DBBrinson1 wrote:
Show me a video of where we behead an enemy-combatant or drag his carcass through the streets.. In my eyes we haven't lowered our standards to meet those of the enemy. We've used proven techniques to 'defeat' those of the enemy. I don't give a flying fuck about those who have done or wished harm on any of my countrymen.
You lowered your standards the minute you started torturing prisoners and using "evidence" obtained through torture against them. I'm not saying you went as low to slaughter innocents now am I?
As for the "proven" techniques, they have also been proven to be ineffectual by many, many studies.
DBBrinson1 wrote:
I don't give a flying fuck about those who have done or wished harm on any of my countrymen.
Maybe you should.
Kmarion wrote:
So you say one is not torture because it was required by their Military commanders? I see where you are going but it isn't like these guys were given many options. The fact of the matter is that this was done with the deliberate intent of breaking a persons will. The same exact reason they do it everyone else. ..the logic, procedure, and goal is not torture for the enlisted man? It may be true that you are less sympathetic to one, ala they were asking for it. However torture is a procedure, not a choice.
No, I am not saying it is not torture because it was required by their commanders. I am saying it stops being torture the minute the soldiers wants it to end. The same can't be said for those held as enemy combatants.
Of course the logic, procedure and goal of the torture is different between the two. As I said, the goal against the enemy was to break them. The goal against your own soldiers was to reach that breaking point but not cross it. Surely you understand this?
Kmarion wrote:
You have the same experience, feelings, and reactions no matter what it was that got you there.
No you don't. Your reaction might be "stop I've had enough". Guess how differently that scenario plays out for the solider compared to the prisoner. The feelings are different, knowing that this is training compared to not knowing how long the process might continue.
The soldiers had a choice. What choices did the alleged combatants have?
Kmarion wrote:
They can be prosecuted and silenced under the grounds of divulging national training secrets. Did you read the entire letter? Weren't some of the detainees released after trial? .. the same military tribunals you so graciously offered our tortured navy.
Those military tribunals were separate to the courts system afforded enlisted US personnel. They were even created, dismantled by Congress and then re-introduced specifically for the alleged combatants. From your own source:
The ruling means the Bush administration will have to adopt a military commission system for trying accused terrorists that meets international standards.
The court's ruling also establishes that federal courts have jurisdiction to hear appeals involving "enemy combatants" held overseas in U.S. military custody.