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Author Topic: Is it acceptable for the US government to torture people?  (Read 66120 times)
paul.karen
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« Reply #275 on: April 18, 2009, 04:50:12 PM »

Bill i never claimed i wasnt a little  :urcrazy;.

But as i dont agree with you 100% i can see why you think that.

Tell me where im wrong here.

We have a terrorist we caught on a field of battle.  Should have just killed him but we didnt.  He gets a little torture thrown in a box with a scorpion say. Whoopie people down south put on there shoes daily with a chance of a scorpion being in them.  So we put the terrorist in the box.  We get useful information about a planed attack.

You would want the people who placed this terrorist in the box to face trial for averting a major bombing saving innocent people.  And go to jail for many years.

And if it came out later that he was tortured but no one followed up out of fear of imprisonment you would shrug and say oh well.



This isnt a war we we have faced before.  Do you realize they prefer to kill innocent children and ladies.  makes them feel better really im not joking.

What we do to them that you claim is torture is a freaking joke to the world in general.  Especially the terrorist.  They are trained for our techniques of torture.  Hard to train for your head being sawed off but we dont do that.
I can show you some videos of executions and real torture.  Just ask for them ill provide them.  Then i will show some videos of the torture we do.  Maybe then you can see the difference.

Im curious does the word terrorist offend or bother you.

Im done on this thread. People can see i dont mind OFFENDING (torturing) a terrorist to save lives or gain valuable intelligence.
Not like we are executing them in inhumane ways,

This doesnt mean i like torture mind you.  No one does.  One of lifes necessary evils so to say.  You make it seem like we torture hundreds a week.  It has only been a few BAD guys.  It worked and they are all alive and doing well no scars to bear or sleepless nights.

Oh my i reread this.  And i think i do have  :urcrazy; issues.


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Wallyz
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« Reply #276 on: April 18, 2009, 05:41:10 PM »

Your basic assumption is that torture gets accurate information out of people.  The experts claim that it does not.  The recent experience with Abu Zubaydeh and Khalid Sheikh Mohammed showed that there was no serious, lifesaving information gained.  And then, because of the torture, the things that they did admit to were thrown out, so that there is no way to charge them with a crime. Torture is inhumane, but worse than that, it is ineffective for the reason you are OK with them torturing people.   
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Bill Peckham
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« Reply #277 on: April 18, 2009, 06:30:36 PM »

You can't really say on the one hand all this amounts to is a little face slap or a bee sting and on the other hand this is the only way to compel fanatical killers to divulge their plots. Let's be clear that we are talking about torture. There is no reason to couch our descriptions about what was done.

So you get this guy who you think might know something and you slap him around a little. He says I've told you everything I know. Are you certain? How can you be certain he isn't holding out? Maybe you weren't rough enough. So it escalates.

If you base your approach on the idea that given enough torture someone will tell you a secrete they would otherwise withhold then wouldn't you end up torturing people routinely because you never know what they might know? If you truly believe that someone might have critical intelligence how could you stop? Why not pick the guy up? Since you have the ability you'd be obliged to use it if you really believe that given enough torture someone will tell you a secrete they would otherwise withhold and certainly anyone might have an interesting secrete. And this is what has happened - people have been disappeared based on hunches.

Is this who you want us to be? Do you really want us to be running secrete prisons staffed by doctors to keep people alive through their torture and psychologists to figure out what the most effective torture would be and lawyers who are willing to say it is all nice and legal. There is an entire infrastructure that goes with it ... it's perverse and sickening. This whole chapter is a dark stain on the country's honor.
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« Reply #278 on: April 18, 2009, 08:33:22 PM »

Interesting is the claim about these "experts".

You are going to need documentation as to who these experts are, which of these alleged torture methods they used, and on which of the terrorists they used them on.

Also a link showing these confessions were thrown out.  Especially in light of the fact that Khalid is still on trial and of last information wants to plead guilty to his crimes.





When these methods are used correctly it gets results.  This isnt the type of method that is used until you physically break one into confessing to anything and everything.  That is a grave mistake to think that is what is being done on a general basis.

