Newsletter July 2007 #69
Table of Contents:
[Newsletter July 2007]
[On Allegations of Torture]
[The Anatomy of a Jihadist Lawsuit]
[Your Forgotten Line of Defence]
[Of Men and Medals]
[Alexander Mackenzie's Bookshelf]
[Voices of Freedom]
On Allegations of Torture
The American
humorist P.J. O'Rourke once made an observation about the relative value of the
1913 Encyclopaedia Britannica
compared to all encyclopaedias written since the end of the First World
War. He pointed out that this was the
last edition where observations about non-Western societies tended to be both
candid and accurate; but also observed that this edition was the last full
expression of that unbounded optimism about the future which used to characterize
the West before 'The War To End All Wars.'
To illustrate this point, he mentioned the reference about torture --
which pointed out that in Europe, this was (in
1913) an obsolete practice whose day had ended.
Ninety four years
later, torture is still far from obsolete and has certainly not vanished. The problem is that, sometimes, it might
indeed be necessary, and also that few of us have any idea of what torture is
and is not.
Torture, like
terrorism or pornography, has escaped exact definition and cannot easily be
isolated from other activities. Art may
be in the eye of the beholder -- so is obscenity. Some people are offended by a Ruben's nude;
some apparently see artistic merit in Andres Serrano's photograph Piss
Christ. We all condemn terrorism and yet
too many people will excuse groups they support from the taint of it. Inexact boundaries are found in the
difference between torture and legitimate means of interrogation.
Most of us can
recognize that subjecting a prisoner to electric shocks, whips and such is
undeniably torture. (One wonders if this is true for those who voluntarily submit
themselves to painful abuse and take sexual pleasure from it.). A few of us imagine that utilizing the sense
of psychological disorientation and isolation that is normal to a POW is
somehow unfair and impinges on torture, while deliberately prolonging or
inducing that feeling is certainly such.
However, innumerable
police officers and military intelligence personnel from democratic societies
who view torture as a foul and evil practice frequently induce a mild sense of
dislocation as a means to facilitating interrogation and see no lasting harm in
it. The author, in his military service,
inflicted and received worse treatment with other Canadian soldiers in
peacetime exercises. This more robust
view of what is or is not torture certainly conflicts with at least one
spokesperson for Amnesty International who held that even an intimidating look
from a police officer constituted 'mental anguish', and hence was torture in
his world view.
While we cannot
agree on what is, or is not torture, everyone is certainly against it -- more or
less. The problem is that the definition
keeps changing: The old pillars of
international standards for behaviour, the International Committee of the Red
Cross and the UN Human Rights Committee, have been getting rather flaky lately;
and the old understanding (in lieu of an acceptable definition) have been
getting blurry. The blurriness is deliberate
-- especially when the new buzz phrase is now about 'Torture and Ill-Treatment',
which lumps the two concepts together and treats them as the same.
Obergefreiter Hanns
Scharff was probably one of the most effective interrogators that ever
lived. An NCO in the German Luftwaffe
during the Second World War, he wrung volumes of information out of captured
Allied airmen. What makes him unusual is
that he largely confined his interview techniques to tea, sympathy and
cigarettes, and is not known to have ever raised his voice to any prisoner he
ever interrogated (in fact, Scharff was welcomed into the US after the war with
the support of many of the airmen he interviewed, and ended his days as an
acclaimed artist).
Professional
interrogators know that with enough time and inducement, almost anything can be
wrung out of most prisoners without resorting to physical torture. However, with fanatical ideologues or
especially stubborn criminals, it might be necessary to turn on the
psychological pressure -- those old non-physical techniques of isolation,
disorientation, and uncertainty. These
techniques, while useful, seldom make for admissible evidence in a court; and
never do if their use seems to have been deliberate and intensive. For example, waking a prisoner up in the
middle of REM-sleep to interrogate him is an effective technique (the author
having done this in peace-time exercises in the Canadian military), but a
competent attorney might convincingly argue that this indeed constituted
torture.
Many people will
accept the idea of torture if it saves lives.
