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Subject:  Should the US Use Torture - It Already Does (Cockburn)


Should the US Use Torture - It Already Does (Cockburn)
Via NY Transfer News * All the News That Doesn't Fit

WorkingForChange - (Creators Syndicate) Nov 15, 2001
http://www.workingforchange.com/article.cfm?ItemId=12340

Shock to the system:
Should torture be used in the U.S.? It already is.
by Alexander Cockburn

Remember the "third degree"? It used to be the standard way many
police departments in this country extracted confessions from
criminal suspects. The practice was sharply diminished after the 1931
Wickersham Report prepared by the National Commission on Law
Observance and Enforcement, which found that the "'third degree' --
the infliction of physical or mental pain to extract confessions or
statements -- was 'widespread throughout the country' and was
'thoroughly at home in Chicago.'"

The methods identified in the Report "range from beating to harsher
forms of torture. The commoner forms are beating with the fists or
some implement, especially the rubber hose, that inflicts pain, but
is not likely to leave permanent visible scars ... authorities often
threaten bodily injury ... and have gone to the extreme of procuring
a confession at the point of a pistol.'" It further found that the
practice of police torture in the United States was "shocking in its
character and extent, violative of American traditions and
institutions, and not to be tolerated."

So the third degree gave way to the jailhouse snitch and other
resources developed by the police to clinch their cases.

The torture issue has been hanging around now for a month or so, as
noisome as a nineteenth century London fog. Open the Nov. 5 edition
of Newsweek, and there is Jonathan Alter, munching on the week's hot
topic, namely: Should the FBI torture obdurate Sept. 11 suspects in
the Bureau's custody here in the United States? Alter's tone was
lightly facetious, as in "Couldn't we at least subject them to
psychological torture, like tapes of dying rabbits or high-decibel
rap?"

As so often with unappealing labor, Alter arrived at the usual
-- American solution outsource the job: "We'll have to think about
-- transferring some
suspects to our less squeamish allies."

What's striking about Alter's commentary and others writing in the
same idiom is the abstraction from reality, as if torture is so
indisputably a dirty business that all painful data had best be
avoided. One would have thought it hard to be frivolous about the
subject of torture, but Alter manages it.

Would one know from his commentary that under international covenants
torture is illegal? One would not, and one assumes that Alter regards
the issue as entirely immaterial. Would one know that in recent years
the United States has been charged by the UN, and also by human
rights organizations such as Human Rights Watch, as tolerating
torture in prisons in many states, by methods ranging from solitary,
23-hour-a-day confinement in concrete boxes for years on end, to
activating 50,000 volt shocks through a mandatory belt worn by a
prisoner?

Alter expresses a partiality for "truth drugs," an enthusiasm shared
by the U.S. Navy after the war against Hitler, when its intelligence
officers got on the trail of Dr. Kurt Plotner's research into "truth
serums" at Dachau. Plotner gave Jewish and Russian prisoners high
doses of mescaline and then observed their behavior, in which they
expressed hatred for their guards and made confessional statements
about their own psychological makeup. The Navy's interest was
anticipated by the OSS, which developed a THC-based truth serum of
its own in its labs in St. Elizabeth's Hospital. The serum was tried
without any success on scientists working on the Manhattan Project.

Start torturing, and it's easy to get carried away. Torture destroys
the tortured and corrupts the society that sanctions it. What about
Israel, which called an official halt to torture in 1999? They're
still torturing. In July, AP and the Baltimore Sun relayed charges
from the Israeli human rights organization Beth T'selem of "severe
torture" by police of Palestinian youths as young as 14, who were
badly beaten, their heads shoved into toilet bowls and so forth.

But Israel subcontracted, too. When Israel finally retreated from its
"security strip" in southern Lebanon, run by its puppet South
Lebanese Army, the journalist Robert Fisk visited Khiam prison. His
report for The Independent, May 25, 2000, began thus: "The torturers
had just left, but the horror remained. There was the whipping pole
and the window grilles where prisoners were tied naked for days,
freezing water thrown over them at night. Then there were the
electric leads for the little dynamo -- the machine mercifully taken
off to Israel by the interrogators -- which had the inmates shrieking
with pain when the electrodes touched their fingers or penises. And
there were the handcuffs, which an ex-prisoner handed to me yesterday
afternoon. Engraved into the steel were the words: 'The Peerless
Handcuff Co. Springfield, Mass. Made in USA.' And I wondered, in
Israel's most shameful prison, if the executives over in Springfield
knew what they were doing when they sold these manacles."

If those handcuffs are sold these days to the FBI's subcontractor of
choice, at least the executives will know they have Jonathan Alter to
explain the patriotic morality of their bottom line. But at least
Alter is only a pundit. For now, the line from the U.S. Justice
Department is superior in moral fiber. U.S. Attorney General John
Ashcroft told Ted Koppel recently: "We don't want anyone to be
subjected to interrogation that would violate their rights. And I
mean by that, we don't want to extort any kind of confession. We
don't believe extorted confessions are reliable ... We don't engage
in those kinds of practices. As a matter of fact, if I were to learn
that so -- those kinds of practices had been undertaken -- and I have
had no report of that -- I would be very distressed, and I would take
action."

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