Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and John Yoo were all instrumental in implementing the U.S. torture program.
So it is no surprise that they are now pretending that torture helped get Bin Laden. See this, this and this.
They're trying to avoid war crimes prosecution.
As I noted in 2009:
Cheney was the main architect of the torture policy (according to the number 2 man at the State Department and others).
So of course he would defend torture - he's trying to keep his behind out of the defense chair at a war crimes tribunal.
Cheney defending torture is exactly like Charles Manson appearing on all of the news shows defending murder as a public policy.
Matthew Alexander - a former top Air Force interrogator who led the team that tracked down Abu Musab al-Zarqawi - agrees:
"These guys are trying to save their reputations, for one thing," Alexander said. "They have, from the beginning, been trying to prevent an investigation into war crimes."
As does Colonel Wilkerson, Colin Powell's chief of staff:
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Defenders of the Bush administration’s interrogation policies have claimed vindication from reports that bin Laden was tracked down in small part due to information received from brutalized detainees some six to eight years ago.
But that sequence of events -- even if true -- doesn’t demonstrate the effectiveness of torture, these experts say. Rather, it indicates bin Laden could have been caught much earlier had those detainees been interrogated properly.
"I think that without a doubt, torture and enhanced interrogation techniques slowed down the hunt for bin Laden," said an Air Force interrogator who goes by the pseudonym Matthew Alexander and located Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the leader of al Qaeda in Iraq, in 2006.
It now appears likely that several detainees had information about a key al Qaeda courier -- information that might have led authorities directly to bin Laden years ago. But subjected to physical and psychological brutality, "they gave us the bare minimum amount of information they could get away with to get the pain to stop, or to mislead us," Alexander told The Huffington Post.
"We know that they didn’t give us everything, because they didn’t provide the real name, or the location, or somebody else who would know that information," he said.
In a 2006 study by the National Defense Intelligence College, trained interrogators found that traditional, rapport-based interviewing approaches are extremely effective with even the most hardened detainees, whereas coercion consistently builds resistance and resentment.
"Had we handled some of these sources from the beginning, I would like to think that there’s a good chance that we would have gotten this information or other information," said Steven Kleinman, a longtime military intelligence officer who has extensively researched, practiced and taught interrogation techniques.
"By making a detainee less likely to provide information, and making the information he does provide harder to evaluate, they hindered what we needed to accomplish," said Glenn L. Carle, a retired CIA officer who oversaw the interrogation of a high-level detainee in 2002.
***
For Alexander, Kleinman and others, the key takeaway is not just that the torture didn't work, but that it was actually counterproductive.
"The question is: What else did KSM have?" Alexander asked. And he’s pretty sure he knows the answer: KSM knew the courier’s real name, "or he knew who else knew his real name, or he knew how to find him -- and he didn’t give any of that information," Alexander said.
Alexander’s book, "Kill or Capture," chronicles how the non-coercive interrogation of a dedicated al Qaeda member led to Zarqawi’s capture.
"I’m 100 percent confident that a good interrogator would have gotten additional leads" from KSM, Alexander said.
***
This new scenario hardly supports a defense of torture on the grounds that it’s appropriate in "ticking time bomb" scenarios, Alexander said. "Show me an interrogator who says that eight years is a good result."
Indeed, Froomkin points out that the type of torture used is a special type focused on obtaining false confessions:
Experts agree that torture is particularly good at one thing: eliciting false confessions.
Bush-era interrogation techniques, were modeled after methods used by Chinese Communists to extract confessions from captured U.S. servicemen that they could then use for propaganda during the Korean War.
And Froomkin notes that torture hurts national security:
"They don’t want to talk about the long term consequences that cost the lives of Americans," Alexander added. The way the U.S. treated its prisoners "was al-Qaeda’s number-one recruiting tool and brought in thousands of foreign fighters who killed American soldiers," Alexander said. "And who want to live with that on their conscience?"
For background, see this.
Note: Cheney and Rumsfeld were never very interested in capturing Bin Laden. Their focus was elsewhere. So their revisionist statements about the usefulness of torture for intelligence purposes must be taken with a grain of salt. In reality, their torture program was crafted to justify the Iraq war, not to catch Bin Laden (and see this.)
Dead Men Don't Lie:
ReplyDelete"The American government is leading the country towards hell. … We say to the Americans as people and to American mothers, if they cherish their lives and if they cherish their sons, they must elect an American patriotic government that caters to their interests not the interests of the Jews.
If the present injustice continues with the wave of national consciousness, it will inevitably move the battle to American soil, just as Ramzi Yousef and others have done. This is my message to the American people. I urge them to find a serious administration that acts in their interest and does not attack people and violate their honor and pilfer their wealth.” – bin Laden 1998 John Miller interview
OBL came out days after the attacks on NYC and said he and his rebels had nothing to do with 9/11. He died in December 2001 of renal failure as reported in multiple daily papers in Pakistan.
Imagine if the world had listened to OBL in 1998.
America, sweet America, your sons and daughters are dying for zionist Rothschild and his counterfeiting IMF cronies.
WAKE THE F**K UP!!!
In the NYT last week, there was an article saying that prosecutors are now going to ask a judge to drop all charges against OBL. The article described an initial indictment dated June 2008, with new versions arriving to include more defendants and the new plots that came after that. The article specifically cited the August 1998 embassy bombings and the Cole bombing. The article never specifically identified 9/11 events as elements of any new charges.
ReplyDeleteThose guys seem to know what the deal is dude.
ReplyDeletewww.totally-anon.at.tc
I was only following orders is a familiar refrain,
ReplyDeleteHope they share the same fate.
Peace
Dan
placeofrefuge2012 dot com
GW said: “In reality, their torture program was crafted to justify the Iraq war, not to catch Bin Laden”.
ReplyDeleteYes, the truth can be told in one sentence without volumes of illumination. Although GW’s opinion is well documented, the truth is simple; it is lies that are complicated and deliberately confusing.
Our American Democracy and the Rule of Law has been overthrown by the Fascist Oligarchy; even admitted American War Criminals go unpunished.
With the Fascist in control of our government, American civil liberties have been suspended indefinitely by Homeland Security; American citizens who resist or speak out against unwarranted search and seizure by the goons have become the enemy. They will be arrested on the spot. Are you afraid of the TSA goons? You should be, they are no different then the Nazi SS.
“Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power”. -- Benito Mussolini
Funny how the writer is all indignant about supposed "war crimes" imediately after one of the biggest war crimes this century: The assassination of OBL. They used to court martial GIs for shooting un-armed prisoners once they were captured. If GWB had been in office and all other facts had been identical, liberals everywhere would be screaming that OBL was not given due process and a fair trial. Hypocrites.
ReplyDelete