Matt Welch | October 4, 2004
Four American soldiers, three from Military Intelligence, were charged with murder today in the asphyxiation death of an Iraqi General that prosecutors say occurred during an interrogation session. Interesting passage from the Colorado Springs Gazette account:
One source close to the case said the public might not get more detailed information because much of it is highly classified.
The regiment's commander in Iraq, Col. David Teeples made a single statement about the case before he was reassigned to the Pentagon in June.
"There is no evidence, there is no proof," Teeples said.
Both warrant officers are from a unit responsible for intercepting radio signals and other electronic intelligence duties. Neither is trained as an interrogator.
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Just terrible.
So, legally, if the coercive techniques these guys used were legal,
as long as they don't result in death...
And if the troops didn't mean to kill the guy...
Than they had neither the intent to murder, nor did someone get
killed during the commission of a felony.
This might not meet the legal standard for murder.
Now, perhaps they demonstrated a depraved indifference to human
life, but if they can point to statements endorsing this kind of
torture by their superiors, they could argue that they didn't think
their actions could result in death.
I'm sure Shannon Love will explain to us that this was no big deal and we obviously don't understand the intelligence business.
What are ya complainin' about? He wuz nuthin' but a filthy,
moose-lim terrorist in league that the Al Kay-da and the Sa-Damn
and that Bin Lay-din! These proud 'Meri-can Sooooooilders deserve
the Corn-gressional Medal of Honor for showin' em the 'Meri-can Way
with a boot in thar ass!
REMEMBER 9-11! U-S-A! U-S-A! U-S-A!!!
(I'm Toby Keith, and I ape-prove this message.)
What makes this episode so supersecret that they cannot tell us
what happened in the room?
This is one of those things that just makes me feel like the US has
taken a disastrous wrong turn that's going to take us to a very bad
place.
"Both warrant officers are from a unit responsible for
intercepting radio signals and other electronic intelligence
duties. Neither is trained as an interrogator."
How deep do students of interrogation get into the textbook before
they hit the chapter about how asphyxiating someone is
disgracefully wrong.
Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain. Pay No Attention
To The Man Behind The Curtain. PAY NO ATTENTION TO THE MAN BEHIND
THE CURTAIN.
And 2 plus 2 = 5 you traitors.
Ken-
Not to mention the chapter that says "Once you kill a prisoner you
can't get any more information from him." I realize that many of
the people on this forum don't care that the Iraqi prisoner was
killed, but what about the value of his information?
does anybody think that the pre 9-11 situation in iraq was
maintainable?
is it fair to say, that, absent a MAD doctrine, that iraq would
have to have been "done" in some way or another, sooner or
later?
abstracting from 9-11, did anybody out there support some sort of
aggressive campaign against SH to remove him?
speaking for the hawks here, did anybody against the war think that
the 9/11 "success" against us would have spurred others on against
us? (think: iran post vietnam)...
i am against this war, barring any connection between 9/11 or
ready-to-use WMDs. but that does not mean that i was against being
tough or getting tough with iraq pre 9/11. i wish the prez who
probably cheated with the "lou holz lookalike kevin c" in my
accounting class in the first year of our mba program had finished
the job in afghanistan before embarking on iraq, which, according
to what i've seen, and seeing it through a
critical-bush-critical-clinton filter-not-pro-not-against-israel
filter, doesn't see a threat that merits war (yet), that the
current waste of resourses might allow al quaida to escape? but
those questions are still active.
and i do think that tough action should have been taken against
iraq at some point before we did, and that the timing this time
'round was wrong. and i thought we should have used our perfect
argument (since it must have been perfect, since we went to war) to
convince our "allies" of the need. plus: apparently we have a
"perfect" argument that bush is pro constitution and pro-bill of
rights, according to a dumb lady from naperville (IL) who was at
the dubyah ralley at the goose island brewery (at the same time a
LP event was being held).
anti patriot, pro abortion, anti gun "control", suspicious of death
penalties (since i dont' trust the post office as a government
entity), anti religion in politics, anti state as "helping others",
hating politcally correctness (having gone to an extreme school in
the late 80s) etc....
drf
Sounds like the general was given a rebirthing ceremony to help
him remember why he hates his mommy.
Just like the Nazi's, now we are trying the suspected concentration
camp guards.
The peace-nics and warmongers seem to have the same mantra:
We Bad, We Bad, We Bad...
So, legally, if the coercive techniques these guys used were
legal, as long as they don't result in death... And if the troops
didn't mean to kill the guy... Than they had neither the intent to
murder, nor did someone get killed during the commission of a
felony
Is it legal to punish children by withholding food from them? Yes,
obviously -- parents have been using the "send them to bed without
any supper" technique since who knows when. That doesn't mean that
it's legal for parents to accidentally kill their children by
refusing to let them eat for a month. Nor could the parents point
to some authority figure and say "he told us to starve them!" and
escape punishment.
Now, now. This was no worse than a fraternity initiation!
If only Shannon were here to help me explain why.
Ken Schultz writes:
How deep do students of interrogation get into the textbook
before they hit the chapter about how asphyxiating someone is
disgracefully wrong.
As Assistant Attorney General [1] Jay S Bybee so poignantly
remarked, "Physical pain amounting to torture must be equivalent in
intensity to the pain accompanying serious physical injury, such as
organ failure, impairment of bodily function, or even death." Now,
whether this accident can be called torture - as anti-war Liberals
no doubt would call it - depends entirely on whether the Iraqi
general passed out before he died. If he was unconscious when he
died, then he wasn't caused physical pain "equivalent in intensity"
to the "pain accompanying death", was he? Anwer me that, you
bleeding heart peaceniks.
[1] Dear Leader has since appointed the esteemed Mr Bybee to the US
Court of Appeals for the 9th circuit - perhaps in gratitude for Mr
Bybee's groundbreaking work in redefining torture for a post-9/11
world.
Dan
Withholding food for a months will obviously kill a child. I'm
saying, if these guys had received some kind of minimal training
and instruction in using this type of torture...
Christ, what am I saying? I'm saying, this episode doesn't make any
sense at all, unless there's somebody above the rank of Warrant
Officer sending down instructions to engage in this type of
interrogation, and not adequately keeping an eye on his
command.
I'm saying, this episode doesn't make any sense at all,
unless there's somebody above the rank of Warrant Officer sending
down instructions to engage in this type of interrogation, and not
adequately keeping an eye on his command.
That should read:
"This episode doesn't make any sense at all, unless
either there's somebody above the rank of Warrant
Officer sending down instructions to engage in this type of
interrogation, or the Warrant Officers' supervisor
was not adequately keeping an eye on his command."
Guards torture prisoners unless you keep an eye on them; that's
well documented.
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