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United States Government The Military

CIA Lied Over Brutal Interrogations 772

mrspoonsi sends this news from the BBC: The CIA carried out "brutal" interrogations of terror suspects in the years after the 9/11 attacks on the U.S., a U.S. Senate report has said. The summary of the Senate Intelligence Committee report said the CIA misled Americans on the effectiveness of "enhanced interrogation." The interrogation was poorly managed and unreliable, the report said. President Obama has previously said that in his view the techniques amounted to torture. The Senate committee's report runs to more than 6,000 pages, drawing on huge quantities of evidence, but it remains classified and only a 480-page summary (PDF) is being released. Publication had been delayed amid disagreements in Washington over what should be made public. CIA Director John Brennan has posted a response.
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CIA Lied Over Brutal Interrogations

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  • Really? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Ultra64 ( 318705 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:09PM (#48558091)

    No shit.

  • Justice (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:10PM (#48558097)

    Is anybody going to jail?
    How about Bush, is this enough to put Bush in jail?

    • Re:Justice (Score:5, Insightful)

      by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:16PM (#48558161)

      In the US, the powerful can be the most evil scum and commit the most heinous crimes against humanity and will have nothing to fear from "the law" at all.

      • Re:Justice (Score:5, Insightful)

        by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:20PM (#48558207) Homepage

        In fact, it's pretty much SoP. The more rich and powerful you are, the less likely you'll ever be held accountable.

        A politician held accountable for crimes he authorized? Never gonna happen.

        Same goes for the crooks on Wall Street.

        I'm sure it's the same elsewhere -- the old boys network makes sure the people who can do the most damage are shielded from consequences.

      • In the US, the powerful can be the most evil scum and commit the most heinous crimes against humanity and will have nothing to fear from "the law" at all.

        To be clear, torture is a human rights violation against customary international law and treaty; it is not a crime against humanity unless it is part of widespread or systemic practice.

        It is, however, widely practiced as a practical matter. Sometimes even by heads of state. This guy has personally tortured people, for example: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R... [wikipedia.org]

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      The entire Bush administration should be prosecuted for war crimes
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Oh just fuck off. If you actually read TFA, you'd see that it also indicates that Bush had little to no knowledge of the specifics of the interrogations or their brutality, and in 2006, upon his learning of it, it was ramped down. Also, waterboarding was done on 3 prisoners, though the media would have you believe every single prisoner in gitmo had it done to them. The onus here is on the CIA, primarily. And that's from a report from people not likely to be favorable to Bush.
      • Re:Justice (Score:5, Informative)

        by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @04:45PM (#48559003) Journal

        Also, waterboarding was done on 3 prisoners, though the media would have you believe every single prisoner in gitmo had it done to them.

        FTFA:

        The CIA has maintained that only three prisoners were ever subjected to waterboarding, but the report alludes to evidence that it may have been used on others, including photographs of a well-worn waterboard at a black site where its use was never officially recorded. The committee said the agency could not explain the presence of the board and water-dousing equipment at the site, which is not named in the report, but is believed to be the âoeSalt Pitâ in Afghanistan.

        Who are you going to believe, the CIA or your own lying eyes?

      • Re:Justice (Score:4, Insightful)

        by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @05:06PM (#48559233) Journal

        If you actually read TFA, you'd see that it also indicates that Bush had little to no knowledge of the specifics of the interrogations or their brutality

        Yeah, he didn't really strike me as the curious type. But Cheney claims to have known every single detail. I guess he gets off on that stuff.

        and in 2006, upon his learning of it, it was ramped down.

        "Say fellas? You think we can ramp down the shoving of pureed food up prisoners' asses a little bit? The screaming is starting to keep Laura awake at night and somebody keeps stealing the mashed peas out of the White House fridge. Now watch this drive"

        http://youtu.be/Z3p9y_OEAdc [youtu.be]

      • So he should not be held accountable for things his subordinates did even when he should have known of their activities? Just checking. Is that the same standard we apply to all presidents then?
      • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
        It's like the adage, there are no good cops. Only bad cops, and those that cover for them. If it was done to 3 people and "eventually" leaked out, it wasn't immediately reported by the 10-50 guards that transported them or saw the implements of torture. It was covered up by the military. So yes, it proves guilt for more than just the three who did it.
    • Re:Justice (Score:4, Informative)

      by halivar ( 535827 ) <bfelger@gmai l . com> on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:53PM (#48558561)

      According to the report, CIA officials did not disclose the methods of interrogation to White House officials, either by omission or blatantly lying about it. This is in reference to techniques that went beyond the initial executive order authorizing "enhanced interrogation techniques." Note that this report is not collected from sources friendly to the previous administration; if they could have thrown Bush under the bus, they would have.

