Author Topic: Torture--the tool of the enemy  (Read 2134 times)

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Lanya

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Torture--the tool of the enemy
« on: March 03, 2008, 03:06:48 AM »
http://harpers.org/archive/2008/03/hbc-90002531

[..............]
The Legacy
We should start by taking a step back in time. The theme of torture is nothing new to Hollywood, of course, it has appeared in many forms, frequently in romanticized historical settings. But when it makes its appearance in connection with contemporary settings there are some consistent themes. As the World War II era propaganda poster says ?Torture?The Tool of the Enemy.? We used torture to define the enemy and to separate the enemy from us. The use of torture by the enemy marked them. They were evil, intrinsically evil, because of their use of these techniques. Conversely, the victims were Americans or American allies. Torture killed or maimed, but it did not work. It was a sign of weakness. A good example of these themes and their development can be found in a series of World War II films, such as ?13, rue Madeleine,? which was of course the address of the Gestapo in Paris during World War II.
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This thematic approach held through the Cold War, when torture became more exotic and was presented as a still greater threat to the human spirit. Torture was an effort to crush the individual, to destroy the personality, to bend its victim to the will of the totalitarian state.

Still, torture scenes were relatively infrequent.
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This graph shows the number of scenes appearing over a ten-year period 1995-2005. Notice the spike that occurs after 9/11.

Transformation from 2002
The entertainment industry latches on to the events of the day and tries to take a ride from them. That is the simple nature of things. So the reintroduction of torture as a theme in the broadcast world was to be expected. But something happened beginning in 2002 which was a bit surprising, and that was the fairly dramatic transformation of the way in which torture was addressed by Hollywood. I will be generalizing here, and there are exceptions to every statement, but I will focus on one single program: Fox?s ?24,? which takes an easy first place in this process?if offers 67 torture scenes in the first five seasons?so it is responsible for a large part of the total number of incidents shown here.

Whereas before, torture was the ?tool of the enemy,? now torture is the tool of Jack Bauer. Its use is a heroic act of defiance, often of petty bureaucratic limitations, or of conceited liberals whose personal conscience means more to them than the safety of their fellow citizens. While Bauer is presented as an ultimate heroic figure (and also a figure with some heroic flaws), those who challenge use of the rough stuff are na?ve, and their presence and involvement in the national security process is threatening. We see a liberal who defends a Middle Eastern neighbor then under suspicion, and who winds up being killed because the neighbor is in fact a terrorist.

We?re looking at a Hollywood specialty: a ?reality? show which is divorced from reality. It grossly simplifies necessarily complex facts, and it pares away critical factors which a responsible citizen should be thinking about. But more importantly, perhaps, it is a head-on attack on morality and ethics. The critics of torture are shallow figures, self-serving politicians?vain, arrogant, indifferent to the harm they are doing to society. But in fact the arguments against torture are profound and informed by centuries of human experience and religious doctrine. Torture has in the course of the last two hundred years emerged as an intrinsic evil in Christian teaching; the teaching of most churches?protestant, Catholic, Evangelical?rejects the idea that a state can ever legitimately employ torture.

Key to ?24?s? success is the ticking bomb scenario?indeed you hear it with all the introductions, breaks and trailers?the seconds ticking off. The myth of the ticking bomb is the core of the program. Torture always works. Torture always saves the day. Torture is the ultimate act of heroism, of defiance of pointy-headed liberal morality in favor of service to the greater good, to society.

We should start with a frank question: has ?24? been created with an overtly political agenda, namely, to create a more receptive public audience for the Bush Administration?s torture policies? I think the answer to that question is now very clear. The answer is ?yes.? In ?Whatever It Takes,? Jane Mayer has waded through the sheaf of contacts between the show?s producer, Joel Surnow, and Vice President Cheney and figures right around him. There is little ambiguity about this point, namely, if the torture system introduced after 9/11 can be traced back to a single person, it is Vice President Cheney. He pushed relentlessly for use of the tools of the ?dark side,? and he ruthlessly took out everyone who stood in his way. He also worked feverishly to disguise or cloak his intimate involvement in the entire process. I take it as a given that Surnow is working to develop public attitudes which are more accepting of torture; to overturn centuries-old prejudices against torture. He is a torture-enabler.

The key to achieving this objective consists of two steps. The first is to reduce the issue to something simple: Does torture work? If it does, why should we ever rule it out? Any other question will be dismissed as a moralizing quibble, not something that virile men would worry about. I call this the ?Rambo approach.?

The Missing Elements
We should all be focused on the gap between reality and the world of ?24.? Here are the major points I would make:

? The irreality of the ticking-bomb. For one thing the fact that the ticking-bomb scenario upon which they build has never occurred in the entirety of human history. It?s a malicious fiction. The facts posited will simply never occur. But beyond this, while we are asked to keep our eye on the ticking-bomb scenario, it has nothing to do with the cases in which highly coercive techniques are actually used?look at the testimony of Steven Bradbury before the Judiciary Committee. He cited three instances in which waterboarding, an iconic torture technique, was used. None of them involved the ticking-bomb or anything like it.

