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By Dana Priest and Barton Gellman
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, December 26, 2002; Page A01


Deep inside the forbidden zone at the U.S.-occupied Bagram air base in Afghanistan, around the corner from the detention center and beyond the segregated clandestine military units, sits a cluster of metal shipping containers protected by a triple layer of concertina wire. The containers hold the most valuable prizes in the war on terrorism -- captured al Qaeda operatives and Taliban commanders.

Those who refuse to cooperate inside this secret CIA interrogation center are sometimes kept standing or kneeling for hours, in black hoods or spray-painted goggles, according to intelligence specialists familiar with CIA interrogation methods. At times they are held in awkward, painful positions and deprived of sleep with a 24-hour bombardment of lights -- subject to what are known as "stress and duress" techniques.

Those who cooperate are rewarded with creature comforts, interrogators whose methods include feigned friendship, respect, cultural sensitivity and, in some cases, money. Some who do not cooperate are turned over -- "rendered," in official parlance -- to foreign intelligence services whose practice of torture has been documented by the U.S. government and human rights organizations.

In the multifaceted global war on terrorism waged by the Bush administration, one of the most opaque -- yet vital -- fronts is the detention and interrogation of terrorism suspects. U.S. officials have said little publicly about the captives' names, numbers or whereabouts, and virtually nothing about interrogation methods. But interviews with several former intelligence officials and 10 current U.S. national security officials -- including several people who witnessed the handling of prisoners -- provide insight into how the U.S. government is prosecuting this part of the war.

The picture that emerges is of a brass-knuckled quest for information, often in concert with allies of dubious human rights reputation, in which the traditional lines between right and wrong, legal and inhumane, are evolving and blurred.

While the U.S. government publicly denounces the use of torture, each of the current national security officials interviewed for this article defended the use of violence against captives as just and necessary. They expressed confidence that the American public would back their view. The CIA, which has primary responsibility for interrogations, declined to comment.

"If you don't violate someone's human rights some of the time, you probably aren't doing your job," said one official who has supervised the capture and transfer of accused terrorists. "I don't think we want to be promoting a view of zero tolerance on this. That was the whole problem for a long time with the CIA.."

The off-limits patch of ground at Bagram is one of a number of secret detention centers overseas where U.S. due process does not apply, according to several U.S. and European national security officials, where the CIA undertakes or manages the interrogation of suspected terrorists. Another is Diego Garcia, a somewhat horseshoe-shaped island in the Indian Ocean that the United States leases from Britain.

U.S. officials oversee most of the interrogations, especially those of the most senior captives. In some cases, highly trained CIA officers question captives through interpreters. In others, the intelligence agency undertakes a "false flag" operation using fake decor and disguises meant to deceive a captive into thinking he is imprisoned in a country with a reputation for brutality, when, in reality, he is still in CIA hands. Sometimes, female officers conduct interrogations, a psychologically jarring experience for men reared in a conservative Muslim culture where women are never in control.

In other cases, usually involving lower-level captives, the CIA hands them to foreign intelligence services -- notably those of Jordan, Egypt and Morocco -- with a list of questions the agency wants answered. These "extraordinary renditions" are done without resort to legal process and usually involve countries with security services known for using brutal means.

According to U.S. officials, nearly 3,000 suspected al Qaeda members and their supporters have been detained worldwide since Sept. 11, 2001. About 625 are at the U.S. military's confinement facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Some officials estimated that fewer than 100 captives have been rendered to third countries. Thousands have been arrested and held with U.S. assistance in countries known for brutal treatment of prisoners, the officials said.

At a Sept. 26 joint hearing of the House and Senate intelligence committees, Cofer Black, then head of the CIA Counterterrorist Center, spoke cryptically about the agency's new forms of "operational flexibility" in dealing with suspected terrorists. "This is a very highly classified area, but I have to say that all you need to know: There was a before 9/11, and there was an after 9/11," Black said. "After 9/11 the gloves come off."

According to one official who has been directly involved in rendering captives into foreign hands, the understanding is, "We don't kick the [expletive] out of them. We send them to other countries so they can kick the [expletive] out of them." Some countries are known to use mind-altering drugs such as sodium pentathol, said other officials involved in the process.