      • Re:Justice (Score:5, Insightful)

        by mean pun ( 717227 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @05:04PM (#48559197)

        The question remains why nobody has been (and likely will be) prosecuted for these war crimes. Sure, a few underlings got a little punishment, but it has been very clear from the early days of the Obama administration that the guys where the buck stopped would never face any prosecution. The parts of the report that have now been published suggest the buck stopped at the CIA top, but from other sources we know that at least Cheney, Bush, Rice, and Rumsfeld were so deeply involved they deserve at least some investigation. At least Cheney has been pretty open about his involvement.

        So why did this prosecution for war crimes never happen? The most charitable explanation I have been able to come up with is that Obama thought the unrest this would cause in the USA would be unacceptable, but I admit it is a weak explanation.

        Oh, and yes, the things described in the report were war crimes. Waterboarding is explicitly mentioned in a UN definition of torture, and after World War II some Japanese soldiers were tried and executed for waterboarding allied soldiers. And that's just the waterboarding.

  • by alphatel ( 1450715 ) * on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:12PM (#48558119)

    Yet, despite common ground with some of the findings of the Committee’s Study, we part ways with the Committee on some key points. Our review indicates that interrogations of detainees on whom EITs were used did produce intelligence that helped thwart attack plans, capture terrorists, and save lives. The intelligence gained from the program was critical to our understanding of al-Qa’ida and continues to inform our counterterrorism efforts to this day.

    Just when will the CIA get off its high horse of believing that this program, in its former form, or any newer form, produces value for the American citizen or state as a whole? They need to stop defending this indefensible stance that it's okay as long as the CIA is in charge of capturing, detaining, violating rights, and denying everything it does or has ever done.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:17PM (#48558179)

      Of course they will lie about the "success" of what they did. Otherwise everybody would see them for what they are: Utterly primitive and vicious cavemen without even a shred of intact morality.

      • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:25PM (#48558255)

        Of course they will lie about the "success" of what they did.

        Does it matter it if was successful? If they could show that American lives were saved by torturing prisoners, would that make it okay?

        • by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:30PM (#48558309) Homepage

          If they could show that American lives were saved by torturing prisoners, would that make it okay?

          If the prevailing attitude is "we as Americans will accept anything done to you to protect us", then in some people's minds, it may well be okay.

          Of course, if America decides that torturing other people is OK then America has pretty much lost any form of moral high ground, and should expect other countries to torture Americans with impunity.

          When you decide the morality of the situation is asymmetrical, don't expect the other guy to see your side of it.

          So, hey, if a couple of your CIA agents or citizens end up getting offed or tortured, don't suddenly say that's unfair. Because it's kind of the bar you set.

          • by tburkhol ( 121842 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:50PM (#48558535)

            When you decide the morality of the situation is asymmetrical, don't expect the other guy to see your side of it.

            This has been the main argument in favor of torture. "Do you think the terrorists treat their prisoners nicely? Then why should we be bound to any conventions we know they won't abide?" The argument has always been that "they" started it.

            The morality of any of these situations has to be asymmetrical, and "our side" always needs to be the kinder, more honest, and more fair side. As soon as you demonstrate your willingness to use the unethical or evil techniques of your enemy, you lose any distinction from them.

            • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @04:54PM (#48559095)

              When you decide the morality of the situation is asymmetrical, don't expect the other guy to see your side of it.

              This has been the main argument in favor of torture. "Do you think the terrorists treat their prisoners nicely? Then why should we be bound to any conventions we know they won't abide?" The argument has always been that "they" started it.

