zach.:
is it still wrong to ask you to post more often? ;p

excellent articles. can't wait for armed liberal's part II. but what are YOUR opinions on the subjects?
11.6.2007 4:07pm
John Eddy (mail) (www):
I have two thoughts on this. First- the day we embrace torture as 'just another tool in the interrogator's toolbox' we forfeit any claim to justice, liberty or righteousness. Second- I can envision situations where the need for information would outweigh the prohibition against torture in the minds of those forced to make the call. In that situation the ones who employ torture must be prepared to accept the full consequences of their actions, legal or otherwise.

It's admittedly a "no, but..." answer, but faced with a crisis situation I just can't say what my call would be. The default decision is 'never', but as they say- "never say never."

I guess that makes me more of a realist and less of a moralist. So be it.
11.6.2007 7:01pm
jaymaster (mail):
I agree with you John.

But I’ll see your “no, but…”, and raise it a “but”.

But how the hell do we define torture? Especially in the legal sense.

If we’re going to ban it, we need to define what we are banning. Put a line in the sand, so to speak.

Or from the other angle, if we are going to allow something close to it, we need to set limits too.

It’s a messy, muddy, topic.
11.6.2007 8:33pm
Acksiom (mail) (www):
I guess that makes me more of a realist and less of a moralist. So be it.


You say that like it's a bad thing ;-P .

Seriously, though, that's a quite acceptable resolution of the conflicts involved. Agents of the State should indeed be forbidden from condoning or institutionalizing or otherwise officially classifying torture as legal State behavior, let alone actually engaging in it.

However, they should likewise not be forbidden from using, in order to fulfill other legal responsibilities of the State such as providing for the common defense, the information produced by such criminal actions by other State agents.

It seems to me that if we cannot produce enough men and women who are willing to take the responsibility for breaking the law and the consequential risk of losing some of their rights as a result in order to prevent mass destruction and death, then perhaps we don't deserve such prevention ITFP.
11.6.2007 8:39pm
Acksiom (mail) (www):
If we’re going to ban it, we need to define what we are banning. Put a line in the sand, so to speak.


Okay; according to Wikipedia: "Torture, according to international law, is 'any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity.'"

Seems good enough for a starting place to me.
11.6.2007 8:46pm
Tom Hawkson:
Acksiom,

Jailing someone is, arguably, an act 'by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind, when such pain or suffering is inflicted by or at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence of a public official or other person acting in an official capacity.'

I don't find the definition helpful.

Yours,
Wince
11.6.2007 9:09pm
McKiernan:
Violence is written into the genetic make-up of a multitude of species including humans as an evolutionary survival mechanism against the threat from outside influence and it activates for survival when the environmental need arises.

A good example, are the horses that sought survival in the canyons of San Diego county during the recent fire. The lead stallions broke out of their barns with the other horses following and were led to a safe escape. They would have stampeded right over anything or anyone that impeded that progress.

Humans are not less aggressive in that department, except, perhaps, Mahatma Gandhi, who as the paragon of non-violence resistance once suggested that the jews during WW II accept their fate as a form of suicide rather than violate the principle of ahimsa.

Like, if someone is coming to blowup your house and your family, gee, I guess I’ll just sit here and follow my special rule of being a non-violent person.

It seems to me that it’s a long way to paradise if one accepts complete non-violence.

One of the really, really big problems in current politically correct thought (lessness) and in the Department of Defense that five star General Dwight D. Eisenhower didn’t have was 10,000 lawyer sucking up all the main issues. But he did know how to win wars, like really big ones.

Meanwhile back to the discussion. I could not ignore your references re: Guy Fawkes and the gentleman who wrote: “And why I - as someone who is decidedly not nonviolent - am so decidedly against and uncomfortable with issues of torture.”

And that lead to some mental recall of the statements of the current Archbishop of Canterbury who in 2003 made a few incredible statements:

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, yesterday urged America to recognise that terrorists can "have serious moral goals".

He said that while terrorism must always be condemned, it was wrong to assume its perpetrators were devoid of political rationality.

"It is possible to use unspeakably wicked means to pursue an aim that is shared by those who would not dream of acting in the same way, an aim that is intelligible or desirable."

He said that in ignoring this, in its criticism of al-Qa'eda, America "loses the power of self-criticism and becomes trapped in a self-referential morality."