8 terrorist attacks were averted, over 100 al-qaeda members named, details of al-qaeda's working given up.  There is a reason we havent had a terrorist attack since 2001 here.

Now the problem will be.  Will Obama go back to the failings of Clinton in approaching and dealing with terrorism  and set up another attack or keep al-qaeda on the defensive like Bush did.





« Last Edit: April 18, 2009, 08:54:52 PM by BigSky » Logged
Wallyz
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« Reply #279 on: April 19, 2009, 02:11:04 PM »

You make the claim that it has been effective. You have no sources for the claims you make. The recent interrogaitons Of KSM and  were described byt he CIA as producing "no actionable information".

Did he confess to some things? Yes, after four years of torture.  Now, we cannot prosecute him because of the torture.

The issue of the effectivenss of torture:  Jeannine Bell's 2005 article is a very good one.

The citations for the effectiveness of torture are few, anecdotal, and remarkable inefficient.  Further more, they are virtually all (Philippines 95, Various NI incidents) successful in obtaining confessions, not information of future operations.

There is no historical record of torture extracting information that is then used in stopping an attack.  The "Ticking Time Bomb " Scenario has no basis in any historical incident. (Apologies to Joel Sarnow) 

THe CIA training Manuel KUBARK say:s this about inflicting pain:
Quote
Interrogatees who are withholding but who feel qualms of guilt and a secret desire to yield are likely to become intractable if made to endure pain. The reason is that they can then interpret the pain as punishment and hence as expiation. There are also persons who enjoy pain and its anticipation and who will keep back information that they might otherwise divulge if they are given reason to expect that withholding will result in the punishment that they want. Persons of considerable moral or intellectual stature often find in pain inflicted by others a confirmation of the belief that they are in the hands of inferiors, and their resolve not to submit is strengthened.

Intense pain is quite likely to produce false confessions, concocted as a means of escaping from distress. A time-consuming delay results, while investigation is conducted and the admissions are proven untrue. During this respite the interrogatee can pull himself together. He may even use the time to think up new, more complex "admissions" that take still longer to disprove. KUBARK is especially vulnerable to such tactics because the interrogation is conducted for the sake of information and not for police purposes.

If an interrogatee is caused to suffer pain rather late in the interrogation process and after other tactics have failed, he is almost certain to conclude that the interrogator is becoming desperate. He may then decide that if he can just hold out against this final assault, he will win the struggle and his freedom. And he is likely to be right. Interrogatees who have withstood pain are more difficult to handle by other methods. The effect has been not to repress the subject but to restore his confidence and maturity.

Those are a place to start. Still waiting for your cite for pain or suffering vs pain and suffering.
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BigSky
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« Reply #280 on: April 19, 2009, 04:55:15 PM »



Its a folly to think that one needs to gain only actionable information for it to be effective.  We did gain information from him as well as others. 

Information we have gained from such actions has produced intel on 8 terrorist plots, over a hundred other terrorists, as well has workings of al-qaeda.


Also we are prosecuting him despite your claim to the otherwise.  I am not sure where you keep pulling that false claim from.


You say no historical evidence. 

Seems you forget to mention that once torture was used in the Philippines against a suspect, the individual gave up the Bojinka plot.



As before,

I used the term "and".  It doesnt matter if the term is "or"  as I pointed out before.

Because the conventions say it has to be severe.



So whatever you think you have, you have not.





