Author Topic: 3DHS on Torture  (Read 24818 times)

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Michael Tee

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #75 on: October 25, 2007, 11:12:27 PM »
<<You will refuse to beleive any sorce not vetted by Communists , it is exactly equivelent to beleiveing nothing about Hitler not vetted by Hess.>>

That is just more total bullshit.  I never once objected to any source on the grounds it was not vetted by communists.  I don't even know where you got that idea from.  Can't even imagine.  What I said is too obvious to bear repeating.  Go back and read it again; slowly.  Look up any words I used that you might not have understood.  If you still believe that I objected to sources because they  were not vetted by communists, all I can suggest is that you seek out the nearest adult education facility and enroll in a course in reading for comprehension.  Without delay.  You will be desperately in need of it


Plane

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #76 on: October 25, 2007, 11:40:24 PM »
<<You will refuse to beleive any sorce not vetted by Communists , it is exactly equivelent to beleiveing nothing about Hitler not vetted by Hess.>>

That is just more total bullshit.  I never once objected to any source on the grounds it was not vetted by communists.  I don't even know where you got that idea from.  Can't even imagine.  What I said is too obvious to bear repeating.  Go back and read it again; slowly.  Look up any words I used that you might not have understood.  If you still believe that I objected to sources because they  were not vetted by communists, all I can suggest is that you seek out the nearest adult education facility and enroll in a course in reading for comprehension.  Without delay.  You will be desperately in need of it



Quote
(the escape of Ukrainian Nazi collaborators from the justice that awaited them in the U.S.S.R. after V-E Day,) and the need to explain their pro-Nazi, anti-Semitic actions during the war.  There are books (Ratlines, Blowback, Old Wounds, and probably dozens more) which explain these matters in detail, but I know that you will never read them.  Nevertheless, it is your ignorance - - of the books and the facts set out in them - - that enables you to believe the BS of the authors and sources you quoted. 


    There were millions of these people ,every one telling the same lie, they must have compared notes as they left. It cannot be that they are telling truths about Stalin , Hitler was the black and Stalin was the white.

Michael Tee

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #77 on: October 26, 2007, 12:34:37 AM »
<<There were millions of these people ,every one telling the same lie . . . >>

They sure as hell couldn't all tell the same truth, now could they?  "Oh please let us in, we're just poor simple Jew-killing, Nazi-loving Ukrainian nationalists who just tried as hard as we could to help Hitler win the war and now the Russians are mad at us."

Sometimes, plane, you are so fucking naive you could knock me flat on my back.

<<It cannot be that they are telling truths about Stalin , Hitler was the black and Stalin was the white.>>

It cannot be they would tell the truth about ANYTHING, don't you get it, plane?  They were war criminals fleeing for their lives from a vengeful Russian people.

sirs

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #78 on: October 26, 2007, 01:27:55 AM »
Sirs, You said: "various means of sleep deprivation is NOT torture."  I am simply disagreeing with your statement.

So, intermittently waking someone up, preventing them from having a pleasant 8hrs of sleep is "torture"??  Again, I'm referring to the act itself, not a DURATION of an act.  So, if you want to argue that getting 5hrs of sleep vs 8 is torture at the hands of our americans, then so be it.  I am simply disagreeing with that premice


Now, the real question is: do you support using torture?

No, not of the type I've already referenced, that of causing physical damage to one's body.  Being made uncomfortable, stressed, humiliated, and anquished is NOT torture.  At least not in the traditional examples of true torture.  But since so many here are ready to rationalize how periodic head slapping and not providing 8hrs of blissful sleep is torture as well, then obviously we have little to talk about
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Plane

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #79 on: October 26, 2007, 05:59:31 AM »
<<There were millions of these people ,every one telling the same lie . . . >>

They sure as hell couldn't all tell the same truth, now could they?  "Oh please let us in, we're just poor simple Jew-killing, Nazi-loving Ukrainian nationalists who just tried as hard as we could to help Hitler win the war and now the Russians are mad at us."

Sometimes, plane, you are so fucking naive you could knock me flat on my back.

<<It cannot be that they are telling truths about Stalin , Hitler was the black and Stalin was the white.>>

It cannot be they would tell the truth about ANYTHING, don't you get it, plane?  They were war criminals fleeing for their lives from a vengeful Russian people.

I too perceive naivete,
How can this be?

Michael Tee

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #80 on: October 26, 2007, 09:57:28 AM »
<<I too perceive naivete,
How can this be?>>

I have no idea.

