Bloggingheads gender update

I just checked the main page of their website. They now have one woman among the 20 contributors featured on the page.
Not good enough at all, guys.
Especially when, down on the right sidebar we have this little bit of icky laddishness:

    What do you call two naked women painted to look like cows? On BhTV, we call it “playful.”

Ohmigod. So it is indeed true. For women to get any attention at this site we need to take off our clothes and have our bodies laughed at?
Actually, I find the “cow” imagery there really disturbing, as well as the nakedness.
And this is “cutting edge”? And this is the “New America” that Robert Wright’s sponsors at the New America Foundation are trying to build?
Pathetic.

Obama’s plan for Iraq: Strengths & Weaknesses

Today, Barack Obama used the NYT op-ed pages to lay out his current thinking on Iraq. What he writes provides a clear and welcome alternative to what John McCain proposes for Iraq. However, Obama still envisages the retention in Iraq of a continuing US military presence of some size– an idea that we (and he) should all understand quite clearly is not acceptable to the Iraqis.
The good part of what he wrote:

    on my first day in office, I would give the military a new mission: ending this war.

It’s excellent that he said “ending” and not “winning.” However, I think that what he proposes would not result in ending the war.
Also, those of us who are independent citizens can make this demand for war termination of our current president, right now. Indeed, Obama would have a lot more credibility if he did this, too– especially given his continuing responsibilities as a U.S. Senator. He writes that his plan would see the removal of US “combat brigades” within 16 months. But if the clock for that withdrawal, or any other withdrawal plan, does not start start ticking till late January 2009 rather than today, then we will have lost six months’ worth of additional war losses and casualties.
Bring them home now!
Actually, Bush administration officials have already been clearly signaling that they may well be withdrawing more combat brigades than previously planned, in the months between now and January. Obama should make clear that he supports this effort at redeployment/de-escalation, and that he welcomes the fact that it will allow total withdrawal to be completed even sooner than his plan envisages.
But that’s a relatively minor quibble compared with the fact that, even after the withdrawal of “combat brigades” that he calls for, Obama still plans to keep a very significant combat presence in Iraq for a further, undefined period of time.
Here’s how he defines the mission of this continuing force:

    a residual force in Iraq would perform limited missions: going after any remnants of Al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, protecting American service members and, so long as the Iraqis make political progress, training Iraqi security forces.

Let’s look at these missions in order:

    1. Going after Al-Qaeda remnants: Juan Cole helpfully points out that no-one calls themselves “Al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia” any more. There are remnants of Sunni-salafi militancy inside Iraq, true, going under other names. But they’ve been considerably whittled down by now– primarily through political and monetary interventions, and not through the application of US military force. Where US “terrorist-hunters” have applied massive military force against suspected targets– in Iraq or in Afghanistan– the result has nearly always been disastrous and highly counter-productive.
    Also, what is the legal-juridical basis for the US to take on this role in Iraq? It could only do so through an agreement freely signed by a legitimate Iraqi government. No Iraqi government is about to give this role to the Americans.
    As Juan writes, “The way to get out of Iraq is to get out of Iraq.” Too right! This is also exactly what I’ve been arguing consistently here for the past five years, including on the occasions when I produced clear plans as to how that could be achieved in an orderly (i.e. “responsible”) way. In fall of 2006, I note, Juan Cole was still arguing that there could indeed be a continuing US force in Iraq with some limited missions. I am glad that he’s gained some better sense of things since then.
    2. Protecting American service members: This one is truly hilarious! US service members need to serve in Iraq to– protect US service members! Yeah, but then the ones who’re doing the protecting there will also need to be protected; and those additional protectors will also need protection; and… Hey, let’s just fill the whole country up with US service members all protecting each other! (Irony alert, folks.)
    No, this is a trivial and silly thing for Obama to mention. Of course, if any military unit of any country is deployed anywhere in the world, it needs to be attentive to its own self-protection. But to describe force protection on its own as a separate mission is ridiculous!
    The only slightly valid consideration here is the need to make sure that, as the US troop withdrawal occurs, it does so under circumstances in which the retreating units are not under fire. This calls for numerous force protection measures; but the vast majority of them are political. That is, to reach political agreements with all the relevant parties– and yes, that would include Iran and the other neighbors of Iraq– to ensure that that is the case.
    I do wonder where this little rubric of deploying forces with the mission only of protecting other forces came from? I recall that in an earlier version of Obama’s plan, or perhaps one like it, there was mention of leaving a residual force with the mission of protecting the Green Zone. So it is good to see that that is now off the table. Indeed, the whole of what we might call “the Green Zone model of imperial governance” seems to have become largely OBE-ed by now, since the US governors in Iraq no longer have a compliant Iraqi government to deal with– and much of the Iraqi government’s most significant business, including its hosting of Pres. Ahmadinejad, has been taking place quite pointedly outside the US Green Zone.
    3. “So long as the Iraqis make political progress, training Iraqi security forces: This one is almost equally hilarious. First question– what is the definition of this “progress”, and who gets to judge whether the Iraqi government forces have met this benchmark? Second question: If the Iraqi government forces are judged not to have met the benchmark, what then? The US trainers are simply withdrawn?
    This proposed “residual mission” for the US forces in Iraq is a silly and patronizing remnant of the Green Zone model of imperial governance. Yes, it is quite possible that the Iraqi security forces will need some continuing training. (Though some of them have already gotten quite a lot from Iran all along. The US has never had the monopoly on this.) If so, let the Iraqis themselves figure out what configuration of foreigners they want to invite in to provide it.
    If any.
    The most urgent security needs of Iraq’s people are for (1) an effective nationwide gendarmerie force that can assure public security in all regions; and (2) a way to ensure that none of their neighbors invade their country or come to exercise undue forms of non-military influence there. Both of these security needs require solid political underpinnings to be met. The first, through attainment of a robust and sustainable political agreement among all the country’s significant political forces; and the second, through attainment of a robust and sustainable agreement between Iraq and all of its neighbors that governs the nature of their interactions in the region.
    The presence of foreign military “trainers,” from any country, is actually counter-productive to the attainment of these agreements.
    Iraqis know how to fight, and plenty of them know how to coordinate military and police actions on a large scale. They don’t need Americans to teach them those things. And the presence of Americans considerably complicates the attainment of the required political agreements, both internally and regionally.
    As I wrote in the Christian Science Monitor in July 2005:

      A prior US announcement of imminent total withdrawal will focus the minds of Iraqis considerably and show them they’ll truly be masters of their own fate. They’ll see the need to work together politically to figure out what follows. And they’ll be far less hospitable to insurgents, especially those who get their impetus from the prospect of a prolonged foreign occupation.

    And as Juan Cole wrote today: The way to get out is to get out.

Juan also makes some useful observations about the weakness of Obama’s assumption, regarding Afghanistan, that simply the addition of a few thousand more US forces doing what the US has been doing in Afghanistan will solve the problem there.
However, I don’t believe that even that criticism goes nearly far enough. As we turn more of our attention to the rapid deterioration of the US-NATO project in Afghanistan, we need to understand a lot more about the sheer inappropriateness and impracticality of having those two bodies, the US and NATO– so distant from the concerns of Afghanistan’s people both geographically and culturally– take responsibility for “restoring stability” to the country’s long war-ravaged people. This is an imperialistic and militaristic project that needs to be considerably rethought and reconfigured– in conjunction with all the other regional and world powers and broad segments of Afghanistan’s people– if it is to have any chance of success.
So we do need to cast an increasingly watchful eye on developments in Afghanistan. But first, let’s get these US troops out of Iraq and give that country’s people a chance of regaining true national sovereignty.
Barack Obama starts to point us in the direction to achieve that. But he doesn’t go nearly far enough.
Bottom line: too little, too late.

Washington’s ‘Dannatt moment’ approaching?

So is the Bush administration finally coming close to experiencing the “Dannatt moment” that I have been waiting for ever since October 2006, when the British Army’s chief of staff, Sir Richard Dannatt, publicly acknowledged that his troops would be much more constructively employed in Afghanistan than in the sinkhole of Iraq?
It seems this moment might be approaching. The NYT’s Steven Lee Myers is reporting in Sunday’s paper that,

    The Bush administration is considering the withdrawal of additional combat forces from Iraq beginning in September, according to administration and military officials, raising the prospect of a far more ambitious plan than expected only months ago.
    Such a withdrawal would be a striking reversal from the nadir of the war in 2006 and 2007.
    One factor in the consideration is the pressing need for additional American troops in Afghanistan…

Back in fall 2006, it was not only Dannatt who was urging a shift of strategi attention and resources from Iraq to Afghanistan. So were the members of the Baker-Hamilton Group (a.k.a. the ISG.) Who until November 2006 included the present secDef Bob Gates.
But as we know, the Prez never took the ISG’s advice, choosing instead to pour additional troops into Iraq in that episode of fairly meaningless– but very expensive– swagger known as “the surge.”
Myers points out– rightly, imho– that,

    Any troop reductions announced in the heat of the presidential election could blur the sharp differences between the candidates, Senators John McCain and Barack Obama, over how long to stay in Iraq.