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Bill Peckham
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« Reply #281 on: April 19, 2009, 04:59:36 PM »

Still no sources, no links.
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Wallyz
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« Reply #282 on: April 19, 2009, 05:30:42 PM »

Here's someone who knows more than anyone here:

http://www.nydailynews.com/opinions/2009/04/19/2009-04-19_why_the_bush_torture_architects_must_be_prosecuted_a_counterterror_expert_speaks.html
Quote
I have been engaged in the hunt for al-Qaeda for almost two decades. And, as I once wrote in the Daily News, I have personally led, witnessed and supervised waterboarding of hundreds of people - as we trained our own fighting men and women to endure and resist the interrogation tactics they might be subjected to by our enemies. I know waterboarding is torture because I have been on the giving and receiving end of the practice.
This was during the last four years of my military career, when I served at the U.S. Navy Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape (SERE) school. Working there, and helping protect our servicemen and women, was my greatest pride. We especially emphasized escape, because captivity by al-Qaeda's Jihadis would be severe, if not, final.  Our methods of instruction were intense, but realistic and safe.
Now, at long last, six years of denials can now be swept aside, and we can say definitively: America engaged in torture and legalized it through paperwork.

Quote
Worst of all was that an agency advising the Justice Department, the Joint Personnel Recovery Agency, knew that these coercive techniques would not work if captives devoutly trusted in their God and kept faith with each other.  Yet those two characteristics are pre-qualifications for being allowed into al-Qaeda. Other non-coercive methods - the central focus of which is humanely deprogramming them of their religious ideological brainwashing - are now turning al-Qaeda members in Indonesia, Iraq and Saudi Arabia. But they were never considered. Perhaps they were not macho enough.

Quote
Nance is the Founding Director of the International Counterterrorism Center for Excellence at Hudson N.Y. and author of "The Terrorist Recognition Handbook - A Practitioner's Manual for Predicting and Identifying Terrorist Activity."



As forr the numbers of terrorists you give- can you give us any cites or cases?    I've tried hard to give you solid material to work with, and would appreciate an effort at reciprocation. 
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BigSky
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« Reply #283 on: April 19, 2009, 06:34:18 PM »

The vast number of stories on terrorism I had saved were lost due to a windows update corrupting my profile causing all information to be lost.  So all you will get is the source- The AP reported on it at the time.


The JTF on their own website says what they have gathered at Gitmo.

Organizational structure of al-Qaida and other terrorist groups;
Extent of terrorist presence in Europe, the United States, and the Middle East;
al-Qaida’s pursuit of weapons of mass destruction;
Methods of recruitment and locations of recruitment centers;
Terrorist skill sets, including general and specialized operative training; and
How legitimate financial activities are used to hide terrorist operations.


Here's someone who knows more than anyone here:

I have personally led, witnessed and supervised waterboarding of hundreds of people - as we trained our own fighting men and women to endure and resist the interrogation tactics they might be subjected to by our enemies. I know waterboarding is torture because I have been on the giving and receiving end of the practice.


As forr the numbers of terrorists you give- can you give us any cites or cases?    I've tried hard to give you solid material to work with, and would appreciate an effort at reciprocation. 


Interesting. 

bill has already posted evidence that the government didnt consider it to be torture at the time.

Of note is a commander a few years ago at Gitmo also said it was not torture because we would not consider it torture if it was done to our soldiers.

Which you might note your own post the individual says they are interrogation tactics and our own troops were trained to endure them.  So this fits in perfectly to what a commander at gitmo said it not being torture.

In your post the guy gives his opinion and says it is torture.  It matters not what he says because he was not in charge and those in charge concluded it was not torture.  Even more to the point he at first called them interrogation tactics instead of torture tactics.


Khalid

On February 11, 2008 US Department of Defense charged Mohammed as well as Ramzi Binalshibh, Mustafa Ahmad al-Hawsawi, Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali and Walid Bin Attash for the September 11 attacks under the military commission system, as established under the Military Commissions Act of 2006.

On December 8, 2008, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and his four co-defendants told the judge that they wished to confess and plead guilty to all charges. - wikipedia



Murad himself said he was tortured at the time and it has been written about in books on terrorism.  No I am not going to go back through them and see what ones they were in.

But from the web.

Abdul Hakim Murad confessed details of Phase II in his interrogation by the Manila police after his capture.-wikipedia  Bojinka
 
His interrogations by Philippine National Police Intelligence consisted of waterboarding, being beaten with chairs and lumber, and having cigarettes extinguished on his penis and testicles.  -wikipedia   Abdul Hakim Murad

« Last Edit: April 19, 2009, 08:14:47 PM by BigSky » Logged
Wallyz
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« Reply #284 on: April 19, 2009, 08:20:57 PM »

Confessions of previous acts do not equate to information that prevents future attacks.