Presumably, one would not want to lose the power of being trapped in a self-referential morality.
11.6.2007 9:29pm
jaymaster (mail):
Acksiom, that is a good start. But it needs to be limited a bit:


“Okay; according to Wikipedia: "Torture, according to international law, is 'any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession,”


Thats prety good, but the rest is complete bullshit, IMO, and undermines our entire justice system..

Take this example. It meets all the requirements past the first claim above:

torture claim
11.6.2007 10:25pm
John_B (mail) (www):
The 'severe pain' part might serve as a starting point--though you'll get a hell of an argument about any definition of just what 'pain' or its degrees of severity are from anyone working in the field. Pain is utterly subjective, so the severity is in the mind of the sufferer, not any objective third party.

'Severe mental distress', what's that? Again, it's a subjective judgment on the part of the sufferer. Some people take enormous distress as part of their ordinary jobs--cops and EMTs who deal with brutally killed children, for example, deal frequently with a level of distress that most would find intolerable.

Definitions are going to have to be arbitrary. That means they will never be perfect. A place to start would be to catalog forbidden practices. As loopholes are discovered, they can be added to the list, realizing that some new loophole will always be on the verge of being discovered. Laws can only be retroactively complete.

I'm all for the creation of a list that is imposed globally, but acknowledge that it will never be perfected.
11.6.2007 10:29pm
Acksiom (mail) (www):
Jailing someone is, arguably, an act 'by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person. . .


However, unless and until you or someone else actually does argue it, who's supposed to care, and why? Without that, your observation is functionally irrelevant. Merely asserting the potential for arguability of something is. . .well, rather less than helpful itself, Wince.

Jaymaster's comment suggests a possible means of resolution: that one can still forbid agents of the State to commit certain acts without necessarily having to classify them as 'torture'. It also gets prepucectionists off the hook; I'll readily admit it -- I'm an intactivist, not a fanatic, after all.

I think, however, that a good definition should have room to include certain kinds of abuse of people for the personally sadistic purposes of the abuser. I think it's wrong to not classify certain things as torture simply because they're done out of fetishistic insanity rather than rationalized interrogation.

I suppose one could classify the screaming and howling and other expressions of pain and suffering as 'information' themselves in that context, though. But it strikes me as poor reasoing and worse jurisprudence.
11.7.2007 2:35am
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):

However, unless and until you or someone else actually does argue it, who's supposed to care, and why?


I'll argue that: jailing someone is, inarguably, an act by which severe mental suffering is intentionally inflicted on a person for the purpose of punishing him for an act he has committed. Ergo, by the Wikipedia definition, jailing is torture.
11.7.2007 3:16am
Acksiom (mail) (www):
No, that's only at best arguably so. Forex, there was a period in my own youth when having even just minimal access to books, my housing, meals, and laundry provided for me, and the occasional opportunity to put some serious deep hurting on stupid bad people and pretty much get away with it would have been for me like unto a pure heaven upon this corrupted earth.
I would not have been suffering; I would have been experiencing sublime contentment.

So, no, it's not inarguable; in fact, it's anything but. Even apart from my own relatively absurd personal case, if the intention is not to punish the jailed but to protect others from her, the wikipedia definition certainly doesn't apply, and there are more than enough satisfactory examples of that already, from Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy murder moms to, oh, say, Aileen Wuornos.
11.7.2007 5:05am
John Eddy (mail) (www):
I think the legal wrangling around definitions of torture have some value on a philosophical level; however, when the decision to employ coercion is made, it is probably made at a personal level. There is not an entry in the Field Manual for Interrogations stating that in cases of lack of progress obtain a table, a towel and several buckets of water (If such are not available a car battery and jumper cables are an alternative).

No, in the end the definition of torture is a personal one, all legal wrangling aside. For me the definition is a simple corollary to The Golden Rule:

Doing unto others that which I would not tolerate having done to myself or those I care about.

I admit that for a guy who stated he's a realist, not a moralist, this is a rather moralist definition of torture, but it works for me and I'm willing to bet that it's essentially how others define the practice as well, should they think about it. The legal definition of torture is useful in a court of law. The personal definition is the only one that counts in a crisis situation.
11.7.2007 8:06am
Mark @ Urthshu (mail) (www):
Maybe we can mitigate the mental effects by having agents wear smiley masks or something.
11.7.2007 8:33am
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):
Nice try, but no cigar. Either imprisonment is torture, or the Wikipedia definition is flawed.
11.7.2007 10:05am
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):

Doing unto others that which I would not tolerate having done to myself or those I care about.