Plane

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #81 on: October 26, 2007, 04:31:39 PM »
<<I too perceive naivete,
How can this be?>>

I have no idea.


Again I perceive naivete.

_JS

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #82 on: October 26, 2007, 04:43:37 PM »
So, intermittently waking someone up, preventing them from having a pleasant 8hrs of sleep is "torture"??  Again, I'm referring to the act itself, not a DURATION of an act.  So, if you want to argue that getting 5hrs of sleep vs 8 is torture at the hands of our americans, then so be it.  I am simply disagreeing with that premice

What you are describing is not sleep deprivation. You are not "referring to the act itself." Sleep deprivation means no sleep for an extended duration. It is not "preventing them from having a pleasant 8hrs of sleep." Five hours of sleep a night is not sleep deprivation Sirs. Did you not read what the people described that I quoted? Manachem Begin was not this nice, friendly guy and even he considered it torture.

I have no idea what the hell you are talking about, but you live in some Polyanna dream-world if you think 5 hours a night of sleep = sleep deprivation. We're talking about 72, 96, 168 hours with no sleep.


Quote
But since so many here are ready to rationalize how periodic head slapping and not providing 8hrs of blissful sleep is torture as well, then obviously we have little to talk about

Do you read? Honest answer, I'm not going to poke fun or anything. You just don't come across as someone who really has any knowledge of what goes on outside the United States (or maybe even Southern California). Do you know, for example, what we and the Israelis taught the Ethiopian Army to do to EPLF Rebels in Eritrea? Do you know what we've taught the Colombians to do, or Nicaragua when they faught the Sandanistas or the Contras afterwards?

Blissful 8 hours of sleep? You cannot hold a conversation on this topic if you really believe this is what takes place.

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Michael Tee

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #83 on: October 26, 2007, 06:30:48 PM »
sirs has a vested interest in minimizing acts that anyone else would consider to be torture.  "Sleep deprivation" in his Bizarro world becomes "Not getting a good 8 hrs. sleep."    Working a guy over with a blowtorch would probably become "warming him up a bit."

How can it be torture if U.S. forces do it?  It's impossible.  sirs starts from a premise and works backward from it.  Premise:  the U.S. are the good guys.  Ergo, the U.S. doesn't torture.  Ergo WHATEVER Americans do to their prisoners, it CAN'T be torture.  Now it's simple - - every form of torture becomes non-torture by definition:  sleep dep = "not getting 8 hrs. sleep;" waterboarding - "dunking;" letting attack dogs rip a guy open = "letting my dog bark in your face" (OK the last one was plane's, but sirs doesn't have a monopoly on selling torture.)

You really can't take guys like that seriously, because they don't take YOU seriously, otherwise they wouldn't be insulting your intelligence with that bullshit.

sirs

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #84 on: October 26, 2007, 06:48:23 PM »
So, intermittently waking someone up, preventing them from having a pleasant 8hrs of sleep is "torture"??  Again, I'm referring to the act itself, not a DURATION of an act.  So, if you want to argue that getting 5hrs of sleep vs 8 is torture at the hands of our americans, then so be it.  I am simply disagreeing with that premice

What you are describing is not sleep deprivation. You are not "referring to the act itself." Sleep deprivation means no sleep for an extended duration. It is not "preventing them from having a pleasant 8hrs of sleep." Five hours of sleep a night is not sleep deprivation Sirs. Did you not read what the people described that I quoted? Manachem Begin was not this nice, friendly guy and even he considered it torture.  I have no idea what the hell you are talking about, but you live in some Polyanna dream-world if you think 5 hours a night of sleep = sleep deprivation. We're talking about 72, 96, 168 hours with no sleep.

Sleep deprivation is a general lack of the necessary amount of sleep. This may occur as a result of sleep disorders, active choice or deliberate inducement such as in interrogation or for torture. Studies have reported that sleep deprivation affects tens of millions of adults each year in the United States alone.


What is sleep deprivation


But since so many here are ready to rationalize how periodic head slapping and not providing 8hrs of blissful sleep is torture as well, then obviously we have little to talk about

Do you read?

Do you?  The extended amount of hours (meaning the repetition of an act, and NOT the act itself, as i have referenced over and over again) keeping a person from sleeping which would cause physical damage to a person would be considered torture, as is just about anything made repetative or overly extended.  But the act itself, as defined in wikipedia, is NOT

 
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Lanya

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #85 on: October 27, 2007, 10:30:19 PM »
McCain Rebukes Giuliani on Waterboarding Remark

By MICHAEL COOPER and MARC SANTORA
Published: October 26, 2007

Rudolph W. Giuliani?s statement on Wednesday that he was uncertain whether waterboarding, a simulated drowning technique, was torture drew a sharp rebuke yesterday from Senator John McCain, who said that his failure to call it torture reflected his inexperience.