KSM's confessions were all about incidents that occurred before his incarceration, from the World Trade Center Bombing to the murder of Daniel Pearl.  Because we tortured him- (for 4 years , water boarding him up to 183 times in one month, hardly an efficient process) we have confessions, but nothing that stopped anything new from happening.  Because we tortured him, we cannot use his confession in court, and we cannot try him on charges.

The Joint Task Force does not differentiate between intelligence gained from coercive, non- coercive, and "enhanced" techniques of interrogation, all of which were used at Gitmo.   In the light of the academic evidence, it seems a   a stretch to apply all those intelligence "wins" (none of which are  a "ticking bomb", btw) to outcomes of torture sessions.  DO you have other evidence in which the JTF claims that these were from torture sessions?   

JTF GTMO website


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Bill Peckham
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« Reply #285 on: April 19, 2009, 08:52:25 PM »

Until Cheney came along do you really think waterboarding wasn't considered torture? They have every reason to lie about the program it was against international law and US law and indeed clearly they have been lying about the program - it was widely reported that KSM broke right away:
KSM “didn’t resist,” one CIA veteran said in the August 13 issue of The New Yorker. “He sang right away. He cracked real quick.” Another CIA official told ABC News: “KSM lasted the longest under water-boarding, about a minute and a half, but once he broke, it never had to be used again.”

Um really? So were the 182 other times just for sh#ts and giggles?

Here's Bradbury's unhinged Orwellian judgment of how much waterboarding stayed within the boundaries of legality:
"[W]here authorized, it may be used for two "sessions" per day of up to two hours. During a session, water may be applied up to six times for ten seconds or longer (but never more than 40 seconds). In a 24-hour period, a detainee may be subjected to up to twelve minutes of water appliaction. See id. at 42.  Additionally, the waterboard may be used on as many as five days during a 30-day approval period."

But as emptywheel notes:
So: two two-hour sessions a day, with six applications of the waterboard each = 12 applications in a day. Though to get up to the permitted 12 minutes of waterboarding in a day (with each use of the waterboard limited to 40 seconds), you'd need 18 applications in a day. Assuming you use the larger 18 applications in one 24-hour period, and do 18 applications on five days within a month, you've waterboarded 90 times--still just half of what they did to KSM.

Once you start to torture - and waterboarding has always been considered torture - you have every reason to lie about what you've been doing. These memos prove that the Bush/Cheney administration lied about what they were doing but the memos also show that even by the Bush-Cheney standards of legality, the waterboarders far exceeded what was allowed. They broke the law even by Bush's standards.

And when you consider what Axelrod said on CBS today - if you break the Orwellian Bush/Cheney rules you will be prosecuted - it would tell you that these sadists should soon have to defend their actions in court.
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« Reply #286 on: April 20, 2009, 04:07:01 PM »

One doesnt need to have information on future attacks for it to be considered effective.  Other information was gathered from him with these methods.  Prior to this when asked about future terrorist attacks all he said was  "Soon you will know."  So it was he himself who implied he had information. 

Obama wants to release memos, then release the information on EVERYTHING KSM spoke about.

Despite what you keep claiming, Khalid is indeed on trial. 




The stuff from emptywheel.

Sorry but what they have done is pull something not only out of context, but they pulled it out and applied it out of sequence of the report.

Such as  their claim about "but never more than 40 seconds".  That is not what was said.

It says "at periods of at most 40 seconds. 

This sentence is not in the context of them telling the CIA it is limited to only that amount of time as emptywheel is trying to evidently claim.

The context it what was said is one relaying what was told to them in how the technique is done. 


The next sentences actually do go into detail by the writer in how the technique can be applied and for how long.

