In Torture We Trust?
by Eyal Press
The Nation magazine, March
31, 2003
"If patriotism has to precipitate
us into dishonour, if there is no precipice of inhumanity over
which nations and men will not throw themselves, then, why in
fact do we go to so much trouble to become, or to remain, human?
John-Paul Sartre
The recent capture of Al Qaeda leader
Khalid Shaikh Mohammed is the latest indication that the taboo
on torture has been broken. In the days after Mohammed's arrest,
an unnamed official told the Wall Street Journal that US interrogators
may authorize "a little bit of smacky-face" while questioning
captives in the war on terrorism. Others proposed that the United
States ship Mohammed off to a country where laxer rules apply.
'There's a reason why [Mohammed] isn't going to be near a place
where he has Miranda rights or the equivalent," a senior
federal law enforcer told the Journal. "You go to some other
country that'll let us pistol-whip this guy."
Asked about this by CNN's Wolf Blitzer,
Senator Jay Rockefeller IV, a Democrat from West Virginia and
vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,
replied) "I wouldn't take anything off the table where he
is concerned, because this is the man who has killed hundreds
and hundreds of Americans over the last ten years." (An aide
to Rockefeller subsequently insisted that the Senator did not
condone .turning Mohammed over to a regime that tortures.) In
fact, sending US captives to abusive allies, and other policies
that potentially implicate America in torture, have been in use
for months.
On December 26 of last year, the Washington
Post published a front-page story detailing allegations of torture
and inhumane treatment involving thousands of suspects apprehended
since the September 11 terrorist attacks. Al Qaeda captives held
at overseas CIA interrogation centers, which are completely off
limits to reporters, lawyers and outside agencies, are routinely
"softened up"-that is, beaten-by US Army Special Forces
before interrogation, as well as thrown against walls, hooded,
deprived of sleep, bombarded with light and bound in painful positions
with duct tape. "If you don't violate someone's human rights
some of the time, you probably aren't doing your job ' one official
said to the Post of these methods, which at the very least constitute
cruel and inhumane treatment and may rise to the level of "severe
pain or suffering, whether physical or mental ' the benchmark
of torture.
The same article reported that approximately
100 suspects have been transferred to US allies, including Saudi
Arabia and Morocco, whose brutal torture methods have been amply
documented in the State Department's own annual human rights reports.
"We don't kick the [expletive] out of them ' one official
told the Post. "We send them to other countries so they can
kick the [expletive] out of them." Many captives have been
sent to Egypt, where, according to the State Department, suspects
are routinely "stripped and blindfolded; suspended from a
ceiling or door frame with feet just touching the floor; beaten
with fists, whips, metal rods, or other objects; subjected to
electric shocks." In at least one case, a suspect was sent
to Syria, where, the State Department says, torture methods include
"pulling out fingernails; forcing objects into the rectum...using
a chair that bends backwards to asphyxiate the victim or fracture
the spine." A story in Newsday published just after Mohammed's
arrest quoted a former CIA official who, describing a detainee
transferred from Guantanamo Bay to Egypt, said, "They promptly
tore his fingernails out and he started telling things."
Just as pundits debated Mohammed's possible
transfer, evidence emerged that remaining in US custody might
not be any safer: Death certificates released for two Al Qaeda
suspects who died while in US custody at the Bagram base in Afghanistan
showed that both were killed by "blunt force injuries."
Other detainees told of being hung from the ceiling by chains.
The Bush Administration insists that the
United States has not violated the UN Convention Against Torture,
which the Senate ratified in 1994. But the cascade of recent revelations
has left human rights groups understandably alarmed. Shortly after
the Washington Post article appeared' a coalition of organizations,
including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, fired
off a letter to Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz calling upon
the Bush Administration to unequivocally denounce torture and
clarify that the United States will "neither seek nor rely
upon intelligence obtained" through such practices. But few
have echoed their call. "There's been a painful silence about
this ' says Human Rights Watch executive director Ken Roth. "I
haven't heard anyone in Congress call for hearings or even speak
out publicly." The silence extends to the media, where, until
Mohammed's capture, no follow-up investigations and few editorials
had appeared-not even in the New York Times.
The absence of debate may simply reflect
a preoccupation with Iraq, but it may also signal that in these
jittery times, many people see torture as justified. In the aftermath
of the World Trade Center attack, numerous commentators did suggest
that the absolute prohibition on torture should be reconsidered.
Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz famously proposed allowing
US judges to issue "torture warrants" to prevent potentially
catastrophic terrorist attacks. Writing in The New Republic last
fall, Richard Posner, a judge on the US Court of Appeals for the
Seventh Circuit, expressed reservations about Dershowitz's proposal
but argued that "if the stakes are high enough, torture is
permissible. No one who doubts that this is the case should be
in a position of responsibility."
Lurking behind such comments is the specter
of the so-called "ticking bomb": the captive who knows
of an imminent attack that will cost thousands of lives, imagined
vividly on February 4 in the hit Fox series 24, in which US agents
used electroshock to extract a confession about an impending nuclear
attack.
Should an exceptional captive such as
Mohammed be tortured to extract potentially lifesaving information?
The Nation spoke with several prominent theorists of ethics, human
rights and the law, all of whom acknowledged that this is very
difficult emotional terrain, even if there is, in the end, only
one truly ethical answer. Martha Nussbaum, a professor at the
University of Chicago who has written several books on ethics
and human rights, offered a frank-and somewhat jarring-admission.
"I don't think any sensible moral position would deny that
there might be some imaginable situations in which torture [of
a particular individual] is justified," Nussbaum wrote in
an e-mail to The Nation.
But as Nussbaum went on to note, in the
real world, governments don't just torture ticking time bombs:
They torture their enemies, under circumstances that routinely
stray from the isolated) extreme scenario. Even the most scrupulous
regime is bound to do so, for the simple reason that nobody can
know for certain whether a suspect really is a ticking bomb. 'There's
an inevitable uncertainty ' explains Georgetown law professor
David Cole, the author of Terrorism and the Constitution and a
forthcoming book on September 11 and civil liberties. "You
can't know whether a person knows where the bomb is, or even if
they're telling the truth. Because of this, you end up going down
a slippery slope and sanctioning torture in general." So
while Cole and Nussbaum can imagine scenarios where torture might
constitute a lesser evil, both favor a "bright line ' in
Cole's words, banning the practice.
Henry Shue, a professor of politics and
International relations at Oxford who has published an influential
academic article on torture, points out that the French experience
in Algeria is illustrative. Though justified as a rare measure
to prevent imminent assaults on civilians, says Shue, torture
quickly spread through the French security apparatus "like
a cancer." "The problem is that torture is a shortcut,
and everybody loves a shortcut ' Shue says. "I think it's
a fantasy to believe that the United States is that much better
than anybody else in this respect."
The Algerian experience recurred in Israel,
where, until the Israeli Supreme Court formally banned the practice
in 1999, preventing "ticking bombs" from carrying out
suicide attacks served as the justification for hooding, beating
and abusing hundreds of Palestinians. "Very quickly, from
a rare exception torture in Israel became standard practice in
part because the ticking bomb metaphor is infinitely expandable
' says Human R~ Watch's Roth. "Why stop with the bomber?
Why not torture the person who could introduce you to the cousin
who knows someone who planted the bomb? Why not torture the wife
and kids? Friends? All of this becomes justified."
And once torture becomes common practice,
it severely undermines a society's democratic norms. As Shibley
Telhami, a professor at the University of Maryland and an expert
on the Middle East, writes in his new book, The Stakes, "We
cannot defend what we stand for by subverting our own values in
the process." In the current climate, conservatives may dismiss
such talk as soft-minded idealism. In fact, nobody has more adamantly
insisted that the war on terrorism is, at root, a conflict about
values than George W. Bush. In his recent State of the Union address,
the President catalogued the torture methods administered to prisoners
in Iraq. "Electric shock, burning with hot irons, dripping
acid on the skin, mutilation with electric drills ' Bush said.
"If this is not evil, then evil has no meaning."
For the same government that denounces
such practices to soften the rules when its own interests are
at stake sends a disturbing message: that American moralizing
is meaningless. That the United States is willing to dehumanize
its enemies in much the way that it complains Islamic terrorists
dehumanize theirs.
The parallel between terrorism and torture
is instructive. Proponents of each practice maintain that the
ends justify the means. They explain away violence by framing
it as a necessary "last resort." And they obscure the
human impact of that violence by refusing to register the humanity
of their victims.
