GOP Candidates Advocate Torture
At last week’s debate, Republican presidential candidates Herman Cain and Michelle Bachman defended waterboarding. Cain said, “I don't see it as torture. I see it as an enhanced interrogation technique,” which is what the Bush administration used to call its policy of torture and abuse. Bachman declared, “If I were president, I would be willing to use waterboarding. I think it was very effective. It gained information for our country.” And after the debate, Mitt Romney’s aides told CNN that he does not think waterboarding is torture.
President Obama correctly retorted, “Waterboarding is torture.” He added, “Anybody who has actually read about and understands the practice of waterboarding would say that is torture - and that’s not something we do, period.”
The United States has long considered waterboarding to be torture. Several federal court opinions refer to waterboarding as torture. Our government prosecuted, convicted and hung Japanese military leaders following World War II for waterboarding. The U.S. War Crimes Act defines torture as a war crime.
George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, and John Yoo have all admitted participating in decisions to waterboard detainees, knowing that interrogators would carry out their orders. Under the doctrine of command responsibility, commanders all the way up the chain of command to the commander-in-chief can be prosecuted for war crimes if they knew or should have known their subordinates would commit them and the commanders did nothing to stop or prevent it. Therefore, Bush, Cheney, and Yoo have admitted to the commission of war crimes.
But by refusing to investigate them for their admitted torture, the Obama administration has given the Bush officials a free pass.
Moreover, Bachman was wrong when she claimed torture is effective. Former high level FBI interrogators, including Ali Soufan and Dan Coleman, say the person being tortured will say anything to get the torture to stop – even providing false information. The best results, interrogators add, are obtained with humane methods.
Obama also accurately noted that waterboarding “is contrary to America’s tradition, it’s contrary to our ideals. That’s not who we are. That’s not how we operate. We don’t need it in order to prosecute the war on terrorism. We did the right thing by ending that practice. If we want to lead around the world part of our leadership is setting a good example.”
Unfortunately, during his hearing to be confirmed as CIA director, David Petraeus told Congress there might be occasions in which we must return to “enhanced interrogation” to get information. Alarmingly, that comment signaled that the Obama administration may return to the use of torture and abuse. That would be unacceptable.
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14 comments on "GOP Candidates Advocate Torture"
November 21, 2011 12:23pm
I am TOTALLY OPPOSED to TORTURE of any kind being done by anyone to anyone at any time.
There is an old saying that explains why very simply. "Tit for Tat, you kick my Dog, I will kill your Cat." Therefore if we are willing to TORTURE than it simply means that the people we Tortured will kill our Women and Children and Kill and Torture our men and Women in the Military just before they finally kill them.
November 21, 2011 12:22am
GOP Candidates Advocate Torture, good when are they available for their first session?
November 20, 2011 8:58pm
Any of these politicos should stand up and be waterboarded on live television--and then tell the world it is not torture.
November 20, 2011 6:44pm
Oh, yes. They're very afraid. This is like the Wizard of Oz where Toto lifts the curtain behind which the Wizard does his stuff.True, OWS needs some help focusing more clearly and developing coherent message with clear aims and points. And if it does this watch the Wall Street/Conservative money begin flowing!
November 20, 2011 5:06pm
Any force that advocates torture has to be prepared to have it exercised to its own members by the enemy.
It seems that advocating torture makes it very difficult on members of one's forces who are quite likely to be captured. In fact, it seems that such advocacy give the enemy cause to capture as many "torturers" as possible.
These GOP clowns may very well cause their military much grief. But they don't care as they gawk from the observation posts into the trenches.
November 20, 2011 3:55pm
State sponsored torture is the betrayal of the great historic discourse that gave birth to the modern concept of nationhood.
The fact that these monsters promote a medieval discourse based simply on the same logic of supremacy and exemption that the inquisition used to torture, burn and otherwise terrorize hundreds of thousands of human beings, should give us chills up our spines.
Why these people are allowed to pursue a political party's candidacy to President of the United States reveals that such political party is, at this point in history, an enemy of humanity.
November 20, 2011 4:12pm
Based on Cain and Bachmann's logic, if GW Bush had said that smashing fingers with a hammer wasn't torture, they'd be all for it.
There's nothing wrong with Cain and Bachmann that a couple years in a Japanese POW camp in WWII wouldn't cure. They'd find out real quick what waterboarding is all about.
Where's a time machine when you need one?
November 20, 2011 2:16pm
Pimpin' Hermi, Crazy Eyes and Metrosexual Mit are politicians just palying for votes which reveals the civil war brewing in this nation. The majority of the 99 that believe in truth, honor, dignity, equity, charity, selflessness, peace and justice vs. the minority of the 99 who blindly head their masters the -1% who believe in deciet, treason, humiliation, greed, selfishness, inequity, violence and injustice. The humane vs. the inhumane. The nation can go on no longer divided between the good and the evil. We are in state of war for the very soul of this nation. May the good triumph through their steadfastness of love and compassion. But with every passing day the inevitability of bloodshed grows.
November 20, 2011 1:44pm
It's probably worth noting that Ron Paul is the only GOP candidate opposed to the practice. I didn't see mention of that in the article.
November 20, 2011 1:11pm
I would love to have the opportunity to waterboard the bunch of them. I wonder how fast they would admit, under waterboarding, that it is torture.
November 20, 2011 4:14pm
I'd give them less than five minutes. I'd pay good money to watch that one. They'd need a change of underwear before it was over...
November 20, 2011 1:05pm
For more information about the torture issue, see www.SupportGenevaConventions.org .
November 20, 2011 1:01pm
Waterboard Cheney See what he will admit
November 20, 2011 4:14pm
Waterboard Cheney and he might even say "Ok, I admit it - 9/11 was an inside job!"