The waterboard may be authorized for, at most, one 30 day period, during which the technique can actually be applied on no more than five days.  Further, there can be no more than two sessions in any 24 hour period.  Each session--the time during which the detainee is strapped to the waterboard  - last no more than two hours.  There may be at most six applications of water lasting 10 second or longer during any session, and water may be applied for a total of no more than 12 minutes during any 24 hours period.

As you can see nowhere in how they tell them it can be done does it say its limited to only 40 seconds at a time.



Alsoof note in all of this KSM had said the US population was weak and lack resilience and would be unable to do what was necessary to prevent terrorists from succeeding in their goals. 

He dared us and we proved him wrong.





« Last Edit: April 20, 2009, 04:30:28 PM by BigSky » Logged
Bill Peckham
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« Reply #287 on: April 20, 2009, 09:31:08 PM »


The stuff from emptywheel.

Sorry but what they have done is pull something not only out of context, but they pulled it out and applied it out of sequence of the report.

Such as  their claim about "but never more than 40 seconds".  That is not what was said.

It says "at periods of at most 40 seconds. 

This sentence is not in the context of them telling the CIA it is limited to only that amount of time as emptywheel is trying to evidently claim.

The context it what was said is one relaying what was told to them in how the technique is done. 


The next sentences actually do go into detail by the writer in how the technique can be applied and for how long.

The waterboard may be authorized for, at most, one 30 day period, during which the technique can actually be applied on no more than five days.  Further, there can be no more than two sessions in any 24 hour period.  Each session--the time during which the detainee is strapped to the waterboard  - last no more than two hours.  There may be at most six applications of water lasting 10 second or longer during any session, and water may be applied for a total of no more than 12 minutes during any 24 hours period.

As you can see nowhere in how they tell them it can be done does it say its limited to only 40 seconds at a time.



Alsoof note in all of this KSM had said the US population was weak and lack resilience and would be unable to do what was necessary to prevent terrorists from succeeding in their goals. 

He dared us and we proved him wrong.

Emptywheel is trying to find a way to get to 183 sessions in a month under the Bush/Cheney approved guidelines. He could only get to 90 by making assumptions that I agree aren't warranted. When I read it I am left thinking that at the most someone would be waterboarded 10 times: twice in a day/5 times a month. Yet KSM gets it 183 times in a month. You can't follow these guidelines and get to 183. I don't think you can get past 10 (I don't know why you'd need to do it more than once).

The point stands: They broke the law even by Bush's standards. And the stated Obama administration policy is if you break the Orwellian Bush/Cheney rules you will be prosecuted. Which is all to say that these sadists should soon have to defend their actions in court.

The wheels at justice are turning. I think Obama is tempted to "keep walking" in Peggy Noonan's phrase, tempted to trade votes on healthcare or energy for not pressing the prosecution of constitutional crimes committed by the previous administration and under the previous administration's oversight. However, the Justice Department is feeling independent again and it is not Obama's call, so I guess we'll see. I'm all for releasing all the memos - I'd call it calling Cheney's bluff.
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« Reply #288 on: April 20, 2009, 09:43:26 PM »

Andrew Sullivan makes a solid point I hadn't considered before (my emphasis):

Quote
Leave aside for a moment the policy debate over torture in the abstract. From the very beginning, that has been largely moot. Why? Because even if you believe that the president has the duty to torture terror suspects, under the constitution, he has no legal right to do so without Congress' passage of legislation repealing the laws and treaties governing such torture. The use of torture is part of the laws of war and only Congress has the constitutional authority

To declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, and make rules concerning captures on land and water

It can't really be clearer than that. And the reason, of course, is the colonists' memory of the power of the monarch, especially with respect to torturing and mistreating prisoners of war. Now no legal authority in human history would judge the waterboarding of a prisoner 83 or 183 times in one month as anything but torture. If it were done to a US soldier, would Dick Cheney refuse to call it torture? Of course not, although it is telling that no reporter has ever asked him this obvious question directly.

And so it is simply an empirical fact that president Bush broke the law and violated his oath of office by ordering the torture of prisoners.