Abu Zubaida, who is believed to be the most important al Qaeda member in detention, was shot in the groin during his apprehension in Pakistan in March. National security officials suggested that Zubaida's painkillers were used selectively in the beginning of his captivity. He is now said to be cooperating, and his information has led to the apprehension of other al Qaeda members.

U.S. National Security Council spokesman Sean McCormack declined to comment earlier this week on CIA or intelligence-related matters. But, he said: "The United States is treating enemy combatants in U.S. government control, wherever held, humanely and in a manner consistent with the principles of the Third Geneva Convention of 1949."

The convention outlined the standards for treatment of prisoners of war. Suspected terrorists in CIA hands have not been accorded POW status.

Other U.S. government officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, acknowledged that interrogators deprive some captives of sleep, a practice with ambiguous status in international law.

The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, the authoritative interpreter of the international Convention Against Torture, has ruled that lengthy interrogation may incidentally and legitimately cost a prisoner sleep. But when employed for the purpose of breaking a prisoner's will, sleep deprivation "may in some cases constitute torture."

The State Department's annual human rights report routinely denounces sleep deprivation as an interrogation method. In its 2001 report on Turkey, Israel and Jordan, all U.S. allies, the department listed sleep deprivation among often-used alleged torture techniques.

U.S. officials who defend the renditions say the prisoners are sent to these third countries not because of their coercive questioning techniques, but because of their cultural affinity with the captives. Besides being illegal, they said, torture produces unreliable information from people who are desperate to stop the pain. They look to foreign allies more because their intelligence services can develop a culture of intimacy that Americans cannot. They may use interrogators who speak the captive's Arabic dialect and often use the prospects of shame and the reputation of the captive's family to goad the captive into talking.

'Very Clever Guys'


In a speech on Dec. 11, CIA director George J. Tenet said that interrogations overseas have yielded significant returns recently. He calculated that worldwide efforts to capture or kill terrorists had eliminated about one-third of the al Qaeda leadership. "Almost half of our successes against senior al Qaeda members has come in recent months," he said.

Many of these successes have come as a result of information gained during interrogations. The capture of al Qaeda leaders Ramzi Binalshibh in Pakistan, Omar al-Faruq in Indonesia, Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri in Kuwait and Muhammad al Darbi in Yemen were all partly the result of information gained during interrogations, according to U.S. intelligence and national security officials. All four remain under CIA control.

Time, rather than technique, has produced the most helpful information, several national security and intelligence officials said. Using its global computer database, the CIA is able to quickly check leads from captives in one country with information divulged by captives in another.

"We know so much more about them now than we did a year ago -- the personalities, how the networks are established, what they think are important targets, how they think we will react," said retired Army general Wayne Downing, the Bush administration's deputy national security adviser for combating terrorism until he resigned in June.

"The interrogations of Abu Zubaida drove me nuts at times," Downing said. "He and some of the others are very clever guys. At times I felt we were in a classic counter-interrogation class: They were telling us what they think we already knew. Then, what they thought we wanted to know. As they did that, they fabricated and weaved in threads that went nowhere. But, even with these ploys, we still get valuable information and they are off the street, unable to plot and coordinate future attacks."

In contrast to the detention center at Guantanamo Bay, where military lawyers, news reporters and the Red Cross received occasional access to monitor prisoner conditions and treatment, the CIA's overseas interrogation facilities are off-limits to outsiders, and often even to other government agencies. In addition to Bagram and Diego Garcia, the CIA has other secret detention centers overseas, and often uses the facilities of foreign intelligence services.

Free from the scrutiny of military lawyers steeped in the international laws of war, the CIA and its intelligence service allies have the leeway to exert physically and psychologically aggressive techniques, said national security officials and U.S. and European intelligence officers.

Although no direct evidence of mistreatment of prisoners in U.S. custody has come to light, the prisoners are denied access to lawyers or organizations, such as the Red Cross, that could independently assess their treatment. Even their names are secret.

This month, the U.S. military announced that it had begun a criminal investigation into the handling of two prisoners who died in U.S. custody at the Bagram base. A base spokesman said autopsies found one of the detainees died of a pulmonary embolism, the other of a heart attack.

Al Qaeda suspects are seldom taken without force, and some suspects have been wounded during their capture. After apprehending suspects, U.S. take-down teams -- a mix of military special forces, FBI agents, CIA case officers and local allies -- aim to disorient and intimidate them on the way to detention facilities.