I am not so sure about the validity of the claim he then makes, that a reduction in troop strength in Iraq occurring during the pre-election period might benefit McCain. But regardless of whether it does or not, it’s the right thing to do. Only it should be carried out much more swiftly and more totally (actually, totally totally) than the very partial redeployments that Myers tells us are currently being considered.
Also, if any serious US troop withdrawal is to be orderly, rather than a humiliating and choatic rout, it needs to be executed within the context of a radically different strategic-political situation… one that involves all the elements I have been writing about quite clearly for more than three years now.
And yes, that would certainly include broad, UN-convened negotiations involving all the US and all of Iraq’s neighbors– including Iran and Syria.
No sign of that yet. So that is the real breakthrough that we all still need to work for.

France brokering Lebanon-Syria embassy deal

This is win-win-win all the way. The Lebanese people win by getting their national independence finally recognized by their Syrian neighbor. Syria wins by escaping both from the burden of its long-claimed “responsibilities” in Lebanon and from the useless and anomalous burden of that relic of its recidivist claim over Lebanon. Former colonial power France wins by being given the laurels for bringing off this deal.
Oh, and Bashar al-Asad wins again, of course, by further breaking out of his international isolation.

How powers emerge today

Time was, major shifts in the balance of international power were cataclysmic, violence-wracked events. Not today. (And maybe, paradoxically, we have the existence of nuclear weapons and the broad knowledge of their fearsome potentialities to thank in some part for that.)
Today, what propels a rising power upward is something quite different from raw military power. It is intelligence (especially in the realm of alliance-building); patience; and focus.
Two cases in point: China and Iran. One rising at the global level, the other at the Middle East regional level. Both have “risen” to the point they are– and look set to rise even further over the years ahead– through pursuit of a policy that in my childhood we would have called something like “softly, softly, catchee monkey” (SSCM).
China, as I have noted numerous times here and elsewhere– and building in good part on Kishore Mahbubani’s excellent analysis– has risen in the modern world precisely by acquiring an excellent reputation as a rules-player within the set of international rules established by the US in 1945. It has not sought to do so through military expansion and confrontation with the “old”, US-dominated order, but by challenging (and otherwise interacting with) the US from quite within the US-established order.
By international standards, its military buildup has been measured and restrained. The nuclear arsenal it has built up has been designed to the requirements of a slightly-over-minimal deterrence capability. Beijing wisely chose not to take the route the Soviet Union pursued, of trying to “match” America’s weapons build-up and challenge the US and its allies militarily in various places around the world.
SSCM.
Now, China has regained Hong Kong and is on a good track for building stronger relations with Taiwan. It is certainly (and quietly) emerging as the dominant power around the Pacific Rim. Even if the US still has many bases and alliances there, China has considerable soft power assets in that whole region, as elsewhere.
As for Iran, many people might not think of Ahmadinejad’s Iran as marked by any display of diplomatic intelligence, patience, and focus. But AN with all his rantings is really the epiphenomenon there in Tehran. The big-picture decisions on regional and foreign affairs are made by the Supreme Guide and by others in the clerical and Revolutionary Guard hierarchies. I have to conclude that they’ve been playing a careful and extremely intelligent SSCM game in recent years– and now, it is showing some very tangible results.
One of the hallmarks of Iran’s allies throughout the Middle East has been their ability to deal very effectively with the soft, pliant men who were chosen by the Americans to be their chief henchmen in various theaters. Mainly, I’m talking about Lebanon’s Fouad Siniora (which is where I actually started this whole train of thought this morning), and Iraq’s Nouri al-Maliki.
Both men were chosen, by their US paymasters back in 2005 and early 2006, in large part precisely because of their political pliancy (rather than, say, any strongly demonstrated commitment to any particular set of political principles.) You can go back to what I was blogging here about Iraq in early 2006 if you want to be reminded of exactly how it was that Nouri al-Maliki became annointed as PM– as a last-ditch, compromise candidate who was acceptable to the Americans– back in those tumultuous days. Siniora’s emergence to the head of the anti-Syrian bloc was a little different.
Back then, I repeat, both men were chosen in good part because they were acceptable to the Americans.
Now, both men stay in power in good part because they are acceptable to the large bodies of anti-Americans (and pro-Iranians) within their national constituencies. Amazing, really, to see, how effortlessly the pro-Iranian constituencies seem to have “captured” these two men.
Amazing that is, until you realize that (1) Both men were chosen in the first place because of their political pliancy. That hasn’t changed. (Vide the unbelievably pliant Amin Gemayyel’s amazing political turn-on-a-dime in February 1984.) And (2), actually, a lot of systematic, patient, and well-informed political work was pursued by the pro-Iranian forces behind the scenes in order to arrive at their present positions of strengthening power in both countries.
So those are two intriguing examples of the SSCM capabilities of Iran’s allies in Lebanon and Iraq. (Including, the fact that they were smart and well-informed enough to be able to “capture” the previous US henchmen to become figureheads for their own cause without the American viceroys even particularly realizing what was happening.) Iran itself has also pursued a generally very effective SSCM policy in its relations with Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries…
I want to make a broader point here, though– one that links the two cases of Iran and China that I have mentioned. This is a point completely consonant with my own existing analysis of the rapidly decreasing value of raw military strength in today’s global environment. (As I talked about, for example, in my recent USIP appearance.) In our current era, powers seem to be most successful in increasing their regional and global influence when they rely not primarily on military strength and the projection of military power in foreign theaters. They are most successful when they (a) have a keen understanding of the diplomatic and political realities in the region(s) in which they operate, and (b) use that knowledge to pursue very smart and quite frequently deliberately non-confrontational policies that gradually, over time, bring to them increasing amounts of the other kinds of power– especially “soft” power– that matter a lot more in today’s world than military power does.