That's not all. Sullivan continues that the actions of the previous administration have already tainted the current administration, something Obama the Constitutional law professor must know

Quote
Note that this wasn't an emergency moment, or a ticking time-bomb scenario. It was a decision to torture made months after the 9/11 attacks and re-asserted years after the 9/11 attack, and set up as a program, with elaborate rules, staffing and bureaucracy, to torture prisoners for the indefinite future.

Now fast-forward to February 2007 when the International Committee of the Red Cross notifies the president of the United States that it believes that his administration has engaged in what was unequivocally torture of prisoners. At that point, the president is required, by law and by treaty, to open an investigation and prosecution of the guilty parties. The president failed to do that, another breach of the law. Moreover, any president privy to that information is required to initiate an investigation and prosecution - or violate the law and the Geneva Conventions.

And so Obama's refusal to investigate war crimes is itself against the law. And so torture's cancerous route through the legal and constitutional system continues, contaminating the future as well as the past, rendering the US incapable of upholding Geneva against other nations, because it has violated Geneva itself, and giving to every tyrant on the planet a justification for the torture of prisoners.

In this scenario, America becomes a city on a hill, where the rule of law is optional and torture acceptable if parsed into legal memos that do not pass the most basic professional sniff-test.

America becomes a banana republic.

As much as Obama might want to continue to focus on the other sh@t sandwiches Bush/Cheney left for him - it's a long list - however, I think he has to take a big bite out of this one before we can truly close the chapter on the historic low moral ebb of the last eight years.
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« Reply #289 on: April 21, 2009, 10:53:01 AM »


Emptywheel is trying to find a way to get to 183 sessions in a month under the Bush/Cheney approved guidelines. He could only get to 90 by making assumptions that I agree aren't warranted. When I read it I am left thinking that at the most someone would be waterboarded 10 times: twice in a day/5 times a month. Yet KSM gets it 183 times in a month. You can't follow these guidelines and get to 183. I don't think you can get past 10 (I don't know why you'd need to do it more than once).

How would they?  This memo they cite was written in 2005.  It seems they are applying the new opinions on this interrogation method written in the memo of 2005 to prior acts that occurred years beforehand because they cite nothing else.




Sullivans point is that only Congress can repeal law and treaties governing torture.

That memo from 2005 as well as others are chock full of legal opinions from various cases from various courts, conventions etc etc that show it was not torture and therefore legal.   So this was not an issue for Congress to repeal anything.


The best case they can claim is poor legal advice was given, even then they cannot charge those who gave legal opinion with crimes of torture.


What Cheney did was very clever.  He has put Obama in a hole on the issue.

Obama's only choice is to release ALL of these memos and information to call Cheney's "bluff" as you put it.  The release of only some records will not help Obama but will only hurt Obama on this issue.

1. They show full well we did gather some information and what we did works,
2.  Obama cannot release ALL the records because they contain sensitive information in them which again it shows it works.


So the only thing Obama can hope for is to release all the records and hope they show that we gathered no useful information at all from them.








I might add:
Whole story at:

http://www.cnsnews.com/public/content/article.aspx?RsrcID=46949

CIA Confirms: Waterboarding 9/11 Mastermind Led to Info that Aborted 9/11-Style Attack on Los Angeles

The Central Intelligence Agency told CNSNews.com today that it stands by the assertion made in a May 30, 2005 Justice Department memo that the use of “enhanced techniques” of interrogation on al Qaeda leader Khalid Sheik Mohammed (KSM) -- including the use of waterboarding -- caused KSM to reveal information that allowed the U.S. government to thwart a planned attack on Los Angeles. 
« Last Edit: April 21, 2009, 11:26:43 AM by BigSky » Logged
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« Reply #290 on: April 21, 2009, 04:20:34 PM »

I read the Constitution as saying that only Congress can set rules concerning treatment of detainees - captures on land and water. They've done that via numerous laws and treaties and by signing off, via funding, on the Army Field Manual. Any treatment outside what was vetted by Congress, outside our laws and treaties, outside the AFM, would be outside the Constitution.

