to anything after torture? What are yout thoughts on using Sodium Penthanol (Truth Serum) and a lie detector, even at the same time? EDIT: We all know the CIA are, to coin the phrase, 'as bent as a nine bob note anyway' (i.e a £9 or $9 note) so of course they have broken human rights treaties etc as I am sure many other organisations across the globe have done. |
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I suppose the real question is: does the Constitution / rule of law apply to enemy combatants, depending upon where they are located, which is a question I am not able to fully answer. If the rule of law does apply, then we must treat these enemy combatants as any other citizen. If the rule of law does not apply, then I believe using any means necessary to protect our people is appropriate.
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As far as I know a soldier is a soldier wherever he is in the world and is a representitive of the army and thus the country he is serving, as said representitive he is restricted to the same laws as anyone else of that country. No one is above or below the law. I can not comment on the US constituion though as I have little knowledge of it, I live in the UK, it does not apply to me. |
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http://www.pegc.us/detainee_act_2005.html My question is whether or not waterboarding is truly defineable torture seeing that it doesn't really fall into the definitions if the detainees are told they will not be killed before hand. To me it's a grey area to be exploited in very rare and extreme situations if it's proven to work. |
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I honestly believe waterboarding is torture. Do you honestly believe prisoners are told what is going to happen first? If they were they would just endure it. If they dont know then they will fear they might drown and so will be more likely confess. |
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Well, not really. The definition of torture ( that can be prosecuted in the US) is to cause physical pain, multilation or to psychologically torture with that definition being to instill the fear of death in the efforts to gain information. Also, intent to torture is a part of that as well, but we'll leave that part out for the sake of this discussion.
So why waterboarding is such a grey area is because it meets none of those criteria when you tell the detainee beforehand they will not die. Once you remove the fear of death, it ceases being torture, technically speaking because it doesn't case any pain and does not mutilate. As for whether or not they were "really" told, all we know is that the interrogators were instructed to tell the detainees they would not be killed. Other than that, we don't know as there is no evidence to the contrary. I imagine they would tell them, because the technique has proven to instill severe panic regardess of the conditions it is presented in, so why not cover your ass? I listened to a local radio sho where a DJ was brought to tears when he was waterboarded with kool aid for only a minute or so. The technique apparently plays on an inherent reaction to drowning that kicks in regardless of your knowledge. |
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