thaiboxerken
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2001
- Messages
- 34,592
You're asking for evidence that torture can provide false-data and false-confessions, Cobalt? Do you believe in witches?
You're asking for evidence that torture can provide false-data and false-confessions, Cobalt? Do you believe in witches?
Your statements suggest that torture is only capable of producing false information.
And the witch question is dumb. Did you even read the part of my post where I admit that any truly innocent person will say anything to get out of something, and that who was waterboarded were exceptional cases?
Evidence?
This always sounds like a weak cop out. I'd agree that if someone is actually innocent, sure, they'll say a load of crap to stop it from happening.
But the people that were waterboarded were exceptional cases, not just some middle eastern looking people who were walking down a street looking at a high rise funny.
I would imagine that those people were in fact prepared for interrogations, of many sorts. And when simple stuff doesn't work, you attempt something more.
Do I think that it's something to be proud of? Hell no!
If it can save lives and be worthwhile, do I think it should happen? If necessary, sure!
No. I'm saying if the only reason he's doing it is out of fun (as Marc's post suggested), it's the other definition of torture.So you are saying that "an agent of a government for the purpose of extracting info, a confession or as punishment" couldn't also get a little joy out of watching the pain?
Waterboarding is just one form of torture that was conducted under the Bush administration. (The way I read this thread title, the question is about the effectiveness of torture.) Other forms of torture, especially beating and having the prisoner hung from his handcuffed wrists in a position not quite kneeling have even led to the death of these prisoners from the torture.But the people that were waterboarded were exceptional cases, not just some middle eastern looking people who were walking down a street looking at a high rise funny.
Your statements suggest that torture is only capable of producing false information.
You can, of course, provide a link to my post where I made such an insistence.
That we are discussing the very notion of torture as being acceptable in my view violates the very bedrock principle of sacred honor. I don't want to be a part of it.
It looks to me as if the argument from the pro-torture side is that there is no evidence that water-boarding works because Obama is hiding it.
I'm thinking that it takes a bit of a sadist to torture another human being, for any reason.
The proponents of torture out themselves with every post. It's not information they want but to punish the evildoer.
I just have to ask. Thread after thread, you have presented this logical fallacy, but you refrain from calling it what it is: torture. Why is that? If you think torture is justified, why not own up to it and ask:What sort of human will not apply some temporary pain and discomfort to a very bad person who likely has knowledge about terrorist plots that will soon kill hundreds or even thousands (or tens of thousands) of human beings?
A total of over 250 waterboardings occurred, couldn't 250 methods of interrogation that didn't involve torture produce just as much or more information?
The **** are you babbling about, superhuman?So they were superhuman? Why would you think that the info you got was true?
For one thing, multiquote rules. Two, offer up evidence about those other forms of torture?Waterboarding is just one form of torture that was conducted under the Bush administration. (The way I read this thread title, the question is about the effectiveness of torture.) Other forms of torture, especially beating and having the prisoner hung from his handcuffed wrists in a position not quite kneeling have even led to the death of these prisoners from the torture.
By the US? If so, that's not good and that was hideously poor judgement. Where did I say that it's perfectly fine to torture everyone?In at least one case, just about what you facetiously suggested is about what happened--a perfectly innocent Afghani (no connection to any bad guys at all) driving his taxi was taken into custody and tortured to death.
Didn't say that either, hoss.As for waterboarding, does the fact that it was only done to 3 prisoners (over and over again) make it somehow NOT a crime?
Perhaps later. So far I'm just saying what his posts read like to me.You're deliberately misreading his statements then. If you like, respond to my point number 1 in post number 103.
And if it does, great, still a crime, I get that.The point isn't that torture never ever produces correct intelligence. The point is that at the time you make the decision to break international and US law by committing torture, you have no idea whether or not it will produce good intelligence.
I never said it was the only way. Goddamn, do people not read?Also, you also can't possibly know that it's the only possible way of producing that needed intel (a point that the "ticking time bomb" hypotheticals ask us to concede).
The dishonesty (or at least lack of understanding) from your side appears to be endless. I think dishonesty applies in your case because in a previous thread YOU were referred to posts that provided specific statements (i.e., evidence) and facts from CIA and other sources that indicate waterboarding worked. Here is some of the material you ignored.