Lacks way too much context. I would not tolerate having those I care about shot at. That doesn't mean that military personnel shooting at our enemies are committing torture.
11.7.2007 10:07am
John Eddy (mail) (www):
Martin-

Therein lies the problem- the immediate situation and the individuals involved ARE the context. This is why legal definitions, etc. are meaningless at the moment of decision.

I would not tolerate having those I care about shot at. That doesn't mean that military personnel shooting at our enemies are committing torture.

Understandable, but irrelevant. We are talking about deliberate infliction of pain (defined as physical or psychological) upon a helpless individual, not soldiers in combat. You might be unwilling to tolerate your wife or child being arrested for failing to pay back parking tickets, but in that context it hardly constitutes torture, and remedies are easily applied (pay the fines).
11.7.2007 10:25am
Mark @ Urthshu (mail) (www):
They're not helpless. All they need to do is give out the information sought.
11.7.2007 10:31am
McKiernan:

Small Wars Journal:

There is No Debate Except for Torture Apologists

1. Waterboarding is a torture technique. Period. There is no way to gloss over it or sugarcoat it. It has no justification outside of its limited role as a training demonstrator. Our service members have to learn that the will to survive requires them accept and understand that they may be subjected to torture, but that America is better than its enemies and it is one’s duty to trust in your nation and God, endure the hardships and return home with honor.

2. Waterboarding is not a simulation. Unless you have been strapped down to the board, have endured the agonizing feeling of the water overpowering your gag reflex, and then feel your throat open and allow pint after pint of water to involuntarily fill your lungs, you will not know the meaning of the word.

Waterboarding is a controlled drowning that, in the American model, occurs under the watch of a doctor, a psychologist, an interrogator and a trained strap-in/strap-out team. It does not simulate drowning, as the lungs are actually filling with water. There is no way to simulate that. The victim is drowning. How much the victim is to drown depends on the desired result (in the form of answers to questions shouted into the victim’s face) and the obstinacy of the subject. A team doctor watches the quantity of water that is ingested and for the physiological signs which show when the drowning effect goes from painful psychological experience, to horrific suffocating punishment to the final death spiral.

Waterboarding is slow motion suffocation with enough time to contemplate the inevitability of black out and expiration –usually the person goes into hysterics on the board. For the uninitiated, it is horrifying to watch and if it goes wrong, it can lead straight to terminal hypoxia. When done right it is controlled death. Its lack of physical scarring allows the victim to recover and be threaten with its use again and again.

11.7.2007 10:38am
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):
There is no debate except for moral bullying.

Waterboarding as we practice it is not torture. If volunteers choose to undergo it to demonstrate the technique and then chuckle about it afterwards, it's not torture.
11.7.2007 10:49am
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):

Understandable, but irrelevant. We are talking about deliberate infliction of pain (defined as physical or psychological) upon a helpless individual, not soldiers in combat.


And that's where the slippery slope comes in. As soon as you define "psychological pain" as torture, anything is torture.

Excessive physical pain is torture. Minor physical pain in the course of maintaining order, no: slamming a prisoner into a wall to break up a fight, for example, may be excessive force or not, depending, but it's not torture. Slamming a prisoner into a wall and cracking some ribs to make him talk, that's torture.

Psychological "pain" isn't pain, and isn't torture.
11.7.2007 10:54am
zach.:
Martin,

so should we waterboard suspects accused of murder, rape, theft, etc.? why or why not?

Mark,

what if they don't have the information sought?
11.7.2007 11:02am
Mark @ Urthshu (mail) (www):
zach-
Then we're back to the usual arguments against torture: That it results in faulty intelligence.

I'm only making the point that the victim is not entirely helpless, and thus the definition contains a flaw. Look, if it was torture for the sake of doing it, like the BTK killer did, then it applies absolutely - but in the case of military/judicial application for information it doesn't.

I might also inquire as to studies - if there are any in the public domain - about which sorts of torture [using the term loosely] are considered more effective than others, and why? How come waterboarding [considered a last resort by us, I think] is used in preference to eye-gouging or finger-breaking, etc? Is it more effective or does it just not leave marks?
11.7.2007 11:14am
John Eddy (mail) (www):
McKiernan-

I agree- waterboarding is torture.

The sad reality is that torture will happen no matter how honorable we would like to pretend to be. This is because torture is usually instigated by individuals rather than agencies- we can legally define it and prohibit it, but it will happen anyway.

