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Saturday, November 12, 2005

Nothing To Fear From Silence

The Wall Street Journal:

If Osama bin Laden is alive and looking for signs of flagging U.S. will to fight the war on terror, he need look no further than our national debate about interrogating his compatriots and others who would do us harm.

Post-9/11, after all, it is hardly far-fetched to imagine a scenario in which our ability to extract information from a terrorist is the only thing that might prevent a bioterror attack or even the nuclear annihilation of an American city. And we know for a fact that information wrung from 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and others has helped prevent further attacks on U.S. soil.

Yet according to many Bush Administration critics, the aggressive and stressful questioning techniques used successfully against the likes of KSM put the U.S. on a slippery slope to widespread "torture" and the prisoner abuses at Abu Ghraib. John McCain (R., Arizona) has pushed an amendment through the Senate that would effectively bar all stressful interrogation techniques. The danger for American security is that this would telegraph to every terrorist in the world that he has absolutely nothing to fear from silence should he fall into U.S. hands.


Exactly what I've been saying.

Read the whole thing.

Comments

Avatar for 2Hotel9

Sorry, guys. I am in a totally different camp. Kill them all. No more prisoners, period! F**K whatever intel they may have. The effect of it being general knowledge that they will be killed without mercy or trial will do far more to deter new recruits than anything else. A fast trip to hell, with all the accourtrements stated in the Quran is the only mecy we, as human beings, owe these inhuman pieces of shit.

2Hotel9 on November 12, 2005 at 01:11 pm
Avatar for Say Anything - North Dakota’s Most Popular P

[...] As I’ve pointed out before, McCain’s anti-torture legislation would hamstring our country’s ability to collect intelligence from prisoners of war. The regulations he suggests would subject our troops to such a broad definition of “torture” that one wonders if they’d be able to ask a suspected terrorists many questions at all without the fear of coming into the cross hairs of partisan Senators with axes to grind. [...]

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