Dennis Blair, Obama’s director of national intelligence - "High value information came from interrogations in which those methods were used and provided a deeper understanding of the al-Qaeda organization that was attacking this country.” (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/22/us/politics/22blair.html )
General Michael V. Hayden, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency under President Bush - “the use of these techniques against these terrorists made us safer. It really did work.” (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/22/us/politics/22blair.html ). Hayden recently wrote "As late as 2006, fully half of the government's knowledge about the structure and activities of Al Qaeda came from those interrogations." (http://www.veteranstoday.com/modules.php?name=AvantGo&op=ReadStory&sid=6029 )
Former National Intelligence Director Mike McConnell has said, "We have people walking around in this country that are alive today because this process happened." (The Washington Post via http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stor...auth22258-exceptions-no-torture-rule/?opinion )
George Tenet told CBS' "60 Minutes" (http://mikesamerica.blogspot.com/2007/04/george-tenet-terrorist-interrogations.html) - "Here's what I would say to you, to the Congress, to the American people, to the president of the United States: I know that this program has saved lives. I know we've disrupted plots. I know this program alone is worth more than the FBI, the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Security Agency put together, have been able to tell us."
And here is an article that you were referred to that gives specific details about how waterboarding worked to save lives and stop terrorist attacks when conventional approaches had failed.
http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=ZDE5YTNmZTg5OWUyOTlkMGUxOTk3OGMxY2I4ZDQ4YWQ=
Summarizing the facts claimed in it one could say ...
1) On 9/11 a terrorist plot horrifically murdered over 3000 innocent men, women and children in the United States.
2) We captured the mastermind of that plot, a man with the initials KSM. He was a man so evil that he actually plotted the death of 30,000 people and managed to murder over 3000.
3) KSM was interrogated by conventional means and yes, he did reveal some information, but apparently nothing that he didn't already think we knew. They were totally unable to get him to reveal information about any ongoing or still planned plots, and he did not give up the names of any other terrorists that he thought we didn't already know.
4) When asked what al-Qaeda plots were in the works, KSM told the interrogators that "Soon, you will know". So here was a terrorist, who they already knew had masterminded the killing of 3000+ people in a horrific manner; who destroyed four commercial passenger jets and a complex of skyscrapers to do it; who caused a trillion dollars in damage to an economy overall; and who damaged the psyche of an entire nation, and he was leading investigators to believe that "soon" there would be other such calamities.
5) And those investigators knew that there were indeed other plots underway. They knew that the terrorist organization was large, with many members. They knew that KSM was high enough in the al-Qaeda organization to know about some of the plots. In fact, they'd already discovered that he looked into crop dusters before he was caught ... planes whose only terrorist use might be to spread some form or biological or chemical weapon, which it was feared they might have obtained. So if nothing else, they suspected that might be an ongoing plot.
6) So they decided to waterboard him. And after getting nothing out of KSM by conventional interrogation, that he didn't think they already knew, he broke in minutes and started telling them things about ongoing plots and the names of other terrorists. Sure, he continued to resist, week they learned many things that indeed did prevent the loss of many additional lives (and not just Americans).
7) The article I linked lists some of the life saving facts they learned from waterboarding KSM and the two other top al-Qaeda members. As result of the information they obtained, they captured multiple additional terrorists ... terrorists who they hadn't known anything about even after months of conventional interrogation ... terrorists who were actively plotting additional mass murders at the time they were caught ... terrorists who were involved in the mass murder plots that had already taken place or that had been involved in plots that had been stopped.
8) And as pointed out in that article, one the plots (carrying out simultaneous attacks on the consulate, western residences and westerners at the local airport in Karachi) was stopped only days before it was completed. And the only reason that happened is that we used enhanced interrogation techniques on another captive.
The truth is you simply don't like what the CIA officers and that very specific evidence say, so you and the others have just ignored it or dismissed it out of hand. So you just ignore this evidence and continue your charade.
Now you can argue that the facts in that article aren't true ... that the CIA agents who provided those facts are liars. That the other officials I quoted above are liars. If that's the way you want to view it, then the best we can say is that the verdict is out. And the only way to resolve this is for Obama to release whatever information is necessary to resolve it.
Garbage.
If anyone is outing themselves, it is those who see the application of some temporary pain or discomfort (via waterboarding) as morally worse than not waterboarding ... even though past use of that method might now suggest one could get the information needed to prevent thousands of people from being murdered. Those folks are saying that applying some temporary pain and discomfort to one demonstrably bad person is more evil than allowing the murder of 1000's of people to take place when one perhaps could have prevented it without causing more than temporary pain and discomfort to one demonstrably bad person. I think that shows your own moral compass is broken, tsig.
The **** are you babbling about, superhuman?
For one thing, multiquote rules. Two, offer up evidence about those other forms of torture?
By the US? If so, that's not good and that was hideously poor judgement. Where did I say that it's perfectly fine to torture everyone?
Didn't say that either, hoss.
Perhaps later. So far I'm just saying what his posts read like to me.
And if it does, great, still a crime, I get that.
I never said it was the only way. Goddamn, do people not read?