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CIA used mock executions etc.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8215722.stm
"Handguns, electric drills and mock executions were used by CIA agents to elicit information from terror suspects, US media have reported.The reports contain details of a 2004 review by the CIA's inspector general that has been kept secret but is now due to be released next week." All these methods are from the 'School of Americas' training manual for torture. When they dig a little deeper I'm sure they'll find the rest including all the nasty physical torture etc. |
Here we go again *heads for bunker*
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Oh gee, look at me ... I just made a stupid assumption about someone just because I'm not too fond of them... You're rubbing off, OTH. |
Here's a good idea for a thread: a poll for a dedicated politics forum...and preferably a US politics subforum.
I mean, there are tens of thousands of blogs and sites which cater to every form of political view, including the extreme sentiments often voiced here. It's got so bad that a lot of folk don't feel like even looking at this part of SUBSIM, much less post here. |
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Your hypocrisy is deep. Try not to drown in it. Quote:
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Please stick to the argument and avoid trailing off into absurdities. My point is that I really don't give a damn if we scare people into giving information needed to protect the second most sought after target in the terrorist world (behind Israel). The fact is that our opponents are using these methods (and far worse) anyway. Therefore, there is no reason/benefit to us restricting our methods of information extraction. People like you just want to see us fight the threat with both hands tied behind our backs, as it were. Due to your complete intrasigence on this topic, your credibility is quite low. I know you have difficulty comprehending this, but in the real world, being nice for the sake of being nice gets people killed. |
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And I'm saying this from a pro-US point of view, I don't think torture is the smart way to go. There's decades of torture use in places in like US-proxy states in South America, it's not like this stuff is exactly new. |
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First, some methods of "torture" are more effective than others. Fear has always worked more effectively than pain, for instance. That's due to the nature of fear. Secondly, the argument that torture doesn't work fails heavily when one considers that, if it wasn't working, it wouldn't be used. Regarding ethics, the argument fails when the question is asked: what is more unethical? To me, allowing a disaster to happen because of weak-kneed intel methods is far worse than scaring someone into telling what they know. Let's say we capture a known terrorist ringleader. He isn't saying anything, but we know a plot is about to unfold. To me it is morally repugnant to NOT use so-called enhanced methods of interrogation in that case. In essense, we are forced into making a decision between to distasteful things ... yet you want to fault us for making the decision that benefits us. |
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Also to go into this particular case, it seems that the whole point is that these guys don't necessarily have much info if indeed any. So by torturing them they become kind of martyrs. |
The Iranians used mock executions on the American hostages during the hostage crisis.
I'm generally not a fan of using fear/pain-inducing methods to get information out of prisoners, because it corrupts the quality of information you get. When the prisoner will say anything in order to please his captors, that's not a good thing. |
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The US instituted the Shah who had Savak carry out torture etc. operation throughout his reign. The USA also gave 'pointers' to Egypt when it comes to torture. Pretty big article on Wikipedia about the subject. Torture and the United States. Also, what they talk about in the article, about shooting a gun in the next room and telling the person that they shot a person. That's also typical stuff from the School of Americas. They used to play a tape of women and children screaming in the next room and tell the person that it's his wife and children being tortured/killed. This stuff went on for years in South America and also in the Middle East, in nations that the US had relations to at some point in time. |
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such torture. Oftern they make the sufferer's life not worth living or lead to suicide. Workplace stress is sometimes enough to cripple a persons mind for life; let alone the strain that the malice of an experienced torturer can place upon someones mind when trying to 'break' them. It can very easily remove a person's ability to function normally. The magnitude of the effects of torture means it is certainly not 'harmless'. |
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