?All I can say is that it was used in the Spanish Inquisition, it was used in Pol Pot?s genocide in Cambodia, and there are reports that it is being used against Buddhist monks today,? Mr. McCain, who spent more than five years in a North Vietnamese prison camp, said in a telephone interview.

Of presidential candidates like Mr. Giuliani, who say that they are unsure whether waterboarding is torture, Mr. McCain said: ?They should know what it is. It is not a complicated procedure. It is torture.?

Mr. Giuliani said on Wednesday night at a forum in Davenport, Iowa, that he favored ?aggressive questioning? of terrorism suspects and using ?means that are a little tougher? with terrorists but that the United States should not torture people. On the question of whether waterboarding is torture, however, Mr. Giuliani said he was unsure.

?It depends on how it?s done,? he said, adding that he was unsure whether descriptions of the practice by the ?liberal media? were accurate. ?It depends on the circumstances. It depends on who does it.?

Dr. Allen S. Keller, the director of the Bellevue/N.Y.U. Program for Survivors of Torture, said waterboarding involved tipping a person back, covering his mouth with a cloth and repeatedly pouring water over the cloth to make him gag and experience a drowning sensation. If it is done long enough, Dr. Keller said, there is a risk that the person may drown or have a heart attack.

With the exception of Mr. McCain, who believes that torture is ineffective because its victims will say anything to make it stop, several leading Republican presidential candidates have suggested that they would use aggressive or coercive interrogation techniques ? they say they would stop short of torture ? to prevent a terrorist attack.

Fred D. Thompson, the actor and former senator from Tennessee, said at a recent stop in Florida that he would not use waterboarding ?as a matter of course? but that in certain circumstances officials had to ?do what is necessary? to prevent attacks and save lives.

Mr. Giuliani?s remarks about waterboarding seemed to leave more leeway toward using the practice than remarks he made at a news conference in June. Then, he said that he favored aggressive interrogation techniques, but that ?I think you can do it without something like waterboarding.? On Wednesday night, he made it clear that officials should have a wide array of options available to them to try to prevent a potential attack.

The Giuliani campaign responded to Mr. McCain?s comments with a statement from its senior military adviser, Adm. Robert J. Natter, retired, the former commander in chief of the Atlantic Fleet.

?The highly politicized nature of political campaigns makes that forum a poor arena in which to debate the distinctions between torture and different forms of interrogation,? Admiral Natter said. ?Is waterboarding torture? I don?t know. I was waterboarded as part of my military training, and I would say that it falls into a gray area.?

Dr. Keller, an outspoken opponent of waterboarding and similar techniques, said of such trials that ?context is everything,? because people who are waterboarded as an experiment or as part of their training know that they will not be hurt in the end.

In his remarks in Iowa, Mr. Giuliani also criticized Democrats who call sleep deprivation torture.

?They talk about sleep deprivation,? he said. ?I mean, on that theory, I?m getting tortured running for president of the United States. That?s plain silly. That?s silly.?

Mr. Giuliani?s remarks were criticized by Human Rights Watch. Jennifer Daskal, who specialized in counterterrorism for the group, faulted him for suggesting that ?sleep deprivation is a joke.?

?Perfected by the Soviets, sleep deprivation is one of the cruelest, most painful forms of torture,? Ms. Daskal said.

For his part, Dr. Keller said he was troubled by the distinctions being drawn between torture and enhanced investigation techniques.

?We should use a common-sense approach,? he said. ?If it looks like torture, if it smells like torture, it probably is torture.?

Sarah Wheaton contributed reporting.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/26/us/politics/26giuliani.html?_r=2&adxnnl=1&oref=slogin&adxnnlx=1193533514-BCKl+OImaJFhPfvbO82etQ
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Stray Pooch

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #86 on: October 27, 2007, 10:43:13 PM »
I have no idea.

I always thought it, but I never thought you'd admit it.  :D
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Lanya

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #87 on: October 28, 2007, 06:40:36 PM »

CIA's Harsh Interrogation Techniques Described

By BRIAN ROSS and RICHARD ESPOSITO
Nov. 18, 2005


Harsh interrogation techniques authorized by top officials of the CIA have led to questionable confessions and the death of a detainee since the techniques were first authorized in mid-March 2002, ABC News has been told by former and current intelligence officers and supervisors.