According to Americans with direct knowledge and others who have witnessed the treatment, captives are often "softened up" by MPs and U.S. Army Special Forces troops who beat them up and confine them in tiny rooms. The alleged terrorists are commonly blindfolded and thrown into walls, bound in painful positions, subjected to loud noises and deprived of sleep. The tone of intimidation and fear is the beginning, they said, of a process of piercing a prisoner's resistance.

The take-down teams often "package" prisoners for transport, fitting them with hoods and gags, and binding them to stretchers with duct tape.

Bush administration appointees and career national security officials acknowledged that, as one of them put it, "our guys may kick them around a little bit in the adrenaline of the immediate aftermath." Another said U.S. personnel are scrupulous in providing medical care to captives, adding in a deadpan voice, that "pain control [in wounded patients] is a very subjective thing."

'We're Not Aware'


The CIA's participation in the interrogation of rendered terrorist suspects varies from country to country.

"In some cases [involving interrogations in Saudi Arabia], we're able to observe through one-way mirrors the live investigations," said a senior U.S. official involved in Middle East security issues. "In others, we usually get summaries. We will feed questions to their investigators. They're still very much in control."

The official added: "We're not aware of any torture or even physical abuse."

Tenet acknowledged the Saudis' role in his Dec. 11 speech. "The Saudis are proving increasingly important support to our counterterrorism efforts -- from making arrests to sharing debriefing results," he said.

But Saudi Arabia is also said to withhold information that might lead the U.S. government to conclusions or policies that the Saudi royal family fears. U.S. teams, for that reason, have sometimes sent Saudi nationals to Egypt instead.

Jordan is a favored country for renditions, several U.S. officials said. The Jordanians are considered "highly professional" interrogators, which some officials said meant that they do not use torture. But the State Department's 2001 human rights report criticized Jordan and its General Intelligence Directorate for arbitrary and unlawful detentions and abuse.

"The most frequently alleged methods of torture include sleep deprivation, beatings on the soles of the feet, prolonged suspension with ropes in contorted positions and extended solitary confinement," the 2001 report noted. Jordan also is known to use prisoners' family members to induce suspects to talk.

Another significant destination for rendered suspects is Morocco, whose general intelligence service has sharply stepped up cooperation with the United States. Morocco has a documented history of torture, as well as longstanding ties to the CIA..

The State Department's human rights report says Moroccan law "prohibits torture, and the government claims that the use of torture has been discontinued; however, some members of the security forces still tortured or otherwise abused detainees."

In at least one case, U.S. operatives led the capture and transfer of an al Qaeda suspect to Syria, which for years has been near the top of U.S. lists of human rights violators and sponsors of terrorism. The German government strongly protested the move. The suspect, Mohammed Haydar Zammar, holds joint German and Syrian citizenship. It could not be learned how much of Zammar's interrogation record Syria has provided the CIA.

The Bush administration maintains a legal distance from any mistreatment that occurs overseas, officials said, by denying that torture is the intended result of its rendition policy. American teams, officials said, do no more than assist in the transfer of suspects who are wanted on criminal charges by friendly countries. But five officials acknowledged, as one of them put it, "that sometimes a friendly country can be invited to 'want' someone we grab." Then, other officials said, the foreign government will charge him with a crime of some sort.

One official who has had direct involvement in renditions said he knew they were likely to be tortured. "I . . . do it with my eyes open," he said.

According to present and former officials with firsthand knowledge, the CIA's authoritative Directorate of Operations instructions, drafted in cooperation with the general counsel, tells case officers in the field that they may not engage in, provide advice about or encourage the use of torture by cooperating intelligence services from other countries.

"Based largely on the Central American human rights experience," said Fred Hitz, former CIA inspector general, "we don't do torture, and we can't countenance torture in terms of we can't know of it." But if a country offers information gleaned from interrogations, "we can use the fruits of it."

Bush administration officials said the CIA, in practice, is using a narrow definition of what counts as "knowing" that a suspect has been tortured. "If we're not there in the room, who is to say?" said one official conversant with recent reports of renditions.

The Clinton administration pioneered the use of extraordinary rendition after the bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998. But it also pressed allied intelligence services to respect lawful boundaries in interrogations.

After years of fruitless talks in Egypt, President Bill Clinton cut off funding and cooperation with the directorate of Egypt's general intelligence service, whose torture of suspects has been a perennial theme in State Department human rights reports.