I am completely in favor of a 9/11 style truth commission that would release all relevant documents (those that have not been destroyed (remind me again why you destroy records unless you're covering up a crime?)).

This is more reading - this time in Foreign Policy - that leaves me shaking my head and confirms my belief that all documents should be released and evaluated by a bipartisan commission:
Quote
By Philip Zelikow

I first gained access to the OLC memos and learned details about CIA's program for high-value detainees shortly after the set of opinions were issued in May 2005. I did so as Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's policy representative to the NSC Deputies Committee on these and other intelligence/terrorism issues.

...

The underlying absurdity of the administration's position can be summarized this way. Once you get to a substantive compliance analysis for "cruel, inhuman, and degrading" you get the position that the substantive standard is the same as it is in analogous U.S. constitutional law. So the OLC must argue, in effect, that the methods and the conditions of confinement in the CIA program could constitutionally be inflicted on American citizens in a county jail.

In other words, Americans in any town of this country could constitutionally be hung from the ceiling naked, sleep deprived, water-boarded, and all the rest -- if the alleged national security justification was compelling. I did not believe our federal courts could reasonably be expected to agree with such a reading of the Constitution.

Let's hope no court would agree but even better would be to never test its constitutionality when applied at a county jail.
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« Reply #291 on: April 21, 2009, 06:08:32 PM »

Cuba is certainly not a county jail in the US.

What you seem to forget is the memos cite a vast array of legal rulings, conventions etc etc  etc which support that  what was done was legal and it was still within the scope of those rules, laws and treaties set forth by Congress.

 It would be up to those opposed to cite legal rulings disputing each and everyone of those that are within those memos.  That isnt being done.




**A little update to add**

It looks like those harsh interrogation techniques worked.

As of today a memo from the current adminstration says those techniques worked.

“High value information came from interrogations in which those methods were used and provided a deeper understanding of the al Qa’ida organization that was attacking this country,”




 The terrorists said the US was weak and lack resilience and would be unable to do what was necessary to prevent terrorists from succeeding in their goals.  We proved them wrong, there is no need for the US to apologize for keeping its citizens safe.




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« Reply #292 on: April 21, 2009, 06:31:44 PM »

Cuba is certainly not a county jail in the US.

What you seem to forget is the memos cite a vast array of legal rulings, conventions etc etc  etc which support that  what was done was legal and it was still within the scope of those rules, laws and treaties set forth by Congress.

 It would be up to those opposed to cite legal rulings disputing each and everyone of those that are within those memos.  That isnt being done.

That's where Bybee and Yoo and the rest come in for the most criticism from other lawyers. As lawyers Bybee and Yoo, had a professional obligation to inform their clients of precedents that ran counter to their client's preferred position and there is no evidence that this was done while there are clear legal precedents. Lawyers, as an officer of the court, are required to not to hide adverse precedent.  And failing to tell your client about cases that run against the client's preferred result is a profound dereliction of duty. There is no evidence that they even mentioned the cases when the U.S. prosecuted Japanese soldiers for waterboarding, let alone their assertion that "there have been no prosecutions" under the specific statute.

I brought up the Japanese case earlier in this thread, certainly Bybee and Yoo knew of it and the fact that no counter evidence is presented is as damning as the what was presented.
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« Reply #293 on: April 21, 2009, 06:58:17 PM »


You bring up the Japanese.

There is one huge problem in bringing them up.  It has NEVER been shown what we did rose to the veracity and extent of how the Japanese did it.


Only when a method is used to the point that it breaks conventions or laws then can it be illegal.  At no point has it been shown what was done has gone past that point.


In fact if anything it doesnt bode well for Obama since people from Gitmo say their treatment is worse under Obama than it was under Bush.  So as bad as it may have been under Bush, its worse under Obama by their own words. 




