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Old 05-27-2011, 11:05 AM   #1
Undertoad
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If you're really against torture...

...you're angry at the Obama administration and Clinton's State Department for re-engaging with Syria in 2009, creating a closer relationship between the US and these people:

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That allowed me -- despite orders to keep my head down so that my interrogators should remain out of view -- to see a hooded man screaming in pain in front of me.

When they told him to take down his pants, I could see his swollen genitals, tied tight with a plastic cable.

"I have nothing to tell, but I am neither a traitor and activist. I am just a trader," said the man, who said he was from Idlib province in the north west of Syria.

To my horror, a masked man took a pair of wires from a household power socket and gave him electric shocks to the head.
At this point the State Department has figured it out, but when you read this, you realize they seem totally certain they will change Syria by isolating it. Two years ago they were totally certain they could change Syria by engaging with it. Ah, well. you make mistakes, you learn.

Quote:
The United States is upping pressure on Lebanon to reduce its ties to neighboring Syria in an effort to further isolate President Bashar Assad as his security forces violently suppress a pro-democracy movement, according to diplomats and officials.

Visiting Beirut last week, the State Department's Middle East envoy, Jeffrey D. Feltman, bluntly warned Lebanese officials that the tide had turned against the autocratic four-decade-old Damascus regime and urged them to distance themselves from a nation that has long been a major player in Lebanese political life, a Western diplomat and Lebanese officials said.

"There is no return back to the bad old days. Syria is going to change," a source with knowledge of the talks said, characterizing the U.S. message to Lebanon.

Also seeking to influence the cast of a new government in Beirut, Feltman warned that Lebanese leaders "risk being as isolated as Syria," which he characterized as "potentially the North Korea of the Middle East," said the source, who requested anonymity because of the private nature of the talks.
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Old 05-28-2011, 06:46 AM   #2
sexobon
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There's a new enhanced interrogation technique in which detainees are required to lie perfectly still, face down, stiff as a board, with their arms against their sides while balancing themselves on top of some object until they fall off and hurt themselves. The origin of the technique is uncertain; however, it appears that if detainees are photographed during the procedure and the pictures posted to a certain Facebook account, those events can be classified as recreation by the international community.
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Old 05-28-2011, 09:06 AM   #3
infinite monkey
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No, that's torture for those who have to encounter an endless barrage of these photographs and are told its some kind of self-expressive art. You know, like tattoos.
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Old 05-28-2011, 09:11 AM   #4
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No, that's torture for those who have to encounter an endless barrage of these photographs and are told its some kind of self-expressive art. You know, like tattoos.
this

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Old 05-28-2011, 10:47 AM   #5
Fair&Balanced
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Undertoad View Post
...you're angry at the Obama administration and Clinton's State Department for re-engaging with Syria in 2009, creating a closer relationship between the US and these people:



At this point the State Department has figured it out, but when you read this, you realize they seem totally certain they will change Syria by isolating it. Two years ago they were totally certain they could change Syria by engaging with it. Ah, well. you make mistakes, you learn.
I am disappointed and angry (but not surprised) by some of Obama's national security policies.

I certainly approve of his first actions in office of ending the policy of enhanced interrogation and rendition to countries that torture.

But I'm not angry for reengaging with Syria, while at the same time, keeping it on the terrorist supporter list and extending Bush sanctions.

And not for the engagement with NATO in Libya, which I still believe will be successful in driving Ghaddafi out of the country at little $ cost to the US and no US military losses.

We have little influence with Syria, but it was worth a shot. I dont see a good outcome there regardless of the US strategy.

Last edited by Fair&Balanced; 05-28-2011 at 10:57 AM. Reason: clarification
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Old 05-28-2011, 12:50 PM   #6
tw
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Originally Posted by Undertoad View Post
...you're angry at the Obama administration and Clinton's State Department for re-engaging with ...
Serbia? As a result, Milosevic literally negotiated himself out of a job. No military invasion necessary. Engagement is always the best solution. But only when done properly.

George Jr said enemies must earn the right to be engaged. How many thousands of American soldiers were wasted uselessly for the greater glory of that political agenda? How many Americans lost jobs in a recession created by a greater glory?