They say they are revealing specific details of the techniques, and their impact on confessions, because the public needs to know the direction their agency has chosen. All gave their accounts on the condition that their names and identities not be revealed. Portions of their accounts are corrobrated by public statements of former CIA officers and by reports recently published that cite a classified CIA Inspector General's report.

Other portions of their accounts echo the accounts of escaped prisoners from one CIA prison in Afghanistan.

"They would not let you rest, day or night. Stand up, sit down, stand up, sit down. Don't sleep. Don't lie on the floor," one prisoner said through a translator. The detainees were also forced to listen to rap artist Eminem's "Slim Shady" album. The music was so foreign to them it made them frantic, sources said.

Contacted after the completion of the ABC News investigation, CIA officials would neither confirm nor deny the accounts. They simply declined to comment.

The CIA sources described a list of six "Enhanced Interrogation Techniques" instituted in mid-March 2002 and used, they said, on a dozen top al Qaeda targets incarcerated in isolation at secret locations on military bases in regions from Asia to Eastern Europe. According to the sources, only a handful of CIA interrogators are trained and authorized to use the techniques:

1. The Attention Grab: The interrogator forcefully grabs the shirt front of the prisoner and shakes him.

2. Attention Slap: An open-handed slap aimed at causing pain and triggering fear.

3. The Belly Slap: A hard open-handed slap to the stomach. The aim is to cause pain, but not internal injury. Doctors consulted advised against using a punch, which could cause lasting internal damage.

4. Long Time Standing: This technique is described as among the most effective. Prisoners are forced to stand, handcuffed and with their feet shackled to an eye bolt in the floor for more than 40 hours. Exhaustion and sleep deprivation are effective in yielding confessions.

5. The Cold Cell: The prisoner is left to stand naked in a cell kept near 50 degrees. Throughout the time in the cell the prisoner is doused with cold water.

6. Water Boarding: The prisoner is bound to an inclined board, feet raised and head slightly below the feet. Cellophane is wrapped over the prisoner's face and water is poured over him. Unavoidably, the gag reflex kicks in and a terrifying fear of drowning leads to almost instant pleas to bring the treatment to a halt.

According to the sources, CIA officers who subjected themselves to the water boarding technique lasted an average of 14 seconds before caving in. They said al Qaeda's toughest prisoner, Khalid Sheik Mohammed, won the admiration of interrogators when he was able to last between two and two-and-a-half minutes before begging to confess.

"The person believes they are being killed, and as such, it really amounts to a mock execution, which is illegal under international law," said John Sifton of Human Rights Watch.

The techniques are controversial among experienced intelligence agency and military interrogators. Many feel that a confession obtained this way is an unreliable tool. Two experienced officers have told ABC that there is little to be gained by these techniques that could not be more effectively gained by a methodical, careful, psychologically based interrogation. According to a classified report prepared by the CIA Inspector General John Helgerwon and issued in 2004, the techniques "appeared to constitute cruel, and degrading treatment under the (Geneva) convention," the New York Times reported on Nov. 9, 2005.

It is "bad interrogation. I mean you can get anyone to confess to anything if the torture's bad enough," said former CIA officer Bob Baer.

Larry Johnson, a former CIA officer and a deputy director of the State Department's office of counterterrorism, recently wrote in the Los Angeles Times, "What real CIA field officers know firsthand is that it is better to build a relationship of trust ? than to extract quick confessions through tactics such as those used by the Nazis and the Soviets."

One argument in favor of their use: time. In the early days of al Qaeda captures, it was hoped that speeding confessions would result in the development of important operational knowledge in a timely fashion.

However, ABC News was told that at least three CIA officers declined to be trained in the techniques before a cadre of 14 were selected to use them on a dozen top al Qaeda suspects in order to obtain critical information. In at least one instance, ABC News was told that the techniques led to questionable information aimed at pleasing the interrogators and that this information had a significant impact on U.S. actions in Iraq.

According to CIA sources, Ibn al Shaykh al Libbi, after two weeks of enhanced interrogation, made statements that were designed to tell the interrogators what they wanted to hear. Sources say Al Libbi had been subjected to each of the progressively harsher techniques in turn and finally broke after being water boarded and then left to stand naked in his cold cell overnight where he was doused with cold water at regular intervals.

His statements became part of the basis for the Bush administration claims that Iraq trained al Qaeda members to use biochemical weapons. Sources tell ABC that it was later established that al Libbi had no knowledge of such training or weapons and fabricated the statements because he was terrified of further harsh treatment.

"This is the problem with using the waterboard. They get so desperate that they begin telling you what they think you want to hear," one source said.

However, sources said, al Libbi does not appear to have sought to intentionally misinform investigators, as at least one account has stated. The distinction in this murky world is nonetheless an important one. Al Libbi sought to please his investigators, not lead them down a false path, two sources with firsthand knowledge of the statements said.

When properly used, the techniques appear to be closely monitored and are signed off on in writing on a case-by-case, technique-by-technique basis, according to highly placed current and former intelligence officers involved in the program. In this way, they say, enhanced interrogations have been authorized for about a dozen high value al Qaeda targets -- Khalid Sheik Mohammed among them. According to the sources, all of these have confessed, none of them has died, and all of them remain incarcerated.

While some media accounts have described the locations where these detainees are located as a string of secret CIA prisons -- a gulag, as it were -- in fact, sources say, there are a very limited number of these locations in use at any time, and most often they consist of a secure building on an existing or former military base. In addition, they say, the prisoners usually are not scattered but travel together to these locations, so that information can be extracted from one and compared with others. Currently, it is believed that one or more former Soviet bloc air bases and military installations are the Eastern European location of the top suspects. Khalid Sheik Mohammed is among the suspects detained there, sources said.

The sources told ABC that the techniques, while progressively aggressive, are not deemed torture, and the debate among intelligence officers as to whether they are effective should not be underestimated. There are many who feel these techniques, properly supervised, are both valid and necessary, the sources said. While harsh, they say, they are not torture and are reserved only for the most important and most difficult prisoners.

According to the sources, when an interrogator wishes to use a particular technique on a prisoner, the policy at the CIA is that each step of the interrogation process must be signed off at the highest level -- by the deputy director for operations for the CIA. A cable must be sent and a reply received each time a progressively harsher technique is used. The described oversight appears tough but critics say it could be tougher. In reality, sources said, there are few known instances when an approval has not been granted. Still, even the toughest critics of the techniques say they are relatively well monitored and limited in use.

Two sources also told ABC that the techniques -- authorized for use by only a handful of trained CIA officers -- have been misapplied in at least one instance.

The sources said that in that case a young, untrained junior officer caused the death of one detainee at a mud fort dubbed the "salt pit" that is used as a prison. They say the death occurred when the prisoner was left to stand naked throughout the harsh Afghanistan night after being doused with cold water. He died, they say, of hypothermia.

According to the sources, a second CIA detainee died in Iraq and a third detainee died following harsh interrogation by Department of Defense personnel and contractors in Iraq. CIA sources said that in the DOD case, the interrogation was harsh, but did not involve the CIA.

The Kabul fort has also been the subject of confusion. Several intelligence sources involved in both the enhanced interrogation program and the program to ship detainees back to their own country for interrogation -- a process described as rendition, say that the number of detainees in each program has been added together to suggest as many as 100 detainees are moved around the world from one secret CIA facility to another. In the rendition program, foreign nationals captured in the conflict zones are shipped back to their own countries on occasion for interrogation and prosecution.

There have been several dozen instances of rendition. There have been a little over a dozen authorized enhanced interrogations. As a result, the enhanced interrogation program has been described as one encompassing 100 or more prisoners. Multiple CIA sources told ABC that it is not. The renditions have also been described as illegal. They are not, our sources said, although they acknowledge the procedures are in an ethical gray area and are at times used for the convenience of extracting information under harsher conditions that the U.S. would allow.

ABC was told that several dozen renditions of this kind have occurred. Jordan is one country recently cited as an "emerging" center for renditions, according to published reports. The ABC sources said that rendition of this sort are legal and should not be confused with illegal "snatches" of targets off the streets of a home country by officers of yet another country. The United States is currently charged with such an illegal rendition in Italy. Israel and at least one European nation have also been accused of such renditions.

http://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Investigation/story?id=1322866
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sirs

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #88 on: October 28, 2007, 06:48:19 PM »
1-6 no problem in my book, and none of it "torture" as is traditionally understood to be, though definately not pleasant.
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Henny

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Re: 3DHS on Torture
« Reply #89 on: October 28, 2007, 07:35:20 PM »
1-6 no problem in my book, and none of it "torture" as is traditionally understood to be, though definately not pleasant.

Question Sirs - how do you traditionally define torture? My thought is that most people only know what they see on T.V.