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« Reply #294 on: April 22, 2009, 10:23:46 AM »


I might add:
Whole story at:

http://www.cnsnews.com/public/content/article.aspx?RsrcID=46949

CIA Confirms: Waterboarding 9/11 Mastermind Led to Info that Aborted 9/11-Style Attack on Los Angeles

The Central Intelligence Agency told CNSNews.com today that it stands by the assertion made in a May 30, 2005 Justice Department memo that the use of “enhanced techniques” of interrogation on al Qaeda leader Khalid Sheik Mohammed (KSM) -- including the use of waterboarding -- caused KSM to reveal information that allowed the U.S. government to thwart a planned attack on Los Angeles.

Oh dear

Quote
What clinches the falsity of Thiessen's claim, however (and that of the memo he cites, and that of an unnamed Central Intelligence Agency spokesman who today seconded Thessen's argument), is chronology. In a White House press briefing, Bush's counterterrorism chief, Frances Fragos Townsend, told reporters that the cell leader was arrested in February 2002, and "at that point, the other members of the cell" (later arrested) "believed that the West Coast plot has been canceled, was not going forward" (italics mine). A subsequent fact sheet released by the Bush White House states, "In 2002, we broke up (italics mine) a plot by KSM to hijack an airplane and fly it into the tallest building on the West Coast." These two statements make clear that however far the plot to attack the Library Tower ever got—an unnamed senior FBI official would later tell the Los Angeles Times that Bush's characterization of it as a "disrupted plot" was "ludicrous"—that plot was foiled in 2002. But Sheikh Mohammed wasn't captured until March 2003.

The house of cards is crumbling and the hearings haven't even begun.
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« Reply #295 on: April 22, 2009, 10:41:27 AM »

You seem very happy that men trying to save American lives may be heading to prison.
You seem happy that the terrorists cant be harmed but rather coddled like good ol boys.

Enjoy your big smile and happy times.
Cause these TERRORISTS still want to kill us.  Even people like you who stick up for them.
And dont even say anything about the constitution that obama walks on daily.

Sad to see your inspirational leader Mr. Obama can flip on and off like a lightswitch.  He just follows the polls from day to day to see what to do.  And when he misspeaks Pelozi makes him take it back.

How loud will you cheer if these men and woman protecting your rights and LIFE end up in prison??
And you say i have issues.  :urcrazy;

I want america to be safe.  That is my issue.
 I dont even want you to be harmed by terrorists.....

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« Reply #296 on: April 22, 2009, 11:25:00 AM »

The house of cards is crumbling and the hearings haven't even begun.

Hmm

too late bill,

Even this Administration just ADMITTED what we did worked and we gained high profile information.


The only thing that is crumbing is the excuses of those opposed to keeping America safe through the use of these tactics.




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« Reply #297 on: April 22, 2009, 12:28:45 PM »

Right, but the justification was that there was a ticking bomb and we got information about future attacks.  Now, we got '"Important background information about how Al Qaeda worked".  Do you see the slide?  The lies and the cover up are at least as problematic as the torture itself.



Paul-

If a government agent, my employee, broke the law and tortured people, I want him in jail.  If a Government lawyer secretly twisted the law in order to give cover to illegal activities that had already occurred, as it appears happened in some of these cases,  I want them charged as well.    When I ran my own company, I fired people who were doing illegal things.  This is my government, and your government, and I want it run by people who respect and obey the law.
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« Reply #298 on: April 22, 2009, 12:55:51 PM »

lol
Come on Wally.
Please dont go with the government and breaking laws side of things.


To bring it a little closer to these times lets go with me and you not paying our taxs.  We go to jail.  If your in higher ranks of government you walk.

Again we could go back and forth.
But to say our government respects us or our laws makes me laugh.  These are the people who want hookers and madams to go to prison.  Only to be caught red handed with a hooker.  These are the people who claim being gay is a sin.  Only we find out they themselfs are gay yet married?
These are the people who want tougher DWI laws.  Only to walk away after a DWI where a young lady loses her life do to them.
These are the people who condemn adultery only to be caught with there zipper down.
These are the people who have CASH in ther freezers.

These are the people we should look up to??
is breaking some laws worse then others?
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« Reply #299 on: April 22, 2009, 01:59:54 PM »

Lets waterboard the Senate!!!!!   :flower;   jk
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