The Death of Osama bin Laden
#81
Posted 04 May 2011 - 10:58 AM
#82
Posted 04 May 2011 - 11:00 AM
mrmando, on 04 May 2011 - 10:58 AM, said:
Edited by Ryan H., 04 May 2011 - 11:00 AM.
#83
Posted 04 May 2011 - 11:07 AM
Ryan H., on 04 May 2011 - 11:00 AM, said:
mrmando, on 04 May 2011 - 10:58 AM, said:
As an aside, whether waterboarding actually yielded actionable intel in this case is apparently unclear.
Quote
#84
Posted 04 May 2011 - 12:06 PM
Andy Whitman, on 04 May 2011 - 10:42 AM, said:
mrmando, on 04 May 2011 - 10:52 AM, said:
#86
Posted 04 May 2011 - 12:11 PM
SDG, on 04 May 2011 - 11:07 AM, said:
Quote
If information leading to bin Laden's discovery was indeed provided due to waterboarding, this does not prove that the same information couldn't have been provided by different, less questionable interrogation techniques.
#87
Posted 04 May 2011 - 12:14 PM
Persiflage, on 04 May 2011 - 12:06 PM, said:
Edited by Andy Whitman, 04 May 2011 - 12:22 PM.
#88
Posted 04 May 2011 - 12:20 PM
: assassinate: to murder (a usually prominent person) by sudden or secret attack, often for political reasons
Ah, so Merriam-Webster incorporates the implicitly moral component ("murder") into its definition (rather than a more neutral word like "kill"). Interesting.
mrmando wrote:
: Well, "torture" was the word I thought we were discussing, although the spectrum of opinions does more or less mirror that associated with the killing/murder/capital punishment debate.
Quite so. But are there words for separate places on the "torture" spectrum, the way that we have "kill" and "murder" and so forth? And I mean something colloquial; obviously "enhanced interrogation technique" is just a bureaucratic euphemism, like the Obama administration's preference for "man-caused disaster" rather than "terrorism".
: But was it, morally/ethically, or even tactically, the right thing to do?
Hmmm. I'd say it was morally justified, but that isn't necessarily the same thing as saying it was "the right thing to do." Perhaps there's a spectrum of rightness, and some things are more right than others -- but it doesn't necessarily follow that anything short of absolute perfection is necessarily wrong.
#89
Posted 04 May 2011 - 12:29 PM
Peter T Chattaway, on 04 May 2011 - 12:20 PM, said:
Quote
Hmmm. I'd say it was morally justified, but that isn't necessarily the same thing as saying it was "the right thing to do." Perhaps there's a spectrum of rightness, and some things are more right than others -- but it doesn't necessarily follow that anything short of absolute perfection is necessarily wrong.
Edited by mrmando, 04 May 2011 - 12:33 PM.
#90
Posted 04 May 2011 - 12:29 PM
Peter T Chattaway, on 04 May 2011 - 12:20 PM, said:
Hmmm. I'd say it was morally justified, but that isn't necessarily the same thing as saying it was "the right thing to do." Perhaps there's a spectrum of rightness, and some things are more right than others -- but it doesn't necessarily follow that anything short of absolute perfection is necessarily wrong.
#91
Posted 04 May 2011 - 12:36 PM
Persiflage, on 03 May 2011 - 11:51 AM, said:
1) Although one can surely try to elide it out of existence with a chain of false equivalencies – "torture" -> "harsh interrogation" -> "interrogation" – torture remains, stubbornly, torture. I understand the point you're attempting to make, i.e. that we tortured not because we're sadists or because we want to terrorize, but in order to extract actionable intelligence. You apparently think that because we were dispassionate about it, rather than depraved, that made it alright. I couldn't disagree more, but I suspect we'll have to agree to disagree about that. Also, just how dispassionate we always were when we tortured is contested. Details are understandably hard to confirm, but it appears that more than a few detainees – possibly hundreds – died as a result of our "interrogations."
2) We actually did film at least one of the waterboarding sessions we conducted. Of course, this recording was never intended to "get out." The purpose for filming seems to have been so that if investigators missed or misunderstood anything that was said by the detainee during the session, there would be a way to review things later. It may also have been thought that the recording had value as a "training aid." Only later, after it dawned on some people who knew of its existence that the recording might well represent prosecutable evidence of a war crime, and only after express orders were given that the recording not be destroyed, was the recording destroyed.
3) I'm guessing that the phrase "putting them on video camera and sawing their heads off" is a reference to the Daniel Pearl video, or others like it. Al-Qaeda has certainly tortured many people, in worse ways than we have. But is it right for us to relativize our own use of torture in this way? Is it right to allow the most barbarous conduct imaginable to be any sort of moral barometer for our wartime conduct? It's understood that we may not always be able to live up to our ideals under the exigencies of war, but shouldn't we always strive to do so? If the harsh realities of war often inhibit our asking "What would Jesus do?" – are we not at least required to ask "What would Ike do?" I may be wrong, but I don't think Eisenhower would have ever condoned torture.