My position is this: if you engage in torture you (the individual) must be prepared to face the consequences of your actions, legal or otherwise. Legal prohibitions with real punitive power will mostly deter those who would like to try their hand at the masochist's art for their own personal satisfaction (though some people are just sick in the head and won't ever be deterred), as well as remove any institutional cover for the practice. For those faced with crisis situations the choice is this: does the need for information outweigh my moral obligations AND the certainty of punishment for my acts?

We can outlaw torture in all conceivable forms, but in the end it is an individual on the spot who will decide what to do. Failure to recognize that point or even admit it exists is pointless.
11.7.2007 11:14am
John B. Irving (mail):
McKiernan, I've seen that drivel posted elsewhere. For a supposed "expert," the writer cannot come up with one rational reason why waterboarding is actually torture, and instead fills his screed with emotional buzzwords.

I give it no more weight than a retired doctor writing a screed stating "There is no debate except for murder apologists. Abortion is murder, period."
11.7.2007 11:27am
Mark @ Urthshu (mail) (www):

we can legally define it and prohibit it, but it will happen anyway.

Hmmmm Sounds a little like the 'condoms for teens' issue, doesn't it? "Don't do it. But, if you're gonna do it, here's the way you should do it...."
11.7.2007 11:38am
McKiernan:
Well, this is what the man says if one reads the link. I can only surmise he is speaking honestly.

Small Wars Journal:

As a former Master Instructor and Chief of Training at the US Navy Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape School (SERE) in San Diego, California I know the waterboard personally and intimately. SERE staff were required undergo the waterboard at its fullest. I was no exception. I have personally led, witnessed and supervised waterboarding of hundreds of people.

Unless you have been strapped down to the board, have endured the agonizing feeling of the water overpowering your gag reflex, and then feel your throat open and allow pint after pint of water to involuntarily fill your lungs, you will not know the meaning of the word.

Waterboarding is a controlled drowning that, in the American model, occurs under the watch of a doctor, a psychologist, an interrogator and a trained strap-in/strap-out team. It does not simulate drowning, as the lungs are actually filling with water. There is no way to simulate that. The victim is drowning.

Waterboarding is slow motion suffocation with enough time to contemplate the inevitability of black out and expiration –usually the person goes into hysterics on the board. For the uninitiated, it is horrifying to watch and if it goes wrong, it can lead straight to terminal hypoxia. When done right it is controlled death.

If you support the use of waterboarding on enemy captives, you support the use of that torture on any future American captives. The Small Wars Council had a spirited discussion about this earlier in the year, especially when former Marine Generals Krulak and Hoar rejected all arguments for torture.

Is There a Place for the Waterboard?

Yes. The waterboard must go back to the realm of SERE training our operators, soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines. We must now double our efforts to prepare for its inevitable and uncontrolled use of by our future enemies.
11.7.2007 11:40am
P Mike (mail):

It seems to me that it’s a long way to paradise if one accepts complete non-violence...

Actually, it's a short road to paradise if you announce to the world that no matter what anyone does to you, you will take it with a smile. And you will die poor.

I may be WAY off base here, but to my base way of thinking, self defense is a big justification for the use of force. If it's a life-threatening situation, then deadly force is legally permitted.

If an individual is permitted to take a life in an attempt to try to save his own, should a soldier who holds a prisoner be restrained from anything up to and including deadly force against the prisoner who is an agent of his intended death and witholding information, if such action might save his life by virtue of discovering the information about a pending attack? Is it required to face bullets before the prisoner is executed in the heat of battle?
11.7.2007 11:44am
zach.:
P Mike,

an individual is permitted to take a life to save his own, but taking lives is still illegal. he must ensure his actions are justified and undertake them with the knowledge that he may not be acquitted later on. that, i think, is the standard most people are arguing for here wrt torture.
11.7.2007 12:20pm
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):

so should we waterboard suspects accused of murder, rape, theft, etc.? why or why not?


zach., once again, you're losing the distinction between criminal investigation and punishment on the one hand and war and military intelligence on the other. As long as you confuse those two, you will remain confused.

In law, you err on the side of protecting the innocent. That means you give the accused plenty of rights in case your accusation is wrong.

In war, you err on the side of protecting the innocents. That means you take extraordinary measures to learn about and prevent attacks, and you're much less concerned about rights.