              The morality of any of these situations has to be asymmetrical, and "our side" always needs to be the kinder, more honest, and more fair side. As soon as you demonstrate your willingness to use the unethical or evil techniques of your enemy, you lose any distinction from them.

              More than asymmetrical, it has to be utterly unambiguous.

              People will always give their side the benefit of the doubt and the good guy isn't always clear. Bin Laden killed 3k in an utterly indefensible act, the Iraq war killed 100k in a much more defensible act. In the west it's easy to consider Bil Laden's act as the greater evil. Afterall he explicitly tried to kill as many people as possible with the goal of starting a wider war. The Iraq war, even if it were a mistake, wasn't started with the objective of mass casualties.

              However, if you're from the middle east, and find it easier to identify with the dead Iraqis than the dead Americans, then you might consider the far greater number of Iraqi casualties to make that the worse crime.

              Or in Ukraine, where Russia is are using the NATO intervensions in Bosnia and Libya, and the US invasion of Iraq, as justifications for their own actions. It doesn't matter if they're right, it's incredibly easy to rationalize the acts of your side. Just to be certain that you're not one of the bad guys yourself you need to keep your actions way above reproach.

            • by RyoShin ( 610051 ) <tukaro@[ ]il.com ['gma' in gap]> on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @05:40PM (#48559539) Homepage Journal

              What's more, I believe that there have been studies showing that a gentle hand will get better results than a firm first. If you can show the person that they have a lot to gain, rather than something to lose, and treat them nice they are far more likely to divulge information (be it by slipping up or by confessing). Plus, the propaganda probably makes us out to be hellspawn demons, so if we turn out to be quite pleasant people after we capture them it will make them question other things they've been told about what they are doing.

              Aggression puts people on the defensive, so they're more likely to fight against whatever it is you want to accomplish.

              Can't back these words right now, though, as the Google is flooded with posts about the CIA torture reveal and it's harder to look for relevant information.

            • Bullshit. The 'moral relativist' argument doesn't work unless you presuppose that there IS a moral difference in the first place. "Wait, if you do this (torture) it means we aren't the good guys!!" ONLY applies if you believed that we were the good guys in the first place, which is the sort of Manichean simplification that the people upset about this like to keep pointing out in their opponents, ironically.

              America isn't a magical special place on the hill. America is a country like any other that pursue

    • by khasim ( 1285 ) <brandioch.conner@gmail.com> on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:20PM (#48558209)

      I prefer this memo:
      http://www.theatlantic.com/daily-dish/archive/2007/05/-versch-auml-rfte-vernehmung/228158/ [theatlantic.com]

      Part of being the "good guys" means NOT being the "bad guys".

      More people die in traffic accidents EVERY YEAR than the "terrorists" have ever killed here. So why give up a morally superior position to "fight" people who pose almost no threat to anyone outside their own countries?

      • by bmo ( 77928 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:30PM (#48558305)

        >So why give up a morally superior position to "fight" people who pose almost no threat to anyone outside their own countries?

        Money.

        --
        BMO

    • by Col. Klink (retired) ( 11632 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:37PM (#48558397)

      The Committee's Study outlined 20 specific cases that the CIA claimed either solely based on EIT (torture) or thwarted attacks. In ALL cases, there was either other corroborating intelligence (so they didn't need to torture anyone) or that the "attacks" were either fantasies or non-operational.

      Brennan's statement doesn't actually refute this. Providing intelligence that "helped" is not the same as intelligence that was critical.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      I didn't get that far. "Countless lives have been saved" that count is zero. 9/11 was a non-event.

      We have some sort of war being waged against a faceless enemy that supposedly comes in, hijacks our shit, and attacks us from within. We haven't really stopped any such attacks; we've brought attention to attempts which were never going to succeed, but that's it. The PETN underwear bomber is one of the better examples: you can't blow up PETN that way; it needs compression, else it just burns.

      The scenar

  • Enlightening... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Charliemopps ( 1157495 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:20PM (#48558213)

    Queue all the posts of "Why are you surprised! of course they were doing this!"

    No, you should be surprised. Suspecting and Knowing are 2 different things. Get mad, do something. Don't use your arrogance as an excuse for apathy.