For torture is-and has always been-a function
not of brute sadism but of the willingness to view one's enemies
as something less than human. As Edward Peters, a professor of
history at the University of Pennsylvania, has shown in his authoritative
history of the subject, in ancient Greece only slaves and foreigners
were subjected to basanos (torture). During the late eighteenth
and early nineteenth centuries, as the Enlightenment swept across
Europe, one nation after another abolished the practice, to the
point where, by 1874, Victor Hugo could proclaim that "torture
has ceased to exist." Yet torture was reinstated during the
decades that followed-just as the European powers established
colonial empires. It became acceptable to treat "natives"
in ways that were unacceptable for "the civilized."
In more recent decades, when torture has been employed-South Africa,
Cambodia, Tibet-it has often been meted out to members of groups
so demonized that their individual identities were erased. In
this context, it is chilling that the names and identities of
the captives in the war on terrorism are as unknown to us as the
methods being used against them.
"For the torturers, the sheer and
simple fact of human agony is made invisible, and the moral fact
of inflicting that agony is made neutral ' writes Elaine Scarry
in her powerful book The Body in Pain. But those facts are neither
invisible nor neutral to the victims. "Whoever has succumbed
to torture can no longer feel at home in the world," the
Holocaust survivor (and torture victim) Jean Amery observed in
his searing memoir At the Mind s Limits. "It is fear that
henceforth reigns.... Fear-and also what is called resentments.
They remain, and have scarcely a chance to concentrate into a
seething, purifying thirst for revenge." In a recent article
in the London Guardian, Hafiz Abu Sateda, head of the Egyptian
Organization for Human Rights, described how the experience of
being tortured by Egyptian authorities has played a role in radicalizing
members of Islamist groups such as the Muslim Brotherhood.
"Torture demonstrates that the regime
deserves destroying because it does not respect the dignity of
the people ' Sateda explains. "[The Muslim Brotherhood] began
to argue that society should be destroyed and rebuilt again on
the basis of an Islamic state." Among those who have been
transformed from relative moderates into hard-line fanatics through
such a process, the Guardian noted, is Dr. Ayman al Zawahiri,
a surgeon who, after being tortured in Egypt, fled to Afghanistan
to join the mujahedeen and eventually became Osama bin Laden's
deputy. It's possible that Zawahiri would have followed this path
independently, of course. But no regime has ever quelled the hatred
of its enemies by engaging in torture. The abuses instead fuel
this hatred and indelibly transform not only the victims but the
torturers themselves. "The screaming I heard on Saturday
morning...those were screams which until today, when I sleep at
night, I hear them inside my ears all the time ' an Israeli soldier
who stood guard over tortured prisoners said in an oral history
published in 1990. "It doesn't leave me, I can't get rid
of it."
To insist that the ban on torture should
be absolute ought not to lead one to deny that this position comes
with certain costs. It is probable that Israeli security forces
have prevented some suicide bombings over the years by subjecting
Palestinians to beatings and shakings, just as the French crushed
the National Liberation Front during the Battle of Algiers partly
by torturing (and killing) many of its members. In democratic
societies, however, it is understood that, as the Israeli Supreme
Court noted in its 1999 decision banning torture, "not all
means are acceptable." Torture, in this sense, is hardly
unique: Most rights-free speech, privacy, freedom of assembly-entail
potential costs by limiting what governments can do to insure
order. Holding the line on torture should thus be viewed in the
context of a broad debate about where to draw the line between
liberty and security, and whether, in the aftermath of September
11, America is willing to stand by its professed values.
Those who advocate crossing the line frequently
invoke the famous warning from Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson
that, however much we value our liberties, the Bill of Rights
should not become "a suicide pact." But as real as the
danger of Al Qaeda may be, few would argue that it constitutes
an existential threat to the nation. As the world's wealthiest
and most powerful country, the United States has enormous resources
at its disposal and countless tools with which to wage its war
on terror. In this respect, it's worth asking why brutal CIA interrogation
methods could be considered necessary for our security-while adequately
funding homeland security is not.
As a tool for collecting information,
moreover, torture is notoriously ineffective (since people in
pain have the unfortunate habit of lying to make it stop) and
has done little to solve long-term security threats. Witness modern
Israel-or for that matter France in Algeria.
A deeper problem is that, all too often,
even the absolutist position goes unenforced. No government on
earth admits to I practicing torture, yet each year Amnesty International
documents countless states that do. The disparity stems from the
fact that torture nearly always takes place in private settings,
and in societies loath to discuss the subject openly. In a forthcoming
article, Sanford Levinson, a professor at the University of Texas
Law School and a noted legal realist, argues that this gap between
rhetoric and reality may bolster Dershowitz's proposal that torture
should be brought out into the open and regulated.