In both law and war, mistakes happen, and innocents suffer. The world is imperfect. But in law, you bias against one kind of mistake, and toward another. In war, the bias is different, and the sort of mistakes you'll accept is different.
11.7.2007 12:31pm
John B. Irving (mail):
Thanks, McKiernan, you bolded many of the examples of what I stated, emotionally-laden buzzwords without objective content.

Particularly damning to his case is this statement:
The waterboard must go back to the realm of SERE training our operators, soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines. We must now double our efforts to prepare for its inevitable and uncontrolled use of by our future enemies.

If we could get al-Qaeda to merely waterboard prisoners, we'd have won a major victory in the war on terror.

You still have the problem that as a part of SERE training, waterboarding is performed on our troops, as pointed out a few days ago.

The problem with people who rely on any given expert for their opinion is as I pointed out with my counter-example, in that your stance is subject to the whims of other individuals. If you don't have the judgement to consider the case for yourself, you don't have the judgement to evaluate the "expert," either.
11.7.2007 12:45pm
zach.:
Martin,

so what if the police pick up someone suspected of hatching a bomb plot, a timothy mcveigh unrelated to anything happening in the middle east? is that a criminal or military operation?

furthermore, you are making the argument that waterboarding is OK because it doesn't cause any physical harm, and therefore in no way could be constituted as torture. it's just one more interrogation technique at an interrogator's disposal. why, then, is it not acceptable to waterboard suspects picked up in police investigations? after all, they'll just laugh about it afterwards, right? no harm, no foul.
11.7.2007 12:50pm
McKiernan:
If you don't have the judgement to consider the case for yourself, you don't have the judgement to evaluate the "expert," either

John B,

I haven't made any judgements (for you to criticize) whatsoever, merely reported what he wrote. Is it not germane to the discussion that waterboarding (properly done of course) is pouring pints of water into someone's lungs ?

As they say, on Foxnews:

"We Report, You Decide."
11.7.2007 12:59pm
John Eddy (mail) (www):
Mark@Urthshu-

Hmmmm Sounds a little like the 'condoms for teens' issue, doesn't it? "Don't do it. But, if you're gonna do it, here's the way you should do it...."

Not at all. Nobody is saying 'here's how you should do it' to anyone. Rather it is 'If you do this you are breaking the law and can expect to be punished accordingly.' Quite a different scenario, don't you think?
11.7.2007 1:03pm
Bryan Costin (mail) (www):
I'm pretty sure that explanation of waterboarding does not reflect the current practices, which cover the subject's face and do not involve water in the lungs. Either he's wrong or everyone else who's testified to the contrary is. Not that it really makes that much difference for people who oppose both methods.

This basic argument, as I understand it, is that we shouldn't allow torture of our enemies because then we'd be "no better than they are". That's a fine plot element for a typical episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, but I think it falls apart pretty quickly in the real world.

First of all, it doesn't help. An enemy that builds a war strategy around televised beheading and blowing up random civilians is not going to abstain from torture out of a sense of fair play. Maybe when the next war comes around and we're fighting against a more civilized bunch of bad guys we can afford to be more genteel.

Second, motives do matter. Do we seriously believe that there was no Allied torture in World War II? And if there was, did that make us "just as bad" as the Nazis or the Imperial Japanese, who routinely killed and tortured civilians and POWs? Does it mean that we lacked the appropriate karma points for a moral victory?

Frankly, in war we've always had torture. For the good guys it's an off-the-books arrangement that's been tolerated and maintained pretty much forever by pretty much everyone. Nobody likes it (except maybe for the scary people we keep around in order to do it for us, because they do it so well) but everyone knows it's occasionally necessary.

Now, for some reason, we're expected to confess our sins and flagellate ourselves until the proverbial noble savages come and put us out of our bloodstained misery. I say we just lie about it like we always have and move on to more productive discussions.
11.7.2007 1:03pm
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):
zach.,


so what if the police pick up someone suspected of hatching a bomb plot, a timothy mcveigh unrelated to anything happening in the middle east? is that a criminal or military operation?


Criminal. There's no Congressional authorization for the use of military action there.


furthermore, you are making the argument that waterboarding is OK because it doesn't cause any physical harm, and therefore in no way could be constituted as torture. it's just one more interrogation technique at an interrogator's disposal. why, then, is it not acceptable to waterboard suspects picked up in police investigations? after all, they'll just laugh about it afterwards, right? no harm, no foul.


Once again, you're ignoring the continuum of coercive techniques. Waterboarding is coercive, but not torture.

In law, the Fifth Amendment outlaws all coercive techniques. You cannot be forced to intimidate yourself, period. The police may use persuasive techniques to convince you that you want to cooperate; but they may not use coercive techniques to compel you to cooperate.

In war, there's no Fifth Amendment. Investigators may use both persuasive and coercive techniques. If time permits, they should always prefer persuasive techniques. But in a crunch, coercive techniques short of torture should still be on the table.
11.7.2007 1:36pm
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):

Is it not germane to the discussion that waterboarding (properly done of course) is pouring pints of water into someone's lungs ?


Waterboarding is a generic term for many different techniques. The demonstrations we have seen have not invovled pouring pints of water into someone's lungs.
11.7.2007 1:37pm
John B. Irving (mail):
McKiernan,
You judged his screed to be worthy of cutting and pasting, twice now. You judged which sections you would bold.


Is it not germane to the discussion that waterboarding (properly done of course) is pouring pints of water into someone's lungs ?

As waterboarding, "properly done," does not in fact involve water being poured into someones lungs, a serious error on your part apparently mistakenly learned from your "expert," it is not germane to the discussion.

It goes a long way towards destroying both your own and your experts' credibility that you state such as fact, though. It goes back to what I said about judgement.
11.7.2007 1:41pm
McKiernan:
Looks like I'm going to have to switch experts, John B.

Waterboarding is a torture technique that simulates drowning in a controlled environment. It consists of immobilizing an individual on his or her back, with the head inclined downward and pouring water over the face to force the inhalation of water into the lungs.


Waterboarding's use as a method of torture or means to support interrogation is based on its ability to cause extreme mental distress while possibly creating no lasting physical damage to the subject. The psychological effects on victims of waterboarding can last long after the procedure. Although waterboarding in cases can leave no lasting physical damage, it carries the real risks of extreme pain, damage to the lungs, brain damage caused by oxygen deprivation, injuries as a result of struggling against restraints (including broken bones), and even death.


Dr. Allen Keller, the director of the Bellevue/N.Y.U. Program for Survivors of Torture, has treated "a number of people" who had been subjected to forms of near-asphyxiation, including waterboarding.

Keller also stated in his testimony before the Senate that "Water-boarding or mock drowning, where a prisoner is bound to an inclined board and water is poured over their face, inducing a terrifying fear of drowning clearly can result in immediate and long-term health consequences. As the prisoner gags and chokes, the terror of imminent death is pervasive, with all of the physiologic and psychological responses expected, including an intense stress response, manifested by tachycardia, rapid heart beat and gasping for breath. There is a real risk of death from actually drowning or suffering a heart attack or damage to the lungs from inhalation of water.

Now of course, John B, your's is undoubtedly a water-free, lung-free method of waterboarding.
11.7.2007 2:03pm
P Mike (mail):

“Okay; according to Wikipedia: "Torture, according to international law, is 'any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession,”

If a journalist, who has no legal right to keep silent on criminal activity, refuses to testify in a court of law to withhold information (like the name of sources) and is jailed until the information is provided...torture?
11.7.2007 3:08pm
McKiernan:
You missed this part on Wikipedia:

United Nations Convention Against Torture (Wikipedia)

The United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (UNCAT) came into force in June 1987. The most relevant articles are Articles 1, 2, 3, and the first paragraph of Article 16.

Article 1...in part:

It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions.
11.7.2007 3:26pm
Mark @ Urthshu (mail) (www):
John Eddy

Not at all. Nobody is saying 'here's how you should do it' to anyone. Rather it is 'If you do this you are breaking the law and can expect to be punished accordingly.' Quite a different scenario, don't you think?
No, honestly. We ARE in fact telling our soldiers and agents "IF you intend to torture then waterboarding is the extreme of what you can do" then showing them how. And we're ALSO advocating politically [but not backing up with the force of law so far] that nobody 'should' do torture.

No where in here, BTW, am I necessarily supporting or not supporting waterboarding in specific - I agree with and can support our other measures used against enemy combatants [not regular prisoners] such as temperature variations, stress positions, the gut slap, etc. and I can even countenance threatening with a snarling dog without conceding that these constitute torture, mainly because I've been subject to all of these, either by choice or in boot camp. Enemy combatants are a kind of soldier, so perhaps they can be treated like them.
11.7.2007 5:02pm
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):

Enemy combatants are a kind of soldier...


No, they're not. Soldiers fight in uniform under a recognized command structure, as well as meeting several other criteria that entitle them to protection under the Geneva Conventions.
11.7.2007 8:43pm
John B. Irving (mail):
Looks like I'm going to have to switch experts, John B.

And swap to wikipedia, whose failures in the realms of politically-charged debate have been well documented.

*sigh*

Any form of effective interrogation is going to have risks. An unlawful combatant essentially accepts those risks as part and parcel of fighting without uniform, hiding among civilians, and other clear and undisputable violations of those selfsame rules whose grey areas lead to so much debate for our side.

Statistically, what are the risks? Of our soldiers waterboarded in SERE, how many have suffered from heart attacks or death? Of the three enemy combatants interrogated through the use of waterboarding, how many suffered from those same real risks? Come to think of it, did this Democratic Underground poster and his brother, in multiple repeated attempts by amateurs, run afoul of any of these risks, besides their apparent brain damage in deciding that something they went back and tried voluntarily multiple times must be "torture?"
11.8.2007 1:40am
HokiePundit (RDB) W&M 1L (mail) (www):
1. Extremely minor point: Guy Fawkes was not an "Anglo-Catholic." I'm an Anglo-Catholic. Guy Fawkes was an English Catholic.

2. Whether waterboarding is torture doesn't involve the Geneva Conventions. It either is or it isn't (or if there are varying forms, each form either is or isn't).

3. If things which do not cause permanent (or long-lasting) physical harm are okay for coercion, a lot of things would seem to be on the table. Pulling fingernails, pins under the nails, abrasion techniques, hair-pulling, and a good old fashioned smacking-around all come to mind. We could also force them to eat scat and pig meat.
11.8.2007 1:42am
HokiePundit (RDB) W&M 1L (mail) (www):
Also, unless I'm mistaken, SERE training done as "anti-torture training." Doesn't that seem to tacitly admit that what we're doing is torture, or would be so if it weren't consensual (which it is)?

I repeat: we must remain the "good guys" if we're to have peace in the long run. It's not just about us and the terrorists; there are others watching what we do. We owe it to our soldiers to let them know ahead of time what they may or may not do in interrogations and in warfare.
11.8.2007 1:47am
John B. Irving (mail):
Pulling fingernails, pins under the nails, abrasion techniques all involve physical injury. Hair pulling will also, at any level likely to be effective for coercive interrogation, as would "smacking around." The consumption of scat is toxic and would have long-term effects, and we have taken great pains to respect enemy combatants religion. All of which any reasonably informed person would know.

Also, unless I'm mistaken, SERE training done as "anti-torture training."

Yes, you are still mistaken. SERE stands for Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape, and involves training in evading capture, escaping imprisonment, and resisting interrogation.

Part of the reason for the levels of OPSEC the U.S. military employs is to compartmentalize information. If a soldier is actually tortured he's going to sing like a canary, and rightly so. The information rarely does the enemy any good.

Our enemy does not have the cultural background, organization, or resources to conduct a comparable level of training, so the same methods of interrogation that we train our soldiers to resist remain effective against jihadis.
11.8.2007 2:29am
John B. Irving (mail):
there are others watching what we do.

And the lesson they need to learn is Do Not Fark With The U.S.

Trade with us or not, protest us or praise us, it's all good, but do not ever pick a fight with us.
11.8.2007 2:31am
HokiePundit (RDB) W&M 1L (mail) (www):
John B. Irving,

You can't possibly be saying that the terrorists don't have a sufficient grasp of torture to use it effectively on SERE-trained troops.

As for your other point, Machiavelli was wrong. Those who are feared get stabbed in the back. Even more, when America becomes the "bad guy" it loses support from within. Even the misguided views of the "Doves" almost tore the country apart during Vietnam; how would things be if there were legitimate complaints? Various Christian groups have demonstrated a willingness to buck the government in the past (it's why there's a separate system of Catholic schools); I see no reason why they wouldn't do so in the future.
11.8.2007 4:15am
P Mike (mail):
Zach:

an individual is permitted to take a life to save his own, but taking lives is still illegal. he must ensure his actions are justified and undertake them with the knowledge that he may not be acquitted later on. that, i think, is the standard most people are arguing for here wrt torture.

The last sentence is at odds with current political discussion that says torture is illegal, period. The next question in this thread and Congress, "is waterboarding torture." If torture is illegal -- period -- then everyone needs to understand when coercion crosses the line. leading to:

McKiernan:

Article 1...in part:

It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions.

NOTE: I am guilty as charged, i.e., did not read the whole page.

However, it makes me wonder, what country in the world holds the moral high ground? And why do they think they have the high ground? Maybe Australia &Canada have not transgressed, but the players in the current controversy (particularly every country I can think of in old Europe) have subjected thier citizens to what would unquestionably be called torture in my lifetime under terms of the current discussion. If the loophole is that they had laws allowing it, how about we (the U.S.) outline when and what torture is allowed in law, rather than blanket statments that torture is illegal? Or legally defining what acts or categorizing actions that are not "torture" rather than trying to call everything torture until proven otherwise?
11.8.2007 9:23am
zach.:
P Mike,

well, I never pretend Dean's World has anything to do with national discussions ;P.

but I'm all in favor of codifying standards in law rather than talking around it and creating great giant misty clouds of uncertainty that invite abuse. But I think you'll run afoul of Martin for suggesting it.
11.8.2007 9:43am
McKiernan:
I surrender.

signed

Guido (Fawkes) McKiernan
11.8.2007 10:19am
John B. Irving (mail):
You can't possibly be saying that the terrorists don't have a sufficient grasp of torture to use it effectively on SERE-trained troops.

You're right, I'm not saying that, and I don't know where the hell you got that misreading.

It might come from your insistence on conflating interrogation and torture, when they are separate entities entirely. Or maybe the subject matter is too far outside your experiences.
11.8.2007 12:05pm
Acksiom (mail) (www):
Nice try, but no cigar. Either imprisonment is torture, or the Wikipedia definition is flawed.


Um, no, MS; I flatly disproved your assertion. It's wasn't a 'try'; it was a success. You can deny that all you want, but none of it's going to change objective reality in any meaningful way.

As to your false dilemma, it's, well, a false dilemma.
11.8.2007 3:43pm
McKiernan:
John B,

Have you some hands on experience in the current subject matter ?
11.8.2007 6:16pm
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):

Um, no, MS; I flatly disproved your assertion. It's wasn't a 'try'; it was a success.


It was only a "success" if your fantasy view of imprisonment had anything to do with real imprisonment.

Real imprisonment fits Wikipedia's flawed definition of torture. Sorry that undercuts your case, but that's a fact.
11.8.2007 7:57pm
Acksiom (mail) (www):
No, it's empirically not a fact. First of all, there remain plenty of cases of people who do not experience severe pain or suffering from imprisonment, not to mention those who don't experience much at all, and second of all, you blatantly failed to address the intention issue. Unfortunately, though, just ignoring it won't make it go away, let alone prevent it from categorically invalidating your poorly formed assertion.

You presented a false dilemma. Not only is the wikipedia definition flawed, but imprisonment does not necessarily cause severe pain and suffering, regardless of your own subjective opinion. The two things have effectively no causal link of mutual exclusivity between them.

Think things through more completely before you post, and you'll avoid more rookie errors such as those.

As to my case being undercut -- to what 'case', exactly, are you referring?
11.8.2007 11:49pm
Martin L. Shoemaker (www):
You're just digging deeper. Try imprisonment some time, and see if you don't think of it as suffering. When someone else controls every aspect of your life -- what you can do, who you can talk to, where you can go -- you'll find that's suffering plenty. And by Wikipedia's flawed definition -- "punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed" -- that makes it torture.

Nice try, but you're just dissembling.
11.9.2007 12:56am
John B. Irving (mail):
Have you some hands on experience in the current subject matter ?

Do you?
11.9.2007 1:06am
Tom Hawkson:
Ha! Now Acksiom reveals the problem. It all depends on the entirely subjective meaning of severe. Martin, don't go by his quote, though. As McKeirnan noted, this sentence follows his quote, and it does allow jail: It does not include pain or suffering arising only from, inherent in or incidental to lawful sanctions. However, that is a really big loophole. It allows other things that people might consider torture, like caning, or, as many have argued, solitary confinement.

The definition is excellent for dictionary pruposes, but flawed for legal purposes.

Yours,
WInce
11.9.2007 10:08am
McKiernan:
Do you,

No, just thought I'd ask.

BTW, interesting discussion here and here.
11.9.2007 10:45am
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