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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: How Not to Fight Terrorism. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.
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How Not to Fight Terrorism by ubernoir at 11:13 am EDT, May 5, 2006 |
The CIA has reportedly water-boarded Khalid Sheik Mohammed -- a practice in which the suspect is made to fear that he is drowning in order to encourage him to talk. And Army logs report that interrogators threatened Qahtani with dogs, made him strip naked and wear women's underwear, put him on a leash and made him bark like a dog, injected him with intravenous fluids and barred him from the bathroom so that he urinated on himself. With these shortsighted and inhumane tactics, the administration essentially immunized the real culprits, so it was left seeking the execution of a man who was not involved in Sept. 11.
is this true? is this documented? if true there can be no justification for Gestapo tactics I note the word "reportedly" but if these allegations have foundation then the torturers and those who gave the orders need, our collective standards of human rights demand, that they do serious time in jail. You don't defeat Nazis by emulating the enemies of civilisation. Crusaders who descend into barbarianism lose: they lose first themselves then the war. |
How Not to Fight Terrorism by noteworthy at 9:23 am EDT, May 6, 2006 |
The Moussaoui case is emblematic of the administration's approach to fighting terrorism. It has repeatedly overreached and sought symbolic victories, adopting tactics that have undermined its ability to achieve real security while disregarding less flashy but more effective means of protecting us. Tough talk in news conferences, overheated charges that evaporate under scrutiny and executions for symbolic purposes will not make us safer. The administration needs to turn away from symbolism and toward substance if it is to have any hope of protecting us from the next attack.
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