? The reliability of torture. The Intelligence Science Board looked at the question extensively and came to clear conclusions in December 2006. Torture does not work, they said. Indeed, one passage of their report was clearly a swipe at ?24? which they said rested on a series of absurd premises. The belief that a person, once tortured, speaks the truth is ancient and very false. Torture, when applied, seems very likely to produce false intelligence upon which we rely to our own detriment. Ask Colin Powell. He delivered a key presentation to the Security Council in which he made the case for war against Iraq. The keystone of Powell?s presentation turned on evidence taken from a man named al-Libi who was tortured and said that Iraq was busily at work on an WMD program. This information, of course, was totally wrong. Al-Libi fabricated it because he knew this is just what the interrogators wanted to hear, and by saying it, they would stop torturing. It was a perfect demonstration of the tendency of torture to contaminate the intelligence gathering process with bogus data.

? Containment. Can torture be introduced and used only in a highly limited set of cases, usually against cold-hearted terrorists, the worst of the worst? Is there not instead an inevitable rush to the bottom that results in any limitations being disregarded? The corrosive effects of culture on a society altogether.

? For another, the nation?s reputation in the world. Generations of Americans have fought and sacrificed to build a system of alliances around the world that provide our security bulwark. What has happened to those alliances? In country after country?including many of the nations which have historically been our tightest allies?our government?s approval level is, as now in Turkey, within the margin of error. That?s right. The percentage approving may actually be zero. In nation after nation and even among our own allies, we are outstripped by the world?s last Stalinist power, China. This is a very heavy price, and most of it has to do with torture policy. So torture policy erodes confidence of our community of allies in us, makes them hesitant to share intelligence, and to support us in counterterrorism and other operations. I have studied in some detail the consequences of U.S. torture policies for operations in Afghanistan and Iraq, where it is clear that allies are dropping out and loosing enthusiasm for supporting operations, and torture policies provide the single most important motivator in this process.

? Damage to military morale and discipline. George Washington was famous for his opposition to torture. He came to his views not for idealistic but for practical reasons. During the French and Indian Wars he observed brutal tactics being used in the wilderness, and he saw that the soldiers who used them were bad soldiers?disorderly, poorly disciplined, impossible to control. He concluded that torture destroyed morale and discipline. And that continues to be the accepted wisdom of the military today, and the force behind the historically unprecedented opposition of military leaders to Bush Administration policy that we saw in the winter of 2006-07. The dean of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, BG Patrick Finnegan, visited the writers of ?24? to present a complaint. This program was actually corrupting military intelligence and discipline. Soldiers in the field reach to the techniques employed by Jack Bauer?if he can?t use them, why can?t we?

? And the weightiest link in this chain tied around our national neck should be considered last. As my friend Mark Danner writes, if you assembled a team of Madison Avenue?s most brilliant thinkers in a room and asked them to concoct a recruitment plan for al Qaeda and its allies, we?d never come anywhere close to the one that the Bush Administration delivered up to them with the torture program. It?s the major reason why today, six years after the start of the war on terror, the National Intelligence Estimate tells us that al Qaeda is back up or has exceeded the strength it had on 9/11, and the Taliban has also been able to regroup and recharge, destabilizing a friendly government in Afghanistan.

The current season of ?24? set to begin shortly features a senate investigation looking into Jack Bauer. A Senator is out after our hero, but he defends himself brilliantly and in the end, the senate committee, we are told, sees the light and comes to understand Bauer?s heroic qualities, including his willingness to use torture.

America today is witnessing something like the experience of France during the Algerian conflict. Albert Camus noted and developed this carefully over a period of many years in his Chroniques alg?riennes. He saw a polarized society in France, between conservatives, traditional liberals and the Left. But there was no constituency to oppose torture. The right embraced the cause of the colonials, and justified their reach to harsh tactics. First this was justified by arguments that the barbarity of the people justified treating them in ways that in Europe could not be countenanced. (This was an echo of arguments that Tocqueville examined a century earlier in the first Algerian war). But this wasn?t a satisfying basis for a society built on liberty, equality and fraternity. So the second justification was more appealing, and it was the ticking-bomb. Camus notes that the left also could not muster arguments against torture. It was then still in the embrace of Stalinism, which had taken with relish to the same techniques. Who remained to make the moral and social argument? Camus did. He puts it powerfully near the conclusion of that book.

    Though it may be true that, at least in history, values, be they of a nation or of humanity as a whole, do not survive unless we fight for them, neither combat (nor force) can alone suffice to justify them. Rather it must be the other way: the fight must be justified and guided by those values. We must fight for the truth and we must take care not to kill it with the very weapons we use in its defense; it is at this doubled price that we must pay in order that our words assume once more their proper power.