"You can be sure," one Bush administration official said, "that we are not spending a lot of time on that now."

Staff writers Bob Woodward, Susan Schmidt and Douglas Farah, and correspondent Peter Finn in Berlin, contributed to this report.


? 2002 The Washington Post Company



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rono rono rono.
welcome to the age of information.
welcome to the reality of war.
welcome to the reality of being a terrorist caught by the usa.
boo-hoo.:angry:



dB8
 
diamond said:
welcome to the reality of war.


I'm sure what these "poor prisoners" are going through is alot less painful than jumping to your death from the top floor of a burning skyscraper or being burned to death by hot jet fuel. Probably less torture than being blown to bits in an airplane or buried under flying debris I would imagine. How about sitting in a club in Bali sipping a drink one minute and being set on fire the next?

I'm really tired of the bleeding hearts worrying about the "comfort and safety" of these terrorists who would, if given the chance, kill not only Americans, but anyone else who happened to be in the vicinity of their next target.
 
Thanks for posting that Rono. I hope more things like these will be revealed.

That news was posted on teletext here in Slovenia today as well.

I didn't belive US officials when they claimed they were treating prisoners "properly" back when the Guantanamo POW's status was debated. (funny - they're not given that status even though they were caught in the process of WAR against terrorism). IMO, American soldiers (CIA agents etc..) should not even be handling the prisoners in the first place because they're too emotionally involved, thus they won't give them the fair treatment.

:rant:

I thought torture wouldn't be used or approved in democracy (especially from the one country that always emphasizes it's democracy respect and claims to be the leader of democratic world), not in this day and age.

Terorrists or not (for all we know they may not be proven anything yet and are only suspects), no one should be treated like that.

"Gloves come off"? Yes, by all means, forget about human rights, humanity and that stuff.
 
Many Europeans have proven themselves incapable of handling internationional conflict as evidence by World War I and World War II, and the problems in the Balkans. That fact that their barking up the wrong tree now comes as no surprise, but I hope they soon learn what works and what does not work.
 
Rono said:
Sometimes, female officers conduct interrogations, a psychologically jarring experience for men reared in a conservative Muslim culture where women are never in control.

So, now it's a human rights violation for a female to interrogate a male from a "conservative Muslim culture?" So, how do we tell a female CIA or Army intelligence official that she can't do this task? "Sorry, little missy, but you can't question these prisoners because you are a lady and the ACLU (or whomever) doesn't think it would be appropriate." Hell, these prisoners are PRISONERS! They are NOT "in control" of the stuation!

Rono said:
In other cases, usually involving lower-level captives, the CIA hands them to foreign intelligence services -- notably those of Jordan, Egypt and Morocco -- with a list of questions the agency wants answered. These "extraordinary renditions" are done without resort to legal process and usually involve countries with security services known for using brutal means.

Interstingly, they single out three of the more MODERATE Muslim countries as "countries with security services known for using brutal means." Who should we hand them over to in order to ask questions? Iraq? Barbara Walters? Jay Leno?

Everybody keeps bringing up "democracy" whenever prisoners' rights are allegedly "threatened" or "infringed." Should we let the prisoners vote on how they are treated?

~U2Alabama
 
Bono's American Wife said:



I'm sure what these "poor prisoners" are going through is alot less painful than jumping to your death from the top floor of a burning skyscraper or being burned to death by hot jet fuel. Probably less torture than being blown to bits in an airplane or buried under flying debris I would imagine. How about sitting in a club in Bali sipping a drink one minute and being set on fire the next?

I'm really tired of the bleeding hearts worrying about the "comfort and safety" of these terrorists who would, if given the chance, kill not only Americans, but anyone else who happened to be in the vicinity of their next target.



What B.A.W. said:up:
 
U2girl said:


(funny - they're not given that status even though they were caught in the process of WAR against terrorism).


Usually when you fight a war and capture "prisoners of war", you send them back to their native countries at the end of the war without fear that they'll take up arms against you again.