Annals of gender exclusion, Part XXXVI: Bloggingheads

It’s been nearly four years since I counted the proportion of women published on the op-ed pages of the WaPo over the course of a month and found it to be a measly 10 percent. I haven’t counted recently– has anyone else? My impression is it may have gone up a little, but probably not much above 20%.
Still completely outrageous.
And now, we have the “new” media… And once again the male professional elevator and those effortlessly sharp elbows wielded by the boys guys have still been keeping us females largely excluded.
Today’s exhibit: “Bloggingheads TV”, which I guess presents itself as some form of an “edgy”, low-tech public discussion forum– and gets handsomely free-advertised on the NYT’s op-ed page as a way, I suppose, for the Grey Lady to make herself appear a little more edgy and modern… (But it is also, really, really good for BHTV, too. I call this kind of reciprocal image-enhancement the “Rolex watch-ads phenomenon.”)
On the front page of BHTV, when I checked there just now, I found: the names of 20 featured contributors, all of whom are male!
C’meon, guys, what kind of a world do you think you are representing, modeling, or building???
One in which men’s voices and opinions are valued quite disproportionately over those of women, it seems…
I still have to write the longer analysis I have been thinking about for a while, of how the male professional elevator actually works in practice in modern American society. There are elements of lateral cronyism; elements of mentor-protege relationships; and elements of broader social attitudes in which these guys simply assume that the women in their lives can do necessary things like the shopping, childrearing, elder-care, etc, and thus they themselves have the free time left over to engage in cutting-edge things like BHTV.
I have frequently thought it would be nice if I, like so many of my male colleagues, had a wife at home to do those things. But as it happens, I’m very happy with the mutually supportive relationship I have with my spouse.
But for now, let’s just all look at this BHTV example and figure out what we can learn from the rampant gender exclusion (sexism) on open display there…
Note: when I talk about ‘gender exclusion’, in general I don’t mean the total exclusion of females from any particular forum of public discussion. Generally, I mean only their rampant under-representation. It has been amazing, sickening, and disappointing to me in recent years to see how the gains that we made through the 1980s and 1990s in achieving a higher degree of gender inclusion in the public discourse on foreign-policy issues have in the present decade been so effortlessly rolled back. (I have some explanations for that, too.)
But this BHTV example of total female exclusion was just too blatant to ignore.

