Blind groper wrote:Seth wrote:
Is it ethical to torture this suspect to get him to reveal the location of the bomb before it goes off and kills hundreds of thousands of people?
It is not only unethical, but it is also
stupid. Stupid in the extreme!
So, letting a hundred thousand people die by his actions is more ethical than extracting information from him?
One of the things that we know from studies of torture is that it takes time.
Really? And you know this how, exactly? The reason it took more than 200 waterboarding sessions to break the mastermind of the first WTC bombing was not because that was the only way, it's because we didn't want to use methods that would extract the information more quickly.
If you try to get information from someone quickly using torture, assuming the person being tortured is resistant (as an Al Qaeda person would be), then you can guarantee what you get will be lies.
Maybe, maybe not. Apply enough pain and almost everyone will break. The US military knows this, which is why they don't expect captured soldiers to withstand interrogation indefinitely. They formulate their strategy and tactics to minimize the detrimental effects of one person "spilling the beans" instead.
Relying on torture in that situation is an absolute guarantee that you will not get to the bomb in time.
Really? So if sufficient torture might be applied to elicit the desired correct information it's better not to make the attempt and instead do nothing to extract the information and allow hundreds of thousands to die?
Sorry, no sale. The terrorist should be tortured using whatever method is necessary to get him to sing like a bird as quickly as possible because he MIGHT reveal the necessary information in time to stop the attack and save many lives. If he doesn't, nothing is lost. But if he does, the attack can be stopped. Which is not, of course, to say that waiting for that information, correct or incorrect, is the ONLY thing Homeland Security would be doing to try to locate the bomb.
And, during the stress of torture, the terrorist might reveal bits of information that in and of themselves would not locate the bomb, but when COMBINED with other intelligence information may point in a particular direction for the search, or may merely confirm (all unwittingly to the terrorist) information that we already have.
The waterboarding of Khaled Sheikh Mohammed was not intended to elicit a confession from him, we knew he was guilty, it was to elicit dribs and drabs of information, times, places, dates, names and other intel that might slip from him during repeated stressful interrogations that were then assembled by intelligence analysts, combined with other intelligence information from other sources, which built, bit by bit, a much clearer picture of his organization, operations, plans and members.
People make the mistake of thinking that waterboarding is about getting some startling revelation or confession that will bust things wide open, like some stupid Perry Mason on-the-stand confession. That's not it at all. It's about laboriously extracting every bit of information from the suspect and then further investigating each scrap of information in relation to other information the interrogators have to build an accurate picture of the desired situation. The purpose of the stress is to break the terrorist's resistance down, to confuse them and stress them into UNWITTINGLY revealing information. If it doesn't work, it doesn't work. But it might work, and that's good enough when the lives of hundreds of thousands of people are at stake.
In the case of dismantling an organization like the one run by Khaled Sheikh Mohammed, it's like a pointillist painting; each dot on the canvas is meaningless when looked at individually, just as each fact or item extracted from that fucker was obscure in isolation, but with enough information from enough sources, each either confirming or denying another, a clear picture is built up over time. This happens because under enough stress, over a long enough time, no one can avoid saying things that seem harmless but which add to the weight of evidence. What's said on day one and what's said on day 200 will be different, but if the interrogators and analysts record each bit, assemble them in the puzzle they are solving, and then focus on small, seeming inconsequential inconsistencies or intelligence that to the terrorist may seem to reveal nothing, they can direct future interrogations to confirm or flesh out what they already know.
That's why we do it, and why we should do it, and why it's necessary to do it when it comes to defending our nation and the world against terrorists. If they don't want to take the chance of being waterboarded, then they shouldn't perpetrate terror attacks. I have no sympathy whatsoever for them, they get what they deserve, and the innocent people they kill have a right to be protected from them, whatever the cost to the terrorists.
"Seth is Grandmaster Zen Troll who trains his victims to troll themselves every time they think of him" Robert_S
"All that is required for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Edmund Burke
"Those who support denying anyone the right to keep and bear arms for personal defense are fully complicit in every crime that might have been prevented had the victim been effectively armed." Seth
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