This is obviously not the case here.
 
im sure this is nothing really that surprising to anyone.

though the people caught are indeed "bad people," i believe there should be a bit more of a happy medium.

you can maintain custody of these prisoners without depriving them like this.

but whatever. i really dont give much of a shit about them anyway. they shouldnt have been part a part of such a network to begin with. this is a consequence, a much smaller one than many of their victims had to face.
 
diamond said:
oh
boo-hoo.:|
call us when youre in trouble again.:sexywink: :larry: :wave:

thank u-


Originally posted by STING2
Many Europeans have proven themselves incapable of handling internationional conflict as evidence by World War I and World War II, and the problems in the Balkans. That fact that their barking up the wrong tree now comes as no surprise, but I hope they soon learn what works and what does not work

I have no problem with you opposing the view of U2girl and Rono and the article. I agree with both of you. These prisoners should not have the right to legal representives and should be treated as people who would slit your throat at the drop of the hat. But why is it your automatic reaction to attack the country or continent from which the person comes from? It just seems a bit immature...even though U2girl did attack the USA, that really doesnt give you the right to attack their country, or does it?
 
STING2 said:
but I hope they soon learn what works and what does not work.
our problem is not that we don't what works and what doesn't work
our problem is that we tend to wait too long before we get into action

I don't think "many Europeans are more incapable of handling internationional conflict" than the US
sure we haven't done that much right, but does that make us worse?
 
STING2: barking up the wrong tree? What do you mean? US can't be too proud of some of their handling internation conflicts either. (Hiroshima, South America, Vietnam, there was a time when you supported both Sadam and Bin Laden because they were against communism)
Why are you bringing up the past anyway?

What works? Of course torture works for getting the answers you want - I'm sure those people would say anything to get off the hook.
By the way: isn't it wrong to force confessions anyway? I thought those don't count either.

Or by "I hope they soon learn what works and what does not work" did you mean you wish there'd be attacks like these in Europe? :eyebrow: Why thank you.

U2Bama: well you think it's ok that women interrogate them, considering what their position is in their culture? Don't you think it feels humiliating for them?
And I'm not sure I understand your "moderate" countries comment. Handing over prisoners just so you have the "answers" forced out of them is wrong.

Speedracer: that's all very well and fine, but IMO the whole "POWs/not POWs" was done for exactly these purposes the article revealed: so that US can keep them longer and can use fishy (to say the least) methods of getting information.




I wonder how you would feel if this was the other way around and there was an article about terorrists torturing US soldiers. I mean, I'd expect that from them, not a developed county which could and should be better than that.
I really do think rights of people don't stop based on what they did or what they might do. That's the whole point - regardless of what someone does, the whole "innocent till proven gulity", a right to a fair trial, to be treated properly etc.. still apllies. Anywhere and everywhere.
 
Ok, my statement was a bit to harsh about the Europeans. I'm frustrated with European attitudes on several of these issues and no, I do not think that Europeans are less capable, its just that they collectively fail to do what they are capable of doing.

U2 Girl,

Dropping the A-Bomb on Japan at Horishima and Nagasaki saved millions of peoples lives and ended World War II. Stopping Communism from spreading in South America was an important goal during the Cold War. My Father fought in Vietnam and while the USA had combat troops stationed in the country, the North Vietnamese and the Communist rebels were unable to take over the country. We left in 1973, and South Vietnam did just fine on its own until 1975. Its unfortunate that President Ford did not intervene in 1975 to prevent the Communist take over, but unfortunately, he did not have the political support of Congress to do so.

Saddam and Iraq were NOT client states of the United States, they were allies and a Client State of the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union provided Iraq with over 80% of its military combat equipment and kept 2,000 Soviet soldier in Iraq to train its army all the way up to just before the 1991 Gulf War. The USA government only offered Verbal support to Iraq and occassionally food, trucks and transport helicopters. The USA never sold Iraq any military combat equipment! The biological material that did come from the USA was sent there for medical and scientific reasons. Iraq was not under US sanctions just like several other countries that recieved biological material. Unfortunately this biological material has duel uses. Perhaps the USA made mistakes in its trade policy of "duel use" materials in the 1980s, but thats as far as it goes.

The USA supported the Mujahadeen in Afghanistan and because Bin Laden also supported the Mujahadeen in Afghanistan, this becomes "the USA directly supported Bin Laden with everything". Bin Laden's role in the Afghan war has been grossly inflated. Secondly, the USA withdrew from the region entirely in 1989. What ever support may have trickled down to Bin Laden or given to Bin Laden(if that really happened) was used up by 1993. Funding and supplies have had to come from other sources since then.