This is the fundamental dilemma that ?24? dodges. What are the values for which Jack Bauer is fighting? Is he not abdicating them by his conduct? I am not advocating censoring of ?24.? But it is critical that ?24? begin to present this vitally complex and important social issue in a mature, responsible way. Right now, it is multiplying our problems.
* * *

Remarks delivered at the University of Chicago School of Law, Chicago, Illinois on March 1, 2008.
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Michael Tee

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #1 on: March 03, 2008, 03:22:46 AM »
Torture is STILL the tool of the enemy.  The enemy is the Bush Administration.  The internal enemy is always the more dangerous.  In this case, the values of a liberal democracy have been overthrown from within and a bunch of crypto-fascists have taken over.  It's gonna get worse.

sirs

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #2 on: March 03, 2008, 04:48:11 AM »
 ::)
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

BT

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #3 on: March 03, 2008, 07:11:49 AM »
24 is a TeeVee show folks. Get a grip.

Michael Tee

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #4 on: March 03, 2008, 08:05:18 AM »
<<24 is a TeeVee show folks. Get a grip.>>

Precisely.  It's a TV show and as such a barometer of the values the MSM feels can safely be presented to the Amerikkkan people without (remember Janet Jackson's nipple?) provoking a shitstorm of moral protest.

Nipples are still  not allowed on MSM TV, but now, apparently, torture is.  And portrayed as an Amerikkkan virtue, too.  As the article clearly indicates.  The guy has to "buck the system" to do it, but guys who buck the system (remember McCain, the so-called "maverick?") while actually supporting it, are Amerikkkan heroes.

BT

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #5 on: March 03, 2008, 08:20:29 AM »
Quote
Nipples are still  not allowed on MSM TV, but now, apparently, torture is.  And portrayed as an Amerikkkan virtue, too.

You mistake torture for the greater virtue of violence. Violence is as revered in America as mom and apple pie.


Michael Tee

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #6 on: March 03, 2008, 08:44:06 AM »
<<You mistake torture for the greater virtue of violence. Violence is as revered in America as mom and apple pie.>>

Very funny.  Torture is the apple pie of tomorrow.

BT

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #7 on: March 03, 2008, 08:47:51 AM »
Quote
Very funny.  Torture is the apple pie of tomorrow.

Wasn't being funny at all. Do you disagree that American culture is violent?

We censor sex, we love blood and gore.


Michael Tee

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #8 on: March 03, 2008, 08:53:50 AM »
Of course I don't dispute that Amerikkkan culture is violent.  The point is so obvious that I thought you were saying it only to ridicule my objections to the MSM treatment of torture.

_JS

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #9 on: March 03, 2008, 12:56:17 PM »
Of course I don't dispute that Amerikkkan culture is violent.  The point is so obvious that I thought you were saying it only to ridicule my objections to the MSM treatment of torture.

The truth is that torture has been used for decades. It was exahuastively used in Vietnam and all through South America we taught our fascist regimes and right-wing death squads the value of torture. What isn't shown in 24 is that most of the torture was carried out not on sudden threats to national security (which is a joke), but to peasants, musicians, poets, journalists - people who genuinely affected how society viewed itself. Torture was (and still is) a tool to inject incredible amounts of fear into a society in order to change it to reflect the values you desire. KUBARK and the other manuals make that clear. Torture is a long, arduous process - not something done for half an hour to extract world-saving, 007-style information. That's Hollywood, Fox Studio, bullshit.

Torture also seems to effect Americans far less if it is done to non-whites. Palestinians, Arabs, Pashtuns, Latin Americans - especially mestizos, Vietnamese, Roma, Africans of all types...etc. When white Europeans or Americans get tortured it generally seems to have a more negative effect, especially when the torturers are non-white.
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Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #10 on: March 03, 2008, 01:50:23 PM »
Nipples are still  not allowed on MSM TV, but now, apparently, torture is.  And portrayed as an Amerikkkan virtue, too.  As the article clearly indicates.

=========================
Actually, Janet Jackson's famous nipple was mostly covered by a stylish piece of nipple jewelry, as I recall.

All the famous stars wear them, they say.
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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #11 on: March 03, 2008, 01:56:06 PM »
The truth is that torture has been used for decades.

Try millennium.
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Michael Tee

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #12 on: March 03, 2008, 02:09:04 PM »
<<The truth is that torture has been used for decades.>>

<<Try millennium.>>

Try millennia.

The truth is that until Bush rode into power on a stolen election, there had been a long, slow, steady campaign in the international community, through diplomacy and also through NGOs such as AI, to eradicate torture, which had made painful, step by step progress and admittedly still had a very long way to go.  In a few short years, Bush managed to set the clock back to zero in the international campaign against torture.  I really hope that Satan reserves a special place in Hell for this little bastard, because I can think of few people who are more deserving.

Amianthus

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #13 on: March 03, 2008, 02:20:14 PM »
Try millennia.

Actually, that's what I typed, but apparently the spell checker "fixed" it for me...
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Michael Tee

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Re: Torture--the tool of the enemy
« Reply #14 on: March 03, 2008, 11:19:15 PM »
That's pretty innocuous.  MY spell-checker keeps writing whole liberal diatribes into my posts.