    I think the most enlightening part of the report was this:

    The torture of prisoners at times was so extreme that some C.I.A. personnel tried to put a halt to the techniques, but were told by senior agency officials to continue the interrogation sessions.

    The Senate report quotes a series of August 2002 cables from a C.I.A. facility in Thailand, where the agency’s first prisoner was held. Within days of the Justice Department’s approval to begin waterboarding the prisoner, Abu Zubaydah, the sessions became so extreme that some C.I.A. officers were “to the point of tears and choking up,” and several said they would elect to be transferred out of the facility if the brutal interrogations continued.

    That gave me some hope for the world. At least some stood up and said "No" and likely ended their careers over it. I doubt we'll ever know who those people were, but if any of you read this, my hats off to you. You're the real Hero's of this war.

    • Re:Enlightening... (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Fire_Wraith ( 1460385 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:38PM (#48558407)
      What's really sad is how much of this wasn't done by actual skilled interrogators, who know that torture is not only amoral but also horribly counterproductive to getting good intelligence. I've worked with some of those guys, and they're really good at what they do - and would have nothing to do with anything of this sort. Experts like Ali Soufan have long debunked the kind of myths that surround crimes like these - and that's what they are, crimes. There's no justification or excuse for it whatsoever.
    • Re:Enlightening... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by nine-times ( 778537 ) <nine.times@gmail.com> on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:44PM (#48558469) Homepage

      Queue all the posts of "Why are you surprised! of course they were doing this!"

      I wish people would understand that this response is a standard rhetorical technique. You see it happen all the time in various scandals and cover-ups. Essentially the aim is to diffuse the response by delaying it until people can be persuaded not to care.

      A few years ago, if someone suggested that the CIA is torturing people, they'd be accused of being unpatriotic and paranoid. As the news starts to come up, defenders change their message to, "Hold on there. There are some unproven allegations, but you should wait until all the evidence is in before getting upset." They drag the whole thing out for years, and when the evidence is in, the defenders say, "Well we knew all of this years ago. Why are you upset now?!"

      Lots of things follow this pattern. CIA torture, NSA spying, unethical/illegal actions leading to the financial system meltdown, invading other countries, global climate change, and even Clinton sexually harassing White House interns. It's very often those same three steps: (a) Deny it happened; (b) Admit something happened, but ask people to wait before passing judgment; (d) Delay; and finally (e) Admit the whole thing, but claim that the time for a response has already passed.

      It's intentional, and people will keep doing it because it works.

      • by jmd ( 14060 )

        And the population runs around screaming "wait until shit hits the fan". Well shit has been hitting the fan for years but as the above comment shows, the formula to diffuse it works, so people keep running around saying "wait until shit hits the fan"

        While the person to reveal the torture sits in jail. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Kiriakou

    • Re:Enlightening... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by cdrudge ( 68377 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:53PM (#48558555) Homepage

      The real heros are the ones that stood up after they had started waterboarding and it just got to the point where they couldn't' handled it any more? No, they aren't heroes. Heroes are the ones that stand up, stop it BEFORE it got to that point. Or if it progressed to the point of no return, quit, and made it as public as they can regardless what their personal consequences are. Heroes don't get to abuse, and then just walk away when it gets too much and still get to be called heroes.

      I suppose that you'll also call them victims of terrorism for what they have to live with knowing what they've done too.

    • Re:Enlightening... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by CanadianMacFan ( 1900244 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @04:22PM (#48558823)
      Heroes? They aren't heroes! They crawled back home in suburbia crying all the way to their office jobs and got a prescription for Prozac to deal with their PTSD while leaving the prisoners to be tortured and rot in Gitmo. Some heroes. A hero would have gotten a gun and stopped them from being tortured. A hero would have stood up on prime-time television and told the world what they saw in order to get it stopped. Being a hero means risking it all for doing something that believe so strongly in. Asking for a transfer to another division because you can't stand seeing someone tortured isn't not heroic.
  • by MrEricSir ( 398214 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:31PM (#48558327) Homepage

    Even if torturing prisoners was "effective," who cares? If something is immoral, good results will never make it moral.

  • by vivaoporto ( 1064484 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:32PM (#48558333)

    Additional sessions of rectal feeding and hydration followed. In addition to his hunger strikes, Majid Klian engaged in acts of self-harm that included attempting to cut his wrist on two occasions, an attempt to chew into his arm at the inner elbow, an attempt to cut a vein in the top of his foot, and an attempt to cut into his skin at the elbow joint using a filed toothbrush.

    Page 115

    • by vivaoporto ( 1064484 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:34PM (#48558361)

      At DETENTION SITE COBALT, detainees were often held down, naked, on a tarp on the floor, with the tarp pulled up around them to form a makeshift tub, while cold or refrigerated water was poured on them. Others were hosed down repeatedly while they were shackled naked, in the standing sleep deprivation position. These same detainees were subsequently placed in rooms with temperatures ranging from 59 to 80 degrees Fahrenheit.

      two detainees that each had a broken foot were also subjected to walling, stress positions, and cramped confinement, despite the note in their interrogation plans that these specific enhanced interrogation techniques were not requested because of the medical condition of the detainees..

      CIA records indicate that Majid Khan cooperated with the feedings and was permitted to infuse the fluids and nutrients himself. After approximately three weeks, the CIA developed a more aggressive treatment regimen "without unnecessary conversation." Majid Khan was then subjected to involuntary rectal feeding and rectal hydration, which included two bottles of Ensure. Later that same day, Majid Khan's "lunch tray," consisting of hummus, pasta with sauce, nuts, and raisins, was "pureed" and rectally infused. Additional sessions of rectal feeding and hydration followed..

      No comments needed.

  • by TheNastyInThePasty ( 2382648 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:33PM (#48558351)

    "I know from personal experience that the abuse of prisoners will produce more bad than good intelligence. I know that victims of torture will offer intentionally misleading information if they think their captors will believe it. I know they will say whatever they think their torturers want them to say if they believe it will stop their suffering. Most of all, I know the use of torture compromises that which most distinguishes us from our enemies, our belief that all people, even captured enemies, possess basic human rights, which are protected by international conventions the U.S. not only joined, but for the most part authored."

    From a Republican even.

  • And who pays???? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by wbr1 ( 2538558 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:36PM (#48558373)
    The taxpayer.. for all of it. The beatings, the reports, the politicians and bureaucrats dickering over minutia.
    Who doesn't pay? Those responsible for such atrocities. We increasingly live in a society where a few - IE military and intelligence brass, the rich, the police, and corporations and individuals with the money to play the game can do nearly anything with impunity.

    This meets the definition of tyranny - arbitrary or unrestrained exercise of power - and we live it every day, but most do not see it. The question is, is the natural state of being for humans - people abusing their power over others, or can it be changed and transcended?

  • Oversight? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mveloso ( 325617 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:37PM (#48558401)

    Where's the oversight? Oh, it was by the same people that oversee the NSA, never mind.

  • by PvtVoid ( 1252388 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:43PM (#48558457)

    I mean, really.

  • by jmd ( 14060 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:47PM (#48558503)

    In case no one has noticed it seems everything is out of control theses days. War, spying, bankers and the economy, human rights and the list goes on.

    As Leonard Cohen says in his song The Future:
    Things are going to slide, slide in all directions
    Won't be nothing
    Nothing you can measure anymore
    The blizzard, the blizzard of the world
    has crossed the threshold
    and it has overturned
    the order of the soul

    It seems that everything we ever used to benchmark human progress has slipped away.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:49PM (#48558523)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by gestalt_n_pepper ( 991155 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @03:49PM (#48558525)

    Not just the cruelty.

    Did fMRIs disappear yesterday and did I just miss the memo? Did psychoactive agents stop working? We couldn't have used neurological stimulation of the pleasure center each time a detectable truth was told until the subject couldn't wait to answer?

    Did all this disappear yesterday? Did the hundreds of other neurological manipulation techniques we might have employed painlessly go away? Suppose we stimulated the "God Spot" in each detainee, and broke their religious beliefs. Think that wouldn't have worked?

    Are security agency personnel simply incapable of reading neurophysiology journals? Or do we just hire stupid people?

