BeAChooser
Banned
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- Jun 20, 2007
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It always amazes me how much pride some people take into sinking to the level of the enemy they hate the most.
Do you really think that by waterboarding someone, we've sunk to their level?
It always amazes me how much pride some people take into sinking to the level of the enemy they hate the most.
PTSD is permanent.
I do suggest that you refrain from further comment on things of which you know nothing relevant.





I also have to wonder how many of these defenders of torture (that's you, BAC) would be willing to have the techniques applied to themselves?
Would you inflict non-lethal, temporary pain and discomfort on one apparently guilty person if you thought doing so stood a good chance of saving hundreds of thousands of innocent men, women and children who will likely die within the hour if what that person knows isn't obtained? Yes or no?
Would you sketch out for us the set of actions, short of killing even more hundreds of thousands of innocent people, that you would not commit to avert such a tragedy? If you can't come up with anything, then I still find your question kinda pointless.Would you inflict non-lethal, temporary pain and discomfort on one apparently guilty person if you thought doing so stood a good chance of saving hundreds of thousands of innocent men, women and children who will likely die within the hour if what that person knows isn't obtained? Yes or no?
Back on page 4, BAC posed a hypothetical. Essentially, it was this (my paraphrase):
suppose there's a terrorist action being planned, we have in custody a captive who we are certain has information which would enable us to stop the action and save a large number of lives, and there are only a few hours left until the action will occur. Do you use conventional interrogation methods to obtain information which can prevent the action, or do you attempt to torture the information out of the captive?
On page 10 I added a second hypothetical:
Suppose there's a terrorist action being planned, we have in custody a captive who we are certain has information which would enable us to stop the action (and save a large number of lives), and there is a month or more before the action will occur. Do you use conventional interrogation methods to obtain information which can prevent the action, or do you attempt to torture the information out of the captive?
My answer for the second hypothetical is that we should use conventional methods, as these methods have a good track record
Originally Posted by Nova Land
The former hypothetical is extremely rare.
Perhaps. Note that such a situation could easily have arisen just before the 9/11 attack with just a minor tweaking of the facts.
"Easily"? Perhaps. But I note that it didn't.
the only place to date where such scenarios have been known to happen.
Likewise it is true that alien spacecraft may have crash-landed on earth and the remains may be stored in a military hangar.
Similarly it's possible the 9-11 attack was actually a plot carried out by our own government, as some 9-11 conspiracy theorists suggest.
1. Knee Splitter
A popular torture device during the Inquisition, the knee splitter does what it says: split victims' knees and render them useless. Built from two spiked wood blocks, the knee splitter is placed on top of and behind the knee of its victims. Two large screws connecting the blocks are then turned, causing the two blocks to close towards each other and effectively destroy a victim's knee.
In order to demonstrate that torture might be justified in certain situations, you need to show that it will achieve a better outcome than not using torture would
What you have not shown is that torture is effective in obtaining useful information which the questioner does not already possess.
In the example which opens this thread, for instance, torture was able to obtain information from KSM about the LA library tower plot -- several months after the plot had already been foiled using information obtained through conventional interrogation methods.
So MM, since you've decided to enter the fray, let's see if you'll answer my question.
Would you inflict non-lethal, temporary pain and discomfort on one apparently guilty person if you thought doing so stood a good chance of saving hundreds of thousands of innocent men, women and children who will likely die within the hour if what that person knows isn't obtained? Yes or no?
Waterboarding is for pussies.
KSM wouldnt have needed more than one application of these techniques...
http://www.listaholic.com/12-of-the-most-horrifying-torture-devices-in-history.html
All this fuss about a technique that "scares someone into thinking they are drowning" is a bit pathetic.
I particularly like this one...
Hmmmm, nice!
I would happily use any of these instruments of torture if the information extracted saved even one innocent life.
I would happily use any of these instruments of torture if the information extracted saved even one innocent life.
Originally Posted by BeAChooser
Please note the source I provided in an earlier post indicated that months of conventional interrogation was totally ineffective with regards to KSM and some of the other al-qaeda operatives who were captured.
No, that's not what your source said.
Zayn Abidin Muhammed Hussein abu Zubaida, the first high-ranking al-Qaeda member captured after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, broke in less than a minute after he was subjected to the technique and began providing interrogators with information that led to the disruption of several planned attacks, said John Kiriakou, who served as a CIA interrogator in Pakistan.
... snip ...
In an interview, Kiriakou said he did not witness Abu Zubaida's waterboarding but was part of the interrogation team that questioned him in a hospital in Pakistan for weeks after his capture in that country in the spring of 2002.
He described Abu Zubaida as ideologically zealous, defiant and uncooperative -- until the day in mid-summer when his captors strapped him to a board, wrapped his nose and mouth in cellophane and forced water into his throat in a technique that simulates drowning.
