CIA Confirms: Waterboarding 9/11 Mastermind Led to Info that Aborted 9/11-Style Attack on Los Angeles
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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.
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Awesome! A little water in the nostrils is very effective.
.... and more, in the New York Times ... Banned Techniques Yielded ‘High Value Information,’ Memo Says
I would love to see a section of the forum in which we attempt to apply the same standards of skeptical inquiry that we would like to see used in discussions of the paranormal to discussions of the political. Instead we have a section in which the same standards of non-skeptical inquiry which enable people to hold on to paranormal beliefs are used as the standard for presenting and examining political beliefs.
The OP of this thread -- quoted above in its entirety, since I'm joining this thread late and we're already on page 6 -- strikes me as a good example of what is wrong. A claim is made that the use of torture elicited useful information. But instead of presenting the claim clearly, we are given little more than a headline ("Waterboarding 9/11 Mastermind Led to Info that Aborted 9/11-Style Attack on Los Angeles") and a link. The claim is then treated as a proven fact.
This is how non-skeptics operate. A skeptic, in contrast, should lay things out clearly and in detail. If the claim being made is correct, then spelling things out allows other skeptics to see this for themselves.
The use of confident assertion is a common tactic of non-skeptics. It allows them to act as if something has already been established and that anyone who doesn't know this is an uninformed idiot who is scarcely worth paying attention to. This is useful for discouraging casual participants in the discussion from asking the obvious questions. (And if someone does raise the obvious questions, it sets up the non-skeptic to dismiss these derisively with a didn't you read the link?)
A good skeptic should not be afraid to present their claims simply, clearly, and in full detail. If the claim is good, then stating the claim clearly and presenting the relevant information others will need in order to see the truth of the claim will enable others to judge the claim's validity for themselves.
A main reason not to present such details is that the claim is not as rock-solid as the claimant would like to pretend. Then, bluff and bluster are needed to sell the claim. That's what too many people who post in this section of the forum appear to me to be resorting to.
In the OP, the broad claim is that torture produces useful information and the particular claim is that the prevention of an attack on LA is an example of this. But the details of the particular claim are omitted, and people are expected simply to accept this as true.
What attack is being referred to? How was it aborted? What was the information that enabled the attack to be aborted, who was it obtained from, and what are the details of how it was given to the interrogators? These are basic questions which a skeptic would be inclined to ask if presented with this claim -- and therefore these are basic questions which a skeptic should attempt to answer in presenting the claim to others.
That information is missing from the OP. I suspect there is a good reason for this: namely, the details do not support the claim. ***
There is no known attack on LA which was foiled subsequent to the water-boarding of Khalid Sheik Mohammed. There is, however, an attack on LA which appears to match the details in the CSN story and which was foiled in February 2002 when the cell leader was captured. Since this is prior to the water-boarding of Khalid Sheik Mohammed, it is difficult to see how any information obtained by him could have foiled the plot.
The Bush administration spoke frequently about the foiling of the LA plot. Here, for example, is an excerpt from a 2006 "Press Briefing on the West Coast Terrorist Plot":
Khalid Shaykh Muhammad was the individual who led this effort. He initiated the planning for the West Coast plot after September 11th, in October of 2001. KSM, working with Hambali in Asia, recruited the members of the cell. There was a total of four members of the cell. When they -- KSM, himself, trained the leader of the cell in late 2001 or early 2002 in the shoe bomb technique. You all will recall that there was the arrest of the shoe bomber, Richard Reid, in December of 2001, and he was instructing the cell leader on the use of the same technique.
After the cell -- the additional members of the cell, in addition to the leader, were recruited, they all went -- the cell leader and the three other operatives went to Afghanistan where they met with bin Laden and swore biat -- that is an oath of loyalty to him -- before returning to Asia, where they continued to work under Hambali.
The cell leader was arrested in February of 2002, and as we begin -- at that point, the other members of the cell believed that the West Coast plot has been canceled, was not going forward. You'll recall that KSM was then arrested in April of 2003 -- or was it March -- I'm sorry, March of 2003.
Here is George Bush speaking of this in 2008:
The bill Congress sent me would take away one of the most valuable tools in the war on terror -- the CIA program to detain and question key terrorist leaders and operatives. This program has produced critical intelligence that has helped us prevent a number of attacks. The program helped us stop a plot to strike a U.S. Marine camp in Djibouti, a planned attack on the U.S. consulate in Karachi, a plot to hijack a passenger plane and fly it into Library Tower in Los Angeles, and a plot to crash passenger planes into Heathrow Airport or buildings in downtown London.
Here is Washington Post coverage of the foiling of the plot:
President Bush, under pressure from Congress, defended his campaign against terrorism yesterday, offering for the first time a vivid account of a foiled al Qaeda plot to strike the United States after Sept. 11, 2001, by crashing a hijacked commercial airliner into a Los Angeles skyscraper.
Bush said four Southeast Asians who met with Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan in October 2001 were taught how to use shoe bombs to blow open a cockpit door and steer a plane into the Library Tower, the tallest building on the West Coast. The four were captured by Asian authorities before they could execute the plan, he said...
Bush first alluded to the incident in a speech in October when he said the United States and its allies had thwarted 10 serious planned al Qaeda attacks since Sept. 11, 2001. A White House list released at the time referred to a plot to fly a hijacked plane into an unspecified West Coast city in 2002. Citing unnamed sources, news organizations reported that the target was the Library Tower, since renamed the U.S. Bank Tower, and that the plot's author was Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the architect of the Sept. 11 attacks who was captured in 2003.
There are many other sources available with details on the LA plot which was foiled prior to the water-boarding of Khalid (and thus prior to any information obtained from him by the use of water-boarding). If there was another LA plot which was foiled with information obtained from Khalid, there is as yet no evidence of it.
Far from supporting the claim that water-boarding has been useful in producing information that prevented terrorist attacks, what this incident seems to show is:
(a) that examples to support the claim that water-boarding is useful in preventing terrorist attacks are hard to find;
(b) that the main example presented to support the claim is a deception;
and (c) that many believers in this claim were unable to examine the evidence clearly enough to see through the deception on their own.
This does not speak well for the people propounding the claim, the people who believe in the claim, or the claim itself.
*** Please note: I am not trying to say that Kallsop was aware of the details and deliberately chose to present the claim in a misleading fashion. I am inclined to believe that Kallsop was simply unaware of the details (but chose to present the claim anyway -- and in a way that made it appear as if Kallsop were actually familiar with the details and that the details would support the claim.)
Either way, this is not how skeptics should behave. But it is representative of the behavior of too many people who post in this section.
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