May 22, 2005
Torture - You're Either With Us Or Against Us
Don't you just love the use of the 'errant' Newsweek story as further evidence of a vast leftwing media bias and conspiracy?
Of course, such a premise makes it difficult to explain why and how Newsweek's
Michael Izikoff was the primary reporter in exposing the Bill
Clinton/Monica Lewinsky White House trysting. But don't let such facts
and reality get in the way now--it hasn't mattered before. Oh yes, I
get it, how foolish of me--Izikoff did his expose on Clinton so as to
provide him with 'cover' for his liberal bias. Okay, I get it. How
dense of me.
But do me a favor and read this excerpt anyway from a recent Molly Ivins Alternet column
and ask yourself a far broader, grander and sweeping question: do I
resist accepting that the United State government has authorized and
engaged in torture because:
1) well, others do (please try and remember what your mother told you when you were young)
2) George Bush, with Jesus in his heart, says we don't do such things
3) my world, such as it is flimsily constructed, will fall apart
4) my embrace of and conversion to moral relativism. despite my
affinity for ragging on Democrats as the ones guilty of such, allows me
to do so
5) moral values, schmoral values, I get a little tingle at the mention of torture
Here is the excerpt from the article:
Don't Blame Newsweek
Molly Ivins, AlterNet
May 17, 2005
As Riley used to say on an ancient television sitcom, "This is a
revoltin' development." There seems to be a bit of a campaign on the
right to blame Newsweek for the anti-American riots in Afghanistan,
Pakistan and other Islamic countries.
Uh, people, I hate to tell you this, but the story about Americans
abusing the Koran in order to enrage prisoners has been out there for
quite some time. The first mention I found of it is March 17, 2004,
when the Independent of London interviewed the first British citizen
released from Guantanamo Bay. The prisoner said he had been physically
beaten but did not consider that as bad as the psychological torture,
which he described extensively. Jamal al-Harith, a computer programmer
from Manchester, said 70 percent of the inmates had gone on a hunger
strike after a guard kicked a copy of the Koran. The strike was ended
by force-feeding.
Then came the report, widely covered in American media last December,
by the International Red Cross concerning torture at Gitmo. I wrote at
the time: "In the name of Jesus Christ Almighty, why are people
representing our government, paid by us, writing filth on the Korans of
helpless prisoners? Is this American? Is this Christian? What are our
moral values? Where are the clergymen on this? Speak up, speak out."
The reports kept coming: Dec. 30, 2004, "Released Moroccan Guantanamo
Detainee Tells Islamist Paper of His Ordeal," reported the Financial
Times. "They watched you each time you went to the toilet; the American
soldiers used to tear up copies of Koran and throw them in the toilet.
... " said the released prisoner.
On Jan. 9, 2005, Andrew Sullivan, writing in The Sunday Times of
London, said: "We now know a great deal about what has gone on in U.S.
detention facilities under the Bush administration. Several government
and Red Cross reports detail the way many detainees have been treated.
We know for certain that the United States has tortured five inmates to
death. We know that 23 others have died in U.S. custody under
suspicious circumstances. We know that torture has been practiced by
almost every branch of the U.S. military in sites all over the world --
from Abu Ghraib to Tikrit, Mosul, Basra, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay.
"We know that no incidents of abuse have been reported in regular
internment facilities and that hundreds have occurred in prisons geared
to getting intelligence. We know that thousands of men, women and
children were grabbed almost at random from their homes in Baghdad,
taken to Saddam's former torture palace and subjected to abuse, murder,
beatings, semi-crucifixions and rape.
"All of this is detailed in the official reports. What has been
perpetrated in secret prisons to 'ghost detainees' hidden from Red
Cross inspection, we do not know. We may never know.
"This is America? While White House lawyers were arguing about what
separates torture from legitimate 'coercive interrogation techniques,'
the following was taking place: Prisoners were hanged for hours or days
from bars or doors in semi-crucifixions; they were repeatedly beaten
unconscious, woken and then beaten again for days on end; they were
sodomized; they were urinated on, kicked in the head, had their ribs
broken, and were subjected to electric shocks.
"Some Muslims had pork or alcohol forced down their throats; they had
tape placed over their mouths for reciting the Koran; many Muslims were
forced to be naked in front of each other, members of the opposite sex
and sometimes their own families. It was routine for the abuses to be
photographed in order to threaten the showing of the humiliating
footage to family members."
The New York Times reported on May 1 on the same investigation Newsweek
was writing about and interviewed a released Kuwaiti, who spoke of
three major hunger strikes, one of them touched off by "guards'
handling copies of the Koran, which had been tossed into a pile and
stomped on. A senior officer delivered an apology over the camp's
loudspeaker system, pledging that such abuses would stop. Interpreters,
standing outside each prison block, translated the officer's apology. A
former interrogator at Guantanamo, in an interview with the Times,
confirmed the accounts of the hunger strikes, including the public
expression of regret over the treatment of the Korans..."
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