Israel ups the ante for US sitting-duck troops in Iraq

I have long argued– most recently here— that if an act of war is launched against Iran by the US or by Israel, then one of the most obvious ways for Iran to engage in the war that ensues would be to attack, or surround and cut off, the US troops distributed broadly throughout Iraq, very close to Iran’s borders and at the end of agonizingly long and vulnerable supply lines.
My argument has always been that if Iran suffers any aerial (or naval) attack– even if only Israeli forces participate in it directly– then it could easily demonstrate that that attack could not have been launched without the active and premeditated collusion of the US, whose military dominates all the airspace around Iran, especially from the east, as well as the waters of the Gulf.
That would make the US’s forces in the region legitimate targets for an Iranian counter-attack.
And now, Israel’s Y-net website tells us, quoting unnamed “sources in the Iraqi Defense Ministry”, that,

    Israeli fighter jets have been flying over Iraqi territory for over a month in preparation for potential strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, sources in the Iraqi Defense Ministry told a local news network Friday, adding that the aircraft have been landing in American bases following the overflights.

The original reports of Iraqi defense officials reporting seeing Israeli military aircraft using US bases in Iraq seem to have come from the Iraqi news agency Nahrainnet. (That was also what AFP reported.) They have also been carried by the website of Iran’s international Press TV station.
But it is interesting that Israel’s Y-net carried the report– even if attributed to those non-Israeli sources. The Israeli media is, like the old Soviet media, subject to heavy censorship on all military matters. But as in the old Soviet Union, when the Israeli military censors kind of want to “get the news out” about one of their own military developments, they allow a news medium to run the item– but with attribution to foreign sources.
Update 4:20 p.m., July 11: After I wrote the main post here, Y-net updated their article, on the same URL, to feature an IDF denial that they had been doing any “training” activities in Iraq. I note this is not a categoric denial that they’ve been doing anything else, such as reconnaissance or prepositioning of materiel.)
(The second update, at 4:25 p.m. on July 14, is reflected in the new language (underlined) in the next paragraph, with the deleted material struck through. ~ HC)

The fact that Y-net carried the report, even with– at first– no confirmation or denial from their military sources close to home, indicates strongly to me that it’s true. Also, that the Israeli defense authorities want us to know that it’s true. indicated to me at the time that it was true– or, that some portions of the Israeli defense authorities wanted us to believe that it was true. Otherwise, wouldn’t they simply have squashed or denied the whole report from the get-go?
So that’s even more interesting. It means they want the US to know that, at one level, they have us over a barrel. Our 157,000 troops spread widely throughout Iraq are not only hostages to any Israeli military adventurism, but those of them running the air-bases where the Israeli jets have been reported as landing have, in addition, been forced to support Israeli acts that greatly increase the risk to themselves and their G.I. buddies.
Where is the national leader in Washington who can put his foot down, who can tell our Israeli blackmailers that they can no longer play around in this extremely risky way with the security of our men and women in uniform in Iraq and throughout the Gulf; tell them that their military and special-force provocateurs are no longer welcome in the US-controlled battlespace of Iraq; and thereby restore the integrity of US national defense planning?
I will quickly add a few more thoughts.

    1. All the war games that US military planners have done to game out the sequelae of a US (or Israeli) act of war against Iran have shown that they are truly devastating for the US.
    2. Iran’s Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki stated on July 2 that Iran does not, actually, fear an Israeli attack. That is consonant with the results of the war-gaming indicated above.
    3. There is at least some possibility that this current piece of Israeli muscle-flexing– like Iran’s own recent, widely publicized, missile tests– is an intentional precursor to Iran and the P5+1 sitting down to start the serious, de-escalatory negotiations that imho sorely need to happen. (Glenn Kessler posited this explanation, regarding the Iranians, in today’s WaPo, I see.) But Israel’s muscle-flexing is of a notably different order than Iran’s– not least because Israel is not, actually, a potential participant in the Iran-P5+1 negotiations. For that reason, Israel remains in the role of a potentially very dangerous ‘rogue’ actor– and it might even have an incentive to prevent or spoil those negotiations. The fact that PM Olmert is in such deep political trouble at home, and that the country’s whole political system is in such a shaky situation, means that Olmert’s decisionmaking may indeed be reckless and risk-embracing.
    4. We need to think much more about what “message” Olmert and his national-defense people are trying to convey to the Americans with this risk-taking behavior regarding Iran. This is true even if (or perhaps, all the more so if) Olmert has many enablers and supporters dug well in at high levels of the US national-security machine.

