Thursday, May 17, 2007

Why torture is helping us lose the war

Charles C. Krulak and Joseph P. Hoar, two former top military commanders, on the reasons why tolerance for torture is both wrong and counterproductive:

These assertions that "torture works" may reassure a fearful public, but it is a false security. We don't know what's been gained through this fear-driven program. But we do know the consequences.


As has happened with every other nation that has tried to engage in a little bit of torture -- only for the toughest cases, only when nothing else works -- the abuse spread like wildfire, and every captured prisoner became the key to defusing a potential ticking time bomb. Our soldiers in Iraq confront real "ticking time bomb" situations every day, in the form of improvised explosive devices, and any degree of
"flexibility" about torture at the top drops down the chain of command like a stone -- the rare exception fast becoming the rule.


To understand the impact this has had on the ground, look at the military's mental health assessment report released earlier this month. The study shows a disturbing level of tolerance for abuse of prisoners in some situations. This underscores what we know as military professionals: Complex situational ethics cannot be applied during the stress of combat. The rules must be firm and absolute; if torture is broached as a possibility, it will become a reality.


This has had disastrous consequences. Revelations of abuse feed what the Army's new counterinsurgency manual, which was drafted under the command of Gen. David Petraeus, calls the "recuperative power" of the terrorist enemy. Former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld once wondered aloud whether we were creating more terrorists than we were killing. In counterinsurgency doctrine, that is precisely the right question. Victory in this kind of war comes when the enemy loses legitimacy in the society from which it seeks recruits and thus loses its "recuperative
power."

The torture methods that Tenet defends have nurtured the recuperative power of the enemy. This war will be won or lost not on the battlefield but in the minds of potential supporters who have not yet thrown in their lot with the enemy. If we forfeit our values by signaling that they are negotiable in situations of grave or imminent danger, we drive those undecideds into the arms of the enemy. This way lies defeat, and we are well down the road to it.



This kind of reasoning is entirely lost on the Republican base, who applaud and cheer when their primary candidates avow an intention to torture and seem to believe that America can do no wrong so if we do it, it can't be wrong. And that's the more charitable interpretation: the other possibility is that they are simply bloodthirsty and brutal.

UPDATE: My friend RO reminds me of this article from the New Yorker about Jack Bauer and the tortured politics of 24.

2 comments:

Jamey Essex said...

Excellent work on this blog PAF. Would you mind if I linked it to mine so that my students can have a look at it while they're whiling away their time on the web?

Mark said...

Please feel free to invite any and all.
Thanks!