Without knowing and understanding the histories of various countries and regions around the world, you will not be able to understand current conflict or know methods and solutions that might be able to resolve or end those conflicts.

In defending the USA, I'm not saying the USA is 100% perfect or fundamentally better than anyone else. But we have had a better track record in foreign policy since 1945 than any other country on the planet.

Lets not forget the safety and security of the soldiers interogating these Al Quada terrorist is more important than the "proper treatment" of the terrorist. Terrorist are treated properly but not up to the point that our soldiers are put at danger. These terrorist are waiting for any slight opportunity to lash out and kill someone.

One of my friends who returned from serving with the US Marines in Afghanistan for 6 months was involved with the capture and interrogation of Al Quada Terrorist. The procedures he described to me sounded safe and normal. We have every right to detain and get information out of these individuals. That information could potentially save thousands if not millions of lives if it helps prevent a future terrorist attack. In this case, to do anything less would be immoral and potentially cost thousands of innocent lives.

The focus should be on preventing similar 9/11 events from happening, not whether terrorist get to take a shower with Irish Spring Soap.
 
STING2 said:
U2 Girl,

Dropping the A-Bomb on Japan at Horishima and Nagasaki saved millions of peoples lives and ended World War II.

they say world war 2 cost a total of 20 million lives. thats including refugees, particularly in east prussia who were fleeing the advancing soviet army who was more than a little pissed off at the germans after operation barbarossa only managed to get up to stalingrad.

roughly 6 million of the 20 were jews.

when the war ended in the first week of may, america had already had a strong hold in the pacific and japan had their backs to the wall. america didnt even need soviet support which it had requested during the first face to face visit of the three big powers (ussr, america, uk) in january or february of 1945 (i cant remember precisely), where they made initial proposals to decide how war torn europe would be governed after germany surrendered.

the atomic bomb was initially created (the manhatten project) to beat out the germans who were thought to have been doing the same thing. instead, himmler himself, though the idea was ludicrous, proceeded (along with goering) to put the V-2 rocket program on fastrack. this is further proof at how stupid the germans were, as himmler had absolutely no militairy background and certainly no real comprehension on warfare technology. his influence was only considered because he was trusted by hitler, and at this point of the war, hitler didnt care about competance, but rather trust in his men.

ok, im off my point, sorry.

what im saying is that your justification of "well it actually saved millions" is completely unprovable. it sounds quite rediculous actually.

japan has faced unspeakable horros since, though ofcourse, it is behind them for the most part now.

im not even going to get into whether dropping the bomb was right or not, im simply going to argue about your bold claim that the bomb in turn saved millions of lives.

and just out of curiousity, does that huge number include the lives of animals? and how many millions, when the whole war is believed to have killed 20 million?
 
u know i could chime in here, however i choose not to.
this isnt my field of expertise, nor forte.
however in perlious times worry worts usually surface and expose themselves as monday morning quaterbacks always critiizing-sp, showing their colours
showing their colours..
plez continue on-
show them colors.


DB9
 
STING2 said:
In defending the USA, I'm not saying the USA is 100% perfect or fundamentally better than anyone else. But we have had a better track record in foreign policy since 1945 than any other country on the planet.
that's a very interesting statement, I guess
 
So you agree US has had connection with doubtful allies in the past? (I also remember - more than 1 - article here in a local newspaper talking just about that).

As far as I know, Japan was very weak at the time and could have been defeated in short time. I don't think the rest of it would have claimed millions.
But still, what possible reason can there be for killing thousands of civilians , and doing irreversible damage to future generations (from the radiation)? The war would have ended sooner or later, and it's not like it was a question who would win.

IMO it didn't happen because it was necessary, but more because the US happened to be the first country to develop the bomb and took advantage of it that way.



BUT, let's get back to the original question.
How are armed soldiers (and I'm sure the interrogators aren't exactly empty handed) threatened by unarmed, (tied, chained/tied legs and blindfolded) people who are probably heaviliy guarded all the time? Not to mention the ratio of manpower is probably very much in favor of the US.