Finally, we should remember that it has all along been Pres. George W. Bush who has pushed to place scores of thousands of US servicemen and -women into the position of sitting ducks for Iranian retaliation, in Iraq. In December 2006 the bipartisan group headed by Baker and Hamilton recommended strongly that the US should withdraw a sizeable portion of its troops from Iraq and concentrate the remainder into a small number of more easily defended (and supplied) bases. But Bush’s response to that was to pump large numbers of additional sitting ducks into the potential duck-abbatoir, and to spread them out thinly into many distant parts of the country under the logic of his so-called “surge.”
It is time to end the madness, end the Israeli blackmail, end or substantially reduce the tensions with Iran (which could still flare out of control any day), and end the very vulnerable and counter-productive US troop deployment in Iraq.
We have a pretty good idea how to do all these things. But please God get on with it. This reminder from Y-net about the presence and muscle-flexing propensities of the Israeli wild card makes the whole task of de-escalation much more urgent.

After the wedding

I am still in post-wedding mode, after the extremely moving wedding held Saturday of my son Tarek and his lovely, talented bride, Liz Jackson. Liz and Tarek had put a lot of loving care into the ceremony itself, and into a series of activities that brought families and friends together for a weekend in northern Vermont.
The wedding was marked by huge optimism regarding the future, though with a few notes of sadness. (Isaiah Berlin once wrote, “There is no community without loss.” In Tarek and Liz’s case, one of the sad notes– for us east-coasters– is that they will soon be moving to the west coast of the USA for a few years.)
The ceremony was held in an open, grassy meadow surrounded by wildflowers, overlooking spectacular views of nearby mountains and under a broad blue sky. At the end, those present sent the couple off with successive shouts of “Mabrouk!”, ” Mazel tov!”, and “Huzzah!”
I give thanks to the Almighty that these two beautiful, and wonderfully complementary, spirits found each other.
As for me, I’ll be back blogging toward the end of the week.

More on coercing confessions at Gitmo

The NYT’s Scott Shane has an excellent piece of reporting today, on how,

    The military trainers who came to Guantánamo Bay in December 2002 based an entire interrogation class on a chart showing the effects of “coercive management techniques” for possible use on prisoners, including “sleep deprivation,” “prolonged constraint,” and “exposure.”
    What the trainers did not say, and may not have known, was that their chart had been copied verbatim from a 1957 Air Force study of Chinese Communist techniques used during the Korean War to obtain confessions, many of them false, from American prisoners.
    … Several Guantánamo documents, including the chart outlining coercive methods, were made public at a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing June 17 that examined how such tactics came to be employed.
    But committee investigators were not aware of the chart’s source in the half-century-old journal article… The 1957 article from which the chart was copied was entitled “Communist Attempts to Elicit False Confessions From Air Force Prisoners of War” and written by Alfred D. Biderman, a sociologist then working for the Air Force, who died in 2003. Mr. Biderman had interviewed American prisoners returning from North Korea, some of whom had been filmed by their Chinese interrogators confessing to germ warfare and other atrocities.

So let’s spool back what happened here. Someone in the military (or the CIA?), wanting to use a quick and handy chart on coercive techniques that can generate “confessions”, finds one in the Biderman article and copies it verbatim. Do we assume that whoever copied the chart from the article, read the rest of the article and thereby became fully informed that the “confessions” generated by these techniques were, for the most part, quite false?
False ‘confessions’ have consequences, and not just in a courtroom (where they can rapidly lead to the collapse of the whole case against the individual who was tortured.) If the ‘confessions’ obtained in Gitmo through these coercive techniques were taken at face value and believed by members of the relevant US government agencies, then that would have led to actions that, being based on false information, would place in extreme jeopardy not only the US campaign against the terrorists but also the lives of many US service-members.
Therefore, whoever advocated and went along with the use of these coercive techniques should be investigated and perhaps even tried on charges of placing the lives of U.S. service-members at risk.
The FBI, for its part, has long known the risks and dangers– both inside the courtroom and outside it– of any reliance on coerced ‘confessions’. Some of their agents expressed their deep professional concern at the coercion they saw being applied in Gitmo and other US detention centers.
These coercive techniques– torture, as we should call them– are not only deeply, deeply, anti-humane and anti-humanitarian.
Not only has their revelation been deeply harmful to the US’s reputation around the world.
But in addition, their use– and any reliance the US and its allies might have had on the “information” obtained from them– have spread false “information” throughout the whole US intelligence system and put American