We don’t torture?

The wholly-owned US subsidiary in Iraq has more torture there than ever; President to get blank check to define torture techniques and keep them secret

UN Envoy: More Torture in Iraq Today than Under Saddam

The United Nations’ leading campaigner against torture has issued a grim assessment of Iraq under US occupation. Manfred Nowak, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, says more Iraqis are being tortured today than when Saddam Hussein was in power. His comments come one day after the UN said more than sixty-six hundred Iraqi civilians were killed in July and August.

Funny how in all the recent protestations from President Bush–“The United States does not torture. It’s against our laws, and it’s against our values. I have not authorized it — and I will not authorize it”–there is no longer much of his once-common campaign talk of how the Iraqi people are free of torture.

Torture/Geneva fix: make it secret
The new Republican “deal” on detainee treatment allows President Bush “to write secret rules on how to treat suspected terrorists during interrogations.” Furthermore, according to the Washington Post, the “abuse can continue” because President Bush will be able to write “his own interpretation of the Geneva Conventions in an executive order.”

The list of “techniques” used on detainees will be kept secret under the dubious argument that the detainees do not know what they are, so we don’t want to let them know how to prepare for them.

Well, we do know what the methods and techniques are. They fall under the misnomer of “psychological” techniques. And contrary to common wisdom, they are effective in destroying a human being–these offenses are torture.

Historian Alfred McCoy explains this in his book A Question of Torture, and in this article on TomDispatch

…thanks to recent revelations from Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo, we are now all too familiar with these methods, even if many Americans still have no idea of their history. Upon careful examination, those photographs of nude bodies expose the CIA’s most basic torture techniques — stress positions, sensory deprivation, and sexual humiliation.For over 2,000 years, from ancient Athens through the Inquisition, interrogators found that the infliction of physical pain often produced heightened resistance or unreliable information — the strong defied pain while the weak blurted out whatever was necessary to stop it. By contrast, the CIA’s psychological torture paradigm used two new methods, sensory disorientation and “self-inflicted pain,” both of which were aimed at causing victims to feel responsible for their own suffering and so to capitulate more readily to their torturers. A week after the Abu Ghraib scandal broke, General Geoffrey Miller, U.S. prison commander in Iraq (and formerly in Guantanamo), offered an unwitting summary of this two-phase torture. “We will no longer, in any circumstances, hood any of the detainees,” the general said. “We will no longer use stress positions in any of our interrogations. And we will no longer use sleep deprivation in any of our interrogations.”

Under field conditions since the start of the Afghan War, Agency and allied interrogators have often added to their no-touch repertoire physical methods reminiscent of the Inquisition’s trademark tortures — strappado, question de l’eau, “crippling stork,” and “masks of mockery.” At the CIA’s center near Kabul in 2002, for instance, American interrogators forced prisoners “to stand with their hands chained to the ceiling and their feet shackled,” an effect similar to the strappado. Instead of the Inquisition’s iron-framed “crippling stork” to contort the victim’s body, CIA interrogators made their victims assume similar “stress positions” without any external mechanism, aiming again for the psychological effect of self-induced pain

Fools in the media paint this as just some sort of fun and games, Geneva shmeeva. These are minimum just deserts for those who the president says want to kill us. But they miss the point.

It’s impossible for any human being with an ounce of soul to not see how these techniques so dear to Bush are not humiliating, degrading, cruel, and inhuman tortures. They are the tools of domination, not of protection. And therein lies the reason why President Bush wants to rewrite the rules for his own benefit and not tell the damning secrets.

One Response to “We don’t torture?”

  1. Andrea Lawrence-Stuart Says:

    To expect a good piece of information from someone hanging by his hands is ludicrous. Why does the administration stick to that tactic? Not only do they get poor information out of the poor souls just to get the pain to stop, but why torture in the first place and have it CONDONED, even ENCOURAGED by the harsh Bush administration? It is barbaric, medieval, feudal and cruel and that it is being done in the 21st Century, not the middle ages, makes it more incredible. Why would anyone, let alone the Republican Senate vote on such treatment? Why did SENATOR JOHN McCAIN cave in to the Bush doctrine on torture? He–who knows torture so intimately he can’t bear to even think of it–finally bowed to that horrid doctrine. Now in Congress there are no more heroes in the Republican party, only slaves, puppets, money dangling in front of them. Waht broke him? Oh, yes, it’s an election year. Now he, along with the rest of the Republican party, chooses to put his head in the sand saying there’s no torture going on that he was wrong after all. To simply say you believe there is no torture going on and take sides with the Bush Gang on party lines does not make it so. Don’t they do their homework, read the papers, listen to and watch news every day? The Republican leadership is being known throughout the country as the party of barbarism and cruelty. The people elected these officials who claim to be caring and compassionate, and they claim to be Christians. I am not a Christian for the same reason Bertrand Russell wasn’t, but if you are a Christian, or a Muslim or what have you, at least be a good one. Back in WWII and Korea and past wars we went by the Geneva Convention, not deviating from it. We never put those German war criminals in pyramids and made them masturbate one another to get information. Why are we changing our tactics now? Because Bush says 9-11 changed everything and it is a war on terror, not on a country? He quipped, back in 2000, just after his inauguration, “It’d be a heckuva lot easier if this was a dictatorship, and I’d be the dictator.”

    To set those low standards and capture and detain anyone for as long as we want (that alone is a form of torture–the thought of never seeing one’s family again), and deprive them of sleep, subject them to atrocities, is supposed to elicit good intelligence from them. What an incredibly outrageous mindset. Terror is a tactic, a tool. Harlan Cleveland, a fellow of the ILF (International Leadership Forum), contributes to a blog called ILF Post (www.ilfpost.org) and he wrote an article called “War Against a Tool?” I highly recommend it, and leave him a comment.