If terrorists are treated properly, how do you explain the article (and rumours ever since the Guantanamo prisoners came up)? Who knows how much your friend saw (and how much he is allowed to tell)?
Yes you have the right to detain and get information - I'm just saying it can be done differently.
 
diamond said:
rono rono rono.
welcome to the age of information.
welcome to the reality of war.
welcome to the reality of being a terrorist caught by the usa.
boo-hoo.:angry:



dB8
:der: There are moments that i am glad that i have read paxetaureras post.

It is all about revenge and not about Justice i guess. But we know now why Amirica will not accept the international court of Justice.

And Sting please shut up about kosokov or so,... why did the usa sold weapons to the Moslims in Sebrenica ? That is one of the reasons the the serb`s felt free to invade Sebrinica. And where was the airsupport ?


Sting , we are paying our debts

The Dutch did give the Americans airsupport today in afghanistan.

And sorry that our whole fleet was not at Pearl Habour,...

9:00 AM Crew of the Dutch liner JAGERSFONTEIN opens up with her guns, the first Allies to join the fight...Radios throughout the island crack out urgent messages "Get off roads and stay off.. Don't block traffic...Stay at home...This is the real McCoy

Found on :
http://schoolweb.missouri.edu/ashland.k12.mo.us/cs/miller/table.html
 
Cow and U2Girl,

Over 50 million people died and World War II, most of them from the Soviet Union(30 million).

The fact that the A-bomb saved millions of lives is easily proved by the fact that Japan was ready to fight to the last man if conventional war would have continued. I suggest you read what happened when the USA invaded Okinawa! Okinawa was a perfect example of what would happen all over Japan in early 1946 when the USA would invade.

The US Strategic Air Command had been continuelly bombing Japan and would have continued its bombing raids to soften up the island for invasion well into early 1946. The worst attacks on Japan that took the most lives were NOT the A-Bomb attacks, but the military and industrial bombing that had been occuring on an on going basis, often producing losses well in excess of either of the A-Bomb attacks. If this bombing had continued beyond August of 1945, millions of Japanese citizens would have been killed.

Then the invasion would have occured in 1946 and based on Japanese resistance on the Pacific islands, resistance would have been heavy and Japanese soldiers would have fought to the last man. So there is a few more million people that would have been killed. USA losses would likely be well over a hundred thousand. Maybe more, despite US strength at the time. In addition, millions more Japanese civilians would be caught in the crossfire of the invasion. Then, just like on Okinawa, many Japanese civilians would have committed suicide.

Bottom line is that continued conventional bombing plus a US invasion of mainland Japan in early 1946 would have killed tens of millions of people. Conventional bombing of Japan had already killed several million Japanese soldiers and civilians.

Ask nearly any US soldier who fought in the Pacific in World War II and they will tell you that the A-Bomb saved their life and the lives of millions of Japanese civilians and soldiers. The A-Bombs stopped a war that would have continued for another 8 months or more. It was indeed very necessary in order to save the lives of millions. It was not about being the first to have the bomb or the opportunity to use it, because there have always been opportunities to use it, but never a clear cut senerio where its use would save millions of lives, like it did in the situation with Japan.
 
U2Girl,

Pakistani soldiers last year had captured several Al Quada and were transporting them by bus to a US base. Although the Al Quada were tied up, they managed to get free and overwhelmed the guards and killed about 10 Pakistani soldiers before they were all killed.

My friend will tell you that guarding and controlling them is a dangerous mission. He spent 6 months in Afghanistan heavily involved in doing this. He is allowed to tell plenty but if there is something he is not allowed to talk about, he informs me that is classified. There was nothing classified about the procedures for detaining, processing and interorgating Al Quada personal in Afghanistan. My friend knows a lot about this because he was involved in the very process were talking about, unlike the people who work for the media in Europe. If you want to question my friends experience and simply doubt it because it does not support your point of view or belief, fine. But realize he knows more about the process than the European media or other media.

The USA has the right to detain and get information that could potentially save millions of peoples lives. The USA uses no single interrogation method to extract that information, and given the potential risk(millions of peoples lives), all methods of extraction have so far been justified.
 
Rono,

In case you did not know, Sebrinica is in Bosnia, not Kosovo. At the time of the massacre in Sebrinica, the Clinton administration was following the lead of the European countries which wanted to continue to bring about a ceacefire through the UN without military action from the USA or NATO. Muslim fighters in Bosnia obtained weapons from various sources, but it was rather limited to begin with anyway. The Muslims were poorly equiped and not an offensive military threat to the Bosnian Serb military that had tanks, Ammored Personal Carriers, and heavy Artillery and Helicopter Gunships. There was a move in the US congress to supply the Muslims with arms, but it was blocked by the Clinton Adminstration.