In fiction, the old Clint Eastwood movie 'Dirty Harry' shows a
hard-nosed police office who is willing to torture a suspected serial killer to
save the life of a young woman who has been buried alive, and in the latest
season of the television thriller series '24', the hero tortures a suspect to
attempt to reveal the whereabouts of a nuclear weapon concealed in a city
before it detonates. These are fictional
examples, but are there real cases along these lines? Yes... and the details will never be made
public, particularly as the prisoners who were hastily tortured were killed after
providing vital intelligence (the two instances that the author is aware of
involved Special Forces from Allied nations in conflict zones).
We can all agree
that we all oppose torture, even if we can't agree as to what constitutes
torture, and with the caveat for some of us, that it might just be permissible
in special circumstances. When torture
is alleged to have taken place, we can also all demonstrate our revulsion to
the practice, usually without bothering to acquaint ourselves with the details
or understanding the circumstances... which essentially makes our protest cheap
and meaningless.
Members of Canada's
Parliament were alarmed and horrified by the reports that prisoners captured by
Canadian troops were handed over to Afghan authorities where it was presumed
that they were being tortured in detention.
Much hand-wringing and viewing-with-alarm then ensued. However, Scott Taylor of Esprit de Corps magazine -- no friend of the Canadian military's
senior brass -- went to the effort of actually visiting and photographing the
Afghan detention centre in question (something that no other Canadian
journalists appeared to have done). Yes,
the prisoners are badly housed with few amenities and an inadequate diet... and
their guards lived in virtually identical conditions. These were not conditions of torture, but
they certainly reflected the poverty that virtually all Afghans have to live
with. There were no signs whatsoever of a cage, chains, or other implements
that the centre was accused of using.
But the hoo-hah
about Afghan detainees illustrates two -- or possibly three -- points about
torture that inhibit our ability to fight against terrorism and protect
ourselves.
The first is
allowing the continued survival of a bogus argument that living conditions
which are substandard to our own can somehow constitute 'torture' in
themselves. Yes, an Afghan or Brazilian
or Egyptian prison is a bad place to be; but so what? These are societies that are poorer than
ours, and nobody in any society is going to provide amenities for their prisons
that most of their more law-abiding citizens lack. Moreover, our continued insistence that
prison facilities in poorer countries somehow constitute torture is simultaneously
racist and elitist; and is certainly insulting to people whose cooperation and
support we often need.
Secondly, and this
really should have come up in the Arar Inquiry (which is why the author assigns
no value to its findings); physical torture leaves scars -- brutal ones on the
body as well as on the soul. Once
somebody alleges that they have been tortured and implies that it is somehow
our fault that this occurred, a thorough medical exam by a competent doctor who
is a friend of the court should be the only standard of proof. The test for psychological trauma leaves far
too much to non-specific interpretations of 'torture' to be trustworthy, unless
-- again -- a thoroughly neutral authority can be used as a friend of the court.
There is a good
reason why we should no longer take it as a given on somebody's 'say-so' that
they have been tortured. The al Qaeda
training syllabus in their camps and over the internet places a frequent stress
on the conduct of Jihadists when captured -- they are always to allege torture
and abuse when in detention.
It is a fundamental
principle of deception operations and psychological warfare (at least from
totalitarian sources): Throw enough mud
and some of it always sticks. When al
Qaeda wrote up its training guides, they certainly understood this point, which
is why Jihadists and their sympathizers always
allege that they have been tortured and abused in detention. In fact, the allegation is so common, it can
be reliably taken as an indicator that the suspected Jihadist actually is a
part of the movement.
Should we torture
captured Jihadists? Well, it depends on
what one means by torture. Should we
keep Jihadist prisoners mentally off-balance and disoriented to facilitate
their interrogations? Certainly. Does this constitute torture? Not really.
Is it acceptable to use torture if the circumstances are dire? Probably, but remember this -- torture is dehumanizing
and soul destroying for both the prisoner and the torturer. And the prisoner has a better chance than his
tormentor of recovering his humanity later...
If one inflicts torture, the risk of becoming a monster is real.
John Thompson is President of the Mackenzie Institute which studies political instability and terrorism. He can be reached at: mackenzieinstitute@bellnet.ca
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