The waterboarding lasted about 35 seconds before Abu Zubaida broke down, according to Kiriakou, who said he was given a detailed description of the incident by fellow team members. The next day, Abu Zubaida told his captors he would tell them whatever they wanted, Kiriakou said.
The most effective use of waterboarding, according to current and former CIA officials, was in breaking Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, known as KSM, who subsequently confessed to a number of ongoing plots against the United States.
A senior CIA official said KSM later admitted it was only because of the waterboarding that he talked.
... snip ...
"KSM lasted the longest under waterboarding, about a minute and a half, but once he broke, it never had to be used again," said a former CIA official familiar with KSM's case.
... snip ...
According to the sources, CIA officers who subjected themselves to the waterboarding technique lasted an average of 14 seconds before caving in.
Water-Boarding Saves American Lives
Human Events ,* Nov 12, 2007 * by Murdock, Deroy
... snip ...
KSM, as intelligence agencies call him, directed the September 11 attacks, which killed 2,978 people and injured at least 7356. "I am the head of the al Qaeda military committee," he told Al Jazeera in April 2002. "And yes, we did it." KSM wired money to his nephew, Ramzi Yousef, who masterminded the February 1993 World Trade Center blast that killed six and wounded 1,040. KSM and Yousef planned Operation Bojinka, a foiled 1995 scheme to explode 12 American jetliners above the Pacific. While some doubt his claim, KSM reportedly said, "I decapitated with my blessed right hand the head of the American Jew Daniel Pearl in the City of Karachi, Pakistan."
After U.S. and Pakistani authorities captured KSM in March 2003, he stayed mum for months, often answering questions with Koranic chants. Interrogators eventually water-boarded him-for just 90 seconds.
KSM "didn't resist," one CIA veteran said in the August 13 New Yorker. "He sang right away." Another CIA official told ABC: "KSM lasted the longest under water-boarding, about a minute and a half, but once he broke, it never had to be used again."
KSM's revelations helped authorities arrest at least six major terrorists:
* Ohio-based trucker Iyman Faris pleaded guilty May 1, 2003, to providing material support to terrorists. He secured 2,000 sleeping bags for al Qaeda and delivered cash, cell phones and airline tickets to its men. He also conspired to derail a train near Washington, D.C., and use acetylene torches to sever the Brooklyn Bridge's cables, plunging it into the East River.
* Jemaah Islamiya (JI) agent Rusman "Gun Gun" Gunawan was convicted of transferring money to bomb Jakarta's Marriott Hotel, killing 12 and injuring 150.
* Hambali, Gunawan's brother and ring-leader of JI's October 2002 Bali nightclub blasts, killed 202 and wounded 209.
* Suspected al Qaeda agent Majid Khan, officials say, provided money to JI terrorists and plotted to assassinate Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, detonate U.S. gas stations and poison American water reservoirs.
* Jose Padilla, who trained with al Qaeda in Afghanistan, was convicted last August of providing material support to terrorists and conspiring to kidnap, maim and murder people overseas. Padilla, suspected of but not charged with planning a radioactive "dirty bomb" attack, reportedly learned to incinerate residential high-rises by igniting apartments filled with natural gas.
* Malaysian Yazid Sufaat, an American-educated biochemist and JI member, reportedly provided hijackers Khalid al-Midhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi housing in Kuala Lumpur during a January 2000 9/11 planning summit. He also is suspected of employing "20th hijacker" Zacarias Moussaoui. "The 9/11 Commission Report" (page 151) states: "Sufaat would spend several months attempting to cultivate anthrax for al Qaeda in a laboratory he helped set up near the Kandahar airport."
Imagine how many innocent people these six Islamo-fascists (and perhaps others) would have murdered had interrogators left KSM unwater-boarded and his secrets unuttered.
What has some crap that has never happened to do with the validity of torutring people against who you do not have a valid and airtight case of anything?
The effects are not temporary. Can you not get your petty, viscious mind around that?
And what is it doing to the minds of our soldiers when some dirtbag tels them to take part in torturing people?
Is there any possibility that the maladaptive behavior will spill over into other areas?
Those of us with military experience will hasten to assure you, YOU CAN BET YOUR KUNDINGI IT WILL.
Do try to learn some military science relevant to treatment of prisoners.
I cite the case of KSM and statements made by his interrogators. He remained defiant after months of conventional interrogation but broke in 90 seconds when waterboarding was begun.
As I pointed out above, the LA library tower plot was only one of several situations that the Bush administration claimed was defused as a result of waterboarding and the like.
And if it didn't save a life, would you put his knees back together and apologize? Once you start mutilating someone, you can't exactly unring that bell.
Methinks you'll get jumped on a bit for a comment like that...
What is the problem? Are you doubting that the treatment will result in PTSD or are you just admitting that you are flat busted on the professional opinion of one better trained than the torutre advocates here to know what the result of sub-human interrogation tactics can be?
I have yet to see one person who really understands detainee operations advocating for waterboarding.
In the case of KSM not giving any information?
No I wouldnt repair his knees, I would shoot him.
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