Remember, the Dutch gave up Sebrinica to the Serbs. I don't recall the Dutch calling for airsupport, but even if they did, the current structure of UN forces at the time and given the close proximity of Serb forces, Air Power would not have been able to have made a difference. Plus, most European governments at the time would have opposed it. The USA had been calling for airstrikes since 1993, but had decided to follow the European lead on handling the Crises.

Only after this and the Market bombing in Sarajevo did the Clinton Administration decide that the Europeans had no idea what they were doing, and launched large scale military strikes throughtout Bosnia that forced the Serbs to give in and negotiate, there by ending the war that had taken 250,000 lives and the Europeans had failed with their methods to prevent and stop.
 
I must totally agree with you Sting, especially on the A-bomb issue. People complain about you bring up past incidents(like myslef) but then some of them turn around and try to do it themselves when it serves their purpose.

And for anyone out there who think POW(AQ) should be treated with great care, get real. These people would do anything to kill an american and without the heavy pressures of interogations they wont say a word. These people are fanatics and must be treated hostilly.
 
STING2 said:
If you want to question my friends experience and simply doubt it because it does not support your point of view or belief, fine.

I did neither of those things. All I said was I wonder how much he really saw from the interrogations and how much he is allowed to say. (lots of people were imprisoned anyway, how can you know all were treated right judging just by one person's account?)

OK then, what do you make of some of the US sources in the article that speak of the interrogation methods?


As for A-bomb: well I think the main interest was to save American lives - and indeed plenty of those were saved, and it would seem weird to say it helped save Japanese lives (Either way, Japanese deaths would occur anyway - bomb or no bomb, as you stated - of course they will fight to the last man on their home soil. Or maybe not, if the country would get weak enough they might have surrendered. Guess we'll never know...) and that it was a good thing - try explaining that to Japenese people who still mourn on the anniversaries of the bombing.
Why do you say it wasn't about the first having the bomb - when there was a competition between countries who would make it first? Maybe not the first to have it, but obviously the first country ready to use the bomb. (though if someone uses the bomb first, isn't it logical to assume they were the first to make it in the first place?)



You know, we can talk about this for days and get nowhere - can we agree to disagree? Obviously we see things differently. If you believe in the "end justifies means" principle, fine.
 
How do you know anyone was in fact treated poorly? Terrorist are not to be treated like kings. Remember, the chief task in interrogating the prisoners is to get information that could potentially save millions of lives. If the particular means lead to an end which prevents the loss of thousands, or millions of people, clearly, the end does justify the means.

As far as Japan, remember that far more Japanese soldiers and civilians were killed by conventional warefare than the A-Bombs dropped on Horoshima and Nagasaki. Millions of Japanese citizens and soldiers were killed in battle and by conventional bombing of Japan throughout World War II. The number of deaths from the A-Bomb attacks on Japan are a tiny fraction of the total number of Japanese that were killed in the war.

The continuation of the war beyond August of 1945 if the A-Bomb had not been dropped would have killed millions more Japanese as evidence by what had already happened in the war and at Okinawa, plus the fact that all combat would not be taking place on the Japanese home islands. Japanese deaths would have substationally increased. The A-Bombs forced an immediate Japanese surrender which prevented the war from continueing which would have killed millions of people. Compare that to the 300,000 killed in the two A-Bomb attacks combined. Tens of millions of Japanese citizens and soldiers compared to 300,000. Its sad that was the only way to prevent the war from continuing, but it did save millions of Japanese people.

Imagine the number of people that would have been saved on 9/11 if US military aircraft had been able to shoot down the hi-jacked planes the terrorist had. 300 innocent people would have died instead of 3,000.
 
STING2 said:
How do you know anyone was in fact treated poorly? Terrorist are not to be treated like kings. Remember, the chief task in interrogating the prisoners is to get information that could potentially save millions of lives. If the particular means lead to an end which prevents the loss of thousands, or millions of people, clearly, the end does justify the means.
I have this sneaking suspicion that the Iraqi authorities are going to agree with this statement when they capture an American, English - or from whatever country he / she might be - soldier during the upcoming war
 
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