The events of 11 September 2001 were
traumatic enough. But they also unleashed
fundamental changes in the collective
psyche of the United States that may yet
prove far more traumatic than the original
crimes themselves - more deaths, more
suffering and greater harm to law and
logic. The new attitude towards torture
is an example.
International human rights law prohibits
torture and other forms of cruel, inhuman
or degrading treatment or punishment.
There are no clear boundaries between
what is acceptable and what is prohibited.
Some kinds of treatment are so extreme
as to be obviously and universally unacceptable.
Other actions might be acceptable in some
contexts but not in others. For example,
interrogation of an adult can be more
rigorous than interrogation of a child.
It is necessary to look at the impact
of the actions on the individual.
Torture has been regarded as one of the
most serious human rights violations.
The right not to be tortured is one of
a small number of human rights that can
never be qualified or restricted in any
way. While many rights, such as freedom
of speech and freedom of assembly, can
be qualified in times of national emergency,
the right not to be tortured cannot. While
other rights, such as the right to education
and the right to work, are subject to
the economic resources of a nation, the
right not to be tortured is not. Torture
is never acceptable.
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Yet since the terrorist attacks in the
United States in 2001 there have been
arguments that torture, or at least some
forms of torture, should be acceptable.
There is strong evidence that it is being
practised either by US personnel or on
their behalf. A number of past and present
CIA agents have said that US personnel
torture suspects and possible informants.
US officials have admitted that al Qa'ida
suspects are handed over to the intelligence
services of countries known to torture
along with a list of questions to which
the Americans want answers. It takes little
imagination to see what this means.
Some government officials and intelligence
agents argue that torture is necessary
to prevent terrorist attacks and for that
reason it is justified. They say that,
if a person has information about an impending
terrorist attack, there's nothing wrong
with a little torture to get him or her
to disclose it. Even a noted human rights
academic has contributed to the cause.
He argues that torture occurs whether
we like it or not and so we should be
seeking to regulate the use of torture
and to ensure the accountability of those
who authorise it rather than seeking to
eliminate it. He has proposed that the
US President be given legal authority
to authorise the use of "low level
torture".
Have they got a point? No.
Torture is outlawed for two reasons.
First and most importantly, it is wrong
in principle. It denies the human dignity
of the victim and it demeans the perpetrator
and thereby it diminishes us all. All
human beings are entitled to the respect
due to us by virtue of our common humanity.
We are equal in dignity and rights and
are entitled to have those rights respected
and protected. It is as simple as that.
"Low level torture in limited circumstances
with high level authority" might
sound innocuous enough to some people
but it starts us on the slippery slope
of tolerating and then approving human
rights violations. Our legal and political
systems and our moral standards become
no better than those of the terrorists
we abhor. We have the moral high ground
in opposing terrorism. We cannot afford
to lose it.
Second, and far less importantly, torture
is also wrong as a practical issue. Most
people involved in criminal justice -
judges, police, prosecutors and defence
lawyers - know that information obtained
under duress is inherently unreliable.
A person will say anything under torture
with no regard for its truthfulness or
accuracy. I know I would. More orthodox
interrogation techniques, including persuasion,
moral pressure and rigorous questioning,
are far more likely to produce useful
information than crude violence. If we
are truly interested in obtaining good
information to prevent terrorism, then
we won't torture.
The war against terrorism is now been
complemented by the war against Iraq.
As the bombs fall, the missiles strike
and the armies invade, our capacity to
monitor what is happening on the ground
becomes very limited. All the more reason
then for rules that are clear, that are
known to those charged with making war
and that are strictly enforced by the
military chain of command. The moral and
legal equivocation by US officials about
torture makes life hard for its own soldiers.
They are the ones who could be held accountable
for their actions before national and
international criminal courts.
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So let's make it crystal clear now. Torture
is illegal anywhere, any time, under any
circumstances.
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