Thursday, January 24, 2013

Torture doesn't work, in spite of what movies say



For years it’s been common knowledge that the CIA practices torture but won’t admit to it. Officials in the George W. Bush administration, notably Vice President Dick Cheney and CIA director Michael Hayden, have defended the use of torture in investigation of terrorists.
Then, on Dec. 13, 2012, the Senate Intelligence Committee approved a report concluding that “harsh interrogation measures used by the CIA did not produce significant intelligence breakthroughs,” writes Greg Miller in the Washington Post (Dec. 14, 2012).
The Democrats on the committee adopted the 6,000-page document over the objections of the committee’s Republicans (big surprise), even though the CIA’s use of water boarding and other severe interrogation techniques were banned four years ago.
The report is significant, nevertheless, because it is independent and details the agency’s efforts to “break” dozens of detainees through physical and psychological duress.
Some question the relevance of the report because, writes Miller, “the agency abandoned its harshest interrogation methods years before President Obama was elected, and the Justice Department began backing away from memos it had issued that had served as the legal basis for the program.”
Still, the report is important because it confronts a popular perception, predominant in many movies and TV shows, that such torture does produce helpful information. The recent film Zero Dark Thirty is a case in point.


The film chronicles the decade-long hunt for Osama bin Laden after the September 2001 attacks and his death at the hands of the Navy S.E.A.L. Team 6 in May 2011. It shows torture in its graphic horror. Yet it also depicts CIA agents obtaining information from detainees who have been tortured, though the information comes when the detainees are being fed or treated kindly.
Steve Coll in the Feb. 7 issue of The New York Review of Books goes further and calls the film "disturbing" and "misleading." While acknowledging artistic license and the need to condense actual events, he says "the filmmakers cannot, on the one hand, claim authenticity as journalists while, on the other, citing art as an excuse for shoddy reporting about a subject as important as whether torture had a vital part in the search for bin Laden."
Evidence shows that useful information rarely comes from torture. Treating detainees kindly and building trust has been shown to be much more effective in obtaining accurate information. For example, read The Looming Tower: Al-Quaeda and the Road to 9/11 by Lawrence Wright (Knopf, 2006), which shows an FBI agent obtaining information after developing a relationship with a prisoner and gaining his trust.
While CIA activities are largely secret, there is evidence from FBI agents present at "black sites" where CIA conducted "enhanced interrogation," i.e., torture, that they found these techniques "counterproductive and morally wrong," writes Coll.
The film also depicts the use of secret prisons around the world where detainees were sent to be interrogated, i.e., tortured. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., chair of the committee, issued a written statement that called the decisions to use these secret prisons “terrible mistakes.”
While all but one of the Republicans on the committee opposed the report, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who was a prisoner of war in Vietnam, issued a statement saying the committee’s work shows that “cruel” treatment of prisoners “is not only wrong in principle and a stain on our country’s conscience but also an ineffective and unreliable means of gathering intelligence.”
No one knows when or if the report will be made public. For now, it has been turned over to the Obama administration and the CIA to provide a chance for them to comment, writes Miller.
Miller reports that “earlier this year, the Justice Department closed investigations into alleged abuses, eliminating the prospect that CIA operatives who had gone beyond the approved methods would face criminal charges.”
While any final report may not have much impact on government practice, it could help counter the public perception, based mostly on fictional treatments, that torture is effective.
The deeper truth is that, whether or not torture is effective, it's just plain wrong.

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