    So, instead, the CIA and probably Homeland Security (i.e. the new KGB) wallow in the temple of dumb. Any one of the aforementioned techniques is likely to be at least as effective as crude torture, and probably more so.

  • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @04:14PM (#48558739) Journal

    With their own approval rating at 16%, Senate Democrats announced today that Bush was a meanie. More exciting news after the break.

  • by Alomex ( 148003 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @05:00PM (#48559151) Homepage

    The Israelis who have no qualms supporting state sponsored assassinations in the name of national security told the Bush administration that torture doesn't work.

    For Xsakes, this are your friends telling you not to do it, because it doesn't work. What did Bush do? he carried on regardless.

    This has become a signature pattern for the right in the last 15 years. It wasn't always that way. In the 80s and 90s one could disagree yet respect the opinion of Republican leaders and administrations, even if one didn't always agree with them. Somewhere around the time of the Contract with American ideology became more important than facts and it has been all downhill for America. The 2 trillion dollar invasion of Iraq on false pretenses, the loss of critical support across the world with unwarranted acts of torture, the obstructionist practices of the Republican congress v. the Obama administration.

    Give it another 10 years and the present GOP will achieve from within what Osama Bin Laden foolishly tried to do with a few planes. He should have financed the Tea Party instead, and by now he would be further ahead in his goal.

  • by GrahamCox ( 741991 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @05:29PM (#48559439) Homepage
    As a Brit living in Australia, two of the world's most ardent allies of the USA , I say this: America, you stink. When a friend tells you you stink you'd better wise up and do something about it. Your actions are CAUSING the terrorism that you are seeking so vainly to suppress. The more you oppress, the more people turn against you. I know you have a bit of a thick skull and your thinking processes are limited (as a country, we understand you have trouble walking and chewing gum, but that's OK, intellectual disability we can accept and sympathise with - we are similarly afflicted, truth be told). It's the actions we have a problem with. But now even your friends and allies can see the terrorists' point of view, and have done for some time. Wake up, fix your stupid foreign policies and you know, maybe THAT will sort out terrorism. It's win-win.
  • by Jim Sadler ( 3430529 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @05:42PM (#48559571)
    The people who ordered this deserve to be tried for war crimes. Some individuals were actually tortured to death. Baby Bush would be first in line for a hanging. It makes me sick that the lowest level guards who were following orders were the ones who were drummed out of the service etc.. And the public should know that we caused other nations to apply even worse tortures within the same prisons. I would rather be loyal to humanity than loyal to any nation.
  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2014 @05:54PM (#48559645)
    We constantly try to convince ourselves and the world that we're supposed to be some sort of role model after which all others should strive to emulate.

    Time and time again, the evidence tends to show that we can actually be much worse than those countries we love to demonize.

    Can you imagine what would happen if another country ( pick one ) started a program like the one we run for snatching up Americans ( or American Allies ) suspected of ties to $scarylabel ?

    Perhaps building their own version of Guantanamo and holding them indefinitely without charges, trial or even notification to anyone they were being held at all ?

    Everyone here knows exactly what the reaction would be. Drone strikes, commando raids, hell we might even send a Battle Group or three and park them off your coast. Regime change, invasion, air strikes, sanctions, excuse for new war toys testing, etc. etc.

    As long as the country in question isn't a major power of course. We love to send in the troops to countries that cannot possibly defend themselves from our mighty war machine. Not so much into the countries that can. See any Russian or Chinese detainees in that lovely detention camp of ours ? Yeah . . .my point.
    Ever see a bully pick on someone who could kick their ass ? Me either.

    Wonder how our war-nuts would handle it if $evil_country started snatching our worldwide intelligence agents ( or just Americans and their Allies at random ) and subjecting them to the same tortu. . . . er. . . . enhanced interrogation techniques that we use. Would be hilarious to hear what insanity would spew forth from our Government about how . . . how . . . EVIL such a thing is. How DARE they do that to an American ?! Resolutions !! Declarations !!! OMGTEHHORROR !! ( Fox News would just implode I think ) :|

    To the rest of the world, I would like to apologize for the arrogance, hypocrisy and illogical ideology of our "elected" government. If you have any ideas on how to fix it, we're all ears.

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