The best way to defeat an enemy is engagement. 'Baby Doc' Duvalier? Idi Bitty Amin? Carter almost disarmed the Korea conflict using engagement.
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Old 05-28-2011, 02:53 PM   #7
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The UN needs to impose sanctions on Syria. Only then will sanctions have a chance of being effective. Unfortunately, it is usually the people of a country who suffer rather than their leaders when sanctions are imposed.
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Old 05-29-2011, 02:39 PM   #8
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Originally Posted by sexobon View Post
There's a new enhanced interrogation technique in which detainees are required to lie perfectly still, face down, stiff as a board, with their arms against their sides while balancing themselves on top of some object until they fall off and hurt themselves. The origin of the technique is uncertain; however, it appears that if detainees are photographed during the procedure and the pictures posted to a certain Facebook account, those events can be classified as recreation by the international community.
Water-planking?
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Old 05-29-2011, 11:48 PM   #9
Uday
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The UN needs to impose sanctions on Syria. Only then will sanctions have a chance of being effective. Unfortunately, it is usually the people of a country who suffer rather than their leaders when sanctions are imposed.
Then they would have to place sanctions on most nations on Earth, including the United States.

And in regard to the original post, President Obama is just as barbaric as President Bush was. Torture is barbaric, whether you do it yourself, or have vassal states do it ("Extraordinary Rendition").

There is no acceptable excuse or justification for torture.
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Old 05-30-2011, 11:30 AM   #10
Undertoad
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Then they would have to place sanctions on most nations on Earth, including the United States.
The US is morally identical to Syria and all torture is morally identical, whether the victim is the planner of 9/11 or, you know, some kid off the street. Whether the information sought is to prevent catastrophic attack, or just having fun in a dungeon in Damascus, it's really all the same.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/...REH_story.html

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The boy’s head was swollen, purple and disfigured. His body was a mess of welts, cigarette burns and wounds from bullets fired to injure, not kill. His kneecaps had been smashed, his neck broken, his jaw shattered and his penis cut off.

What finally killed him was not clear, but it appeared painfully, shockingly clear that he had suffered terribly during the month he spent in Syrian custody.

Hamza Ali al-Khateeb was 13 years old.
In fact the young al-Khateeb, nearing the end of his life, would not want to trade places with anyone in Guantanamo or even with KSM being waterboarded in a CIA hideout in Algeria. Because all torture is identically, morally barbaric. It's all the same.

Which is why nothing will be done. We must look the other way; we must turn inwards; we are just as bad. Our shame will fill the history books. We must immediately repent on behalf of young Hamza. If we can admit responsibility we can begin changing ourselves, and then Syria will have no other path except to change as well. Once they see the beauty of the West's non-torturing approach they will certainly and wholly change.

I see it now, and I will pray for repentance at nightfall if the local cops don't cut my dick off first.
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Old 05-30-2011, 11:38 AM   #11
Uday
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Originally Posted by Undertoad View Post
The US is morally identical to Syria and all torture is morally identical, whether the victim is the planner of 9/11 or, you know, some kid off the street. Whether the information sought is to prevent catastrophic attack, or just having fun in a dungeon in Damascus, it's really all the same.
This is true. There is precisely zero difference.
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Old 05-30-2011, 11:45 AM   #12
Uday
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If we can admit responsibility we can begin changing ourselves, and then Syria will have no other path except to change as well. Once they see the beauty of the West's non-torturing approach they will certainly and wholly change.
You wish to make Syria your role model or barometer for what is acceptable? "If we beat them a little less than Syria does, we are okay"?

Also, America uses Syria to torture people, via "Extraordinary Rendition", so I am having trouble understanding your comparison.
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Old 05-30-2011, 11:50 AM   #13
Undertoad
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You wish to make Syria your role model or barometer for what is acceptable?
You are confused. If we used a barometer to measure the scales in the US and Syria, it would have an identical reading. Sending them to Syria or to Guantanamo is exactly the same.
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Old 05-30-2011, 12:27 PM   #14
Uday
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You are confused. If we used a barometer to measure the scales in the US and Syria, it would have an identical reading. Sending them to Syria or to Guantanamo is exactly the same.
This is correct. I was simply questioning your justification.
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Old 05-30-2011, 02:41 PM   #15
Undertoad
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I would answer you except that my left nut has just been crushed in a vise and it's too painful to think.
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