[I fear that last part may get me in trouble. It probably won't be fifteen minutes before someone replies (with embedded links) to the effect that Ike wasn't as noble in wartime as all that.]
Edited by tenpenny, 04 May 2011 - 01:12 PM.
#92
Posted 04 May 2011 - 12:49 PM
Nezpop, on 04 May 2011 - 09:18 AM, said:
Persiflage, on 03 May 2011 - 11:51 AM, said:
Thus, comparing our military action in Iraq for al-Qaeda recruitment purposes to the death of bin Laden for al-Qaeda recruitment purposes is a false comparison. The war in Iraq recruits al-Qaeda terrorists to fight against establishing a Western form of government in Iraq, while bin Laden's death (and American celebration) could easily recruit terrorists to simply hate and kill more Americans. This is a big difference, particularly as to completely different geographical fronts - one of which is our homes and families. Laying the financial problems of our country at the door of the war in Iraq is completely ignoring so many other factors that you might as well abolish learning anything at all about economics altogether. Osama bin Laden, for all he was guilty of, was not guilty for our government's financial incompetence.
This thread seemed directed at the question of whether bin Laden's death ought to be celebrated. Concluding that the answer is no, for Christian, moral, practical, diplomatic, public relations, and tactical reasons is not to conclude that we should not have killed bin Laden the way we did.
#93
Posted 04 May 2011 - 12:59 PM
Persiflage, on 04 May 2011 - 12:49 PM, said:
Edited by mrmando, 04 May 2011 - 01:02 PM.
#94
Posted 04 May 2011 - 02:00 PM
Andy Whitman, on 04 May 2011 - 12:14 PM, said:
tenpenny, on 04 May 2011 - 12:36 PM, said:
Quote
Quote
#95
Posted 04 May 2011 - 02:10 PM
#96
Posted 04 May 2011 - 03:01 PM
Overstreet, on 04 May 2011 - 02:10 PM, said:
Hmm. I watched that, and didn't chuckle in the least. I usually find Ferrell's Bush funny, even when I disagree with his point. In this case, I couldn't figure out what his point was at all. The video seemed to be made on the proposition that Ferrell's Bush is just funny in and of himself, as a character, regardless of what he does or says. I clicked the "DIE" button on that one.
#97
Posted 04 May 2011 - 03:17 PM
Persiflage, on 04 May 2011 - 02:00 PM, said:
tenpenny, on 04 May 2011 - 12:36 PM, said:
Persiflage, on 04 May 2011 - 02:00 PM, said:
tenpenny, on 04 May 2011 - 12:36 PM, said:
I confess that your reasoning on this topic is baffling to me. You say waterboarding is torture, but then you act like it's no big deal, because we've always frowned upon it, so why the huge controversy? It's like the fraudulent post-9/11 legal reasoning used to justify torture never happened. News flash: Torture wasn't frowned upon during a sizable chunk of the years of Bush's presidency. Then Obama came into office and (so he says) he rescinded torture as national policy. Hadn't you heard? It was in all the papers.
Persiflage, on 04 May 2011 - 02:00 PM, said:
tenpenny, on 04 May 2011 - 12:36 PM, said:
#98
Posted 04 May 2011 - 04:45 PM
: It IS a very subtle and layered verse, when quoted in full, isn't it?
Perhaps. The implicit idea, though, that God will punish you in this life for your actions -- and that your enemy's future success will be Your Fault -- doesn't sit well with me. I could never quote verse 17 in good conscience without quoting verse 18, because I don't want to fall into that evangelical trap of moralistic proof-texting or pulling verses out of context. But I don't know that I could quote verse 18 in good conscience At All.
mrmando wrote:
: Hm. Well, there are military field manuals and protocols and such, outlining what U.S. personnel are and aren't officially allowed to do to prisoners ... these could go some way toward defining what is torture and what isn't, if you accept them as authoritative.
I might accept them as authoritative; I don't know that I'd accept them as colloquial.
Incidentally, with regard to the debate over whether waterboarding and the like contributed to bin Laden's execution, it's my understanding that the intel on this goes back to 2005, when one of the people who identified one of bin Laden's couriers was captured (or something like that). So even if Obama HAS suspended the practice, that doesn't mean Bush-era policies didn't contribute to the success of this mission somehow.
: I'd say there was a menu of acceptable outcomes, and the outcome we got is somewhere on that menu ... but not necessarily at the top.
Keeping in mind that the "moral/ethical" menu and the "tactical" menu might prioritize those outcomes differently.
#99
Posted 04 May 2011 - 04:55 PM
Edited by Rich Kennedy, 04 May 2011 - 04:56 PM.
#100
Posted 04 May 2011 - 04:56 PM
Peter T Chattaway, on 04 May 2011 - 04:45 PM, said:










