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End-of-year reflections on torture

Torture – new reflections from the U.S. and Canada
[12-29-05]


The Nation has gathered a number of very good articles on torture, in its December 26, 2005 issue. Go to the page for that issue, and scroll down the right column on the page to link to any of the articles listed below.

Articles include

The Torture Administration

Anthony Lewis | Despite what we know of history, it comes as a shock to discover that American leaders would open the way for torture of prisoners, that the President would fight legislation prohibiting inhumane treatment, and that Congress would barely react. A moment of historical reckoning has come: It is time to establish an independent commission with a special prosecutor and bring executors of abuse to justice.


Brass Tacks

Tara McKelvey | "Do what has to be done" is the motto of the investigative arm of the US military. But when the understaffed institution regularly loses evidence and delays autopsies, it does too little. When it attempts to protect evidence by detaining witnesses, it does too much. A look at the inherently flawed investigations of detainees.


Seeds of Abu Ghraib

Sasha Abramsky | Americans wondered how Army Specialist Charles Graner could torture detainees in the gruesome Abu Ghraib scandal. In war, people do things that would otherwise be unthinkable. But this former corrections officer with a record of spousal abuse has always been at war.


The Silence of the Doctors

Jonathan H. Marks | The overlooked players in the torture scandal are the medical personnel who supervise--and often participate in--acts of torture. Military medical professionals have reportedly tailored torture sessions to the personalities of detainees, at a time when their professional conscience should have told them to take an ethical stand. Though they're not the usual suspects, they should be investigated as well.


Torture Tree

Peter Ahlberg & Steve Brodner | The new torture complex cannot be attributed to just a few rotten apples. Rooted in the White House and Pentagon, its branches extend to the Justice Department, political leaders, academics, medical professionals, media and ordinary soldiers.


Disco Inferno

Moustafa Bayoumi | Military detainees have been subjected to starvation, sleep deprivation and now Metallica and Britney Spears. Blasted at high volume, torture music has become a weapon of war, used to destroy the minds of Muslim detainees. It's time for musicians to speak up.


Rogue Scholars

Tara McKelvey | Defenders of torture dwell not only in the White House and Pentagon, but in the halls of academia. When prominent law professors and academics cite the fantastic "ticking-bomb theory," they not only spread misinformation and foster a perpetual state of fear, but they use their credentials to legitimize a culture of torture.


Pop Torture

Richard Kim | Pop culture does more than validate the claim that torture could help foil bombs seconds before detonation. In shows like 24, where scenes of sensory deprivation are mixed with family melodrama, torture is so routine that it seems one more plot device to create intimacy in characters. The reality is that torture isolates its victims from any sense of intimacy.


Secrets and Lies

Karen J. Greenberg | By the time the first prisoners were taken in Iraq, a green light to abuse had been issued in writing. Now torture is cloaked in a veil of secrecy, with obscured statistics, dismissal of human rights reports and outright denial. Torture has proved to be a window into the Bush Administration's pursuit of the war on terror.


An Army of Lawyers

Lisa Hajjar | Human rights organizations have coordinated an investigation into torture and an extensive defense of detainees, organizing lawyers who represent clients from nonprofits to oil and gas companies. But the issue of torture needs to transcend the legal world.




And the view from Canada

Robin Matthews, writing on the website ViveleCanada, lays out some of the differing views of U.S. use of torture (and perhaps now rejection of it) from two Canadians and two U.S. students of the issue.

The two sides of the argument in Canada are reflected in the writing of Michael Byers, Canada Research Chair in Global Politics and International Law at the University of B.C. in Vancouver, and Michael Ignatieff, recently nominated federal Liberal candidate for Etobicoke-Lakeshore in Toronto. He was, just before that, Director of the Carr Centre for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.A.

Ignatieff is a proponent of what might be called "careful torture" or "soft torture," while Byers rejects torture out of hand, being, perhaps, more deeply aware than Ignatieff of the hard and long-fought struggle to reach the world’s present shaky respect for human rights and international justice.

And from the U.S. there are also differing views: Naomi Klein, writing in The Nation, urges that the idea of a recent U.S. "descent" into torture be rejected. She writes of "the notorious [U.S.] School of the Americas from 1946 to 1984 … that, if it had a motto, [it] might have been ‘we do torture’." She goes on to write: "It was there in Panama – and later, at the school’s new location at Fort Benning, Georgia – where the roots of the current torture scandals can be found.

Klein is challenged by U.S. writer Alfred McCoy, author of the recent book, A Question of Torture. He argues that "the roots of the current [U.S.] torture scandals" are located in Canada. In a CBC interview in the week of December 17, 2005, McCoy argued that CIA-financed studies in sensory deprivation at McGill University in the early 1950s provided the definitive groundwork for present U.S. torture. It is, apparently, a no-touch torture, the purpose of which is to free torturers from the charge of physical abuse.


For his Canadian audience he concludes:

While some Canadians praise the U.S. population for rising after much provocation to inhibit the worst elements of U.S. aggression, time passes and U.S. behaviour in the world continues its lawless way. Even Canadians – as we have seen here – are divided about the acceptability of U.S. brutality in the world. Michael Byers and Michael Ignatieff nicely characterize the division. If uncontained lawlessness is not to be set loose among nations, Canadians are going to have to return – at all levels of government and administration – to the best codes of behaviour. They are going to have to return, that is, to international law and covenants controlling the conduct of war and the definitions of torture. And they are going to have to speak loudly for those codes and covenants wherever they can – in alliances, in public forums, and in any legislation to which Canada is a party.

 

High schoolers comment on torture
[12-29-05]

The Douglas County, Oregon News-Review published on December 26 four letters from local high school students, all of them agreeing that it was about time George Bush accepted Sen. John McCain’s proposal that the U.S. reject the use of torture.  

A thought:  How about inviting your teens to talk about - or write about - the US use of torture and how they think and feel about it?

 

 

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BECOMING NEIGHBORS:
An Invitation
to Global Discipleship

A Witherspoon conference
on global mission and justice

September 16 - 19, 2007
Louisville, Kentucky

 

Check out our report from the Conference
on
Terror, Torture,
and Security

 

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