As William Schulz has argued persuasively
in these pages [see "The Torturer's Apprentice ' May 13,
2002], there are many reasons why, far from limiting torture,
such a policy would end up making the practice more ubiquitous
than ever. Any country in the world, Schulz points out, would
henceforth be able to issue similar warrants and torture at will,
free of criticism from the nation that pioneered the practice.
Levinson is right that it won't do simply
to pretend that torture is not being perpetrated, as CNBC news
anchor Brian Williams did the day after Mohammed's capture, saying
to his guest, "Now, the United States says it does not engage
in torture, and certainly for the purposes of this conversation
and beyond we will take the government at its word." What's
needed instead are scholars, reporters, politicians and citizens
who are willing both to hold democracies such as the United States
to their stated ideals, and to ask hard questions about what,
in a democratic society, should constitute permissible methods
of interrogation during wartime. If violence and the threat of
violence are out, should prolonged interrogations be permitted?
(The Supreme Court has ruled that any confession obtained after
thirty-six hours of questioning is by definition coerced.) Should
captives have access to lawyers? Should solitary confinement be
allowed? This entire area of the law, says David Cole, remains
nebulous, perhaps because it is an unpleasant topic to discuss.
Accompanying this discussion should be
an equally frank dialogue about the safeguards we need to insure
that rampant violations don't occur. For torture, like all governmental
abuses, thrives in the absence of openness and accountability.
In January the International Secretariat of the World Organisation
Against Torture (OMCT), a coalition of nongovernmental organizations
from more than sixty-five different countries, issued a press
release urging Washington to allow the United Nations Special
Rapporteur on Torture to visit the Bagram base in Afghanistan,
where the practices the Washington Post described are taking place.
The OMCT's recommendation was met with stony silence, not only
in Washington but by the US media.
The chilled atmosphere is reminiscent
of the cold war, when discussion of US support for regimes that
engaged in torture (Pinochet's Chile, Suharto's Indonesia) was
likewise swept beneath the rug of national security. A language
of euphemism and evasion emerged that became so ingrained as to
go unnoticed. On February 6, in a disturbing sign that the pattern
is being repeated, the New York Times published a front-page story
detailing the intelligence breakthrough that led US officials
to connect the recent murder of a diplomat to an Al Qaeda cell
in Baghdad. "Critical information about the network emerged
from interrogations of captured cell members conducted under unspecified
circurnstances of psychological pressure [emphasis added],"
the Times reported, a phrase you would expect to find in the training
manual of a South American police state, not the world's leading
newspaper. In the days following Mohammed's arrest, the US media
uncritically accepted the Bush Administration's vow not to violate
the UN Convention Against Torture, while casually mentioning (sometimes
in the same article) that America could persuade Mohammed to talk
by reminding him that it has access to his two young children.
(Any threat to physically harm a captive's children would constitute
torture.) London's Economist, by contrast, has questioned whether
the United States is "quietly sanctioning the use of some
forms of torture" and called on Bush to stop "handing
prisoners over to less scrupulous allies."
In early March, the same week that news
broke of the cause of the captives' deaths in Afghanistan, the
Post reported that some nineteen detainees have attempted suicide
at the US Navy Prison at Guantanamo Bay, which Michael Ratner,
president of the Center for Constitutional Rights, says "begs
the question of the long-term psychological effects of the techniques
that are being employed there." For Americans to accept their
government's assurances in light of these and other recent disclosures
is deeply disquieting. For, as historian Peters has noted, the
source of torture throughout history has always been the same:
not the depraved prison guard who relishes inflicting pain but
the society that agrees to tolerate, or even encourage, his actions.
"It is still civil society ' Peters writes, "that tortures
or authorizes torture or is indifferent to those wielding it on
civil society's behalf."
America's unique stature encumbers it
with a special responsibility in this regard. "For better
or worse, the United States sets precedents and examples ' Henry
Shue says, "We're very visible. If the most powerful country
in the world has to torture, how are we supposed to convince anyone
else that they shouldn't torture?" In Iran, a group of reformists
in Parliament recently submitted a bill calling on their country
to sign the UN Convention Against Torture. One can only hope that
Teheran's hard-line clerics haven't been reading the Washington
Post.
Eyal Press is a journalist based in New
York City. Research support I was provided by the Investigative
Fund of the Nation Institute.
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