Finding Creative Ways to Torture
from Consortium News:
Finding Creative Ways to Torture
February 10, 2015
After World War II, Americans led the way in establishing landmark human rights principles, including a repudiation of torture. But more recent U.S. leaders have chosen to disgrace those ideals by devising euphemisms and end-runs to continue the barbaric practices, as Peter Costantini describes.
By Peter Costantini
Enhanced interrogation: the George W. Bush administration bureaucrats who coined the term had perfect pitch. The apparatchiks of Kafkas Castle would have admired the grayness of the euphemism. But although it sounds like some new kind of focus group, it turns out that enhanced interrogation was just anodyne branding for good old-fashioned torture.
Unfortunately, the debate around it unleashed by the report of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence has largely missed the point.
Certainly, the report provided overwhelming evidence that torture did not produce useful intelligence. The CIA had concluded previously that torture is ineffective, counterproductive, and will probably result in false answers.
Some CIA agents and soldiers reportedly questioned the legality of the enhanced interrogation policies and resisted carrying them out. FBI agent Ali Soufan, who had legally interrogated prisoner Ali Zubaydah, has written that Zubaydah had cooperated and provided important actionable intelligence months before he was tortured extensively.
.....(snip).....
Throwing Light on the Dark Side
In response to mounting evidence of decades of torture, what would an indispensable nation do?
The release of the Senate report was an important precedent. But what has been released so far is only the executive summary. The Senate should release the full report and encourage the Obama administration to act on it. Until perpetrators all the way to the top are brought to justice, the U.S. government will rightly be seen as hypocritical when it criticizes the human rights violations of others.
.....(snip).....
Allies, though, have begun digging. In 2009, Spanish jurist Baltasar Garzón Real opened two investigations of the Bush torture program, one of which is still pending. In December, the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights in Berlin filed complaints accusing several high Bush administration figures of the war crime of torture under German and international law. ...............(more)
The complete piece is at:
https://consortiumnews.com/2015/02/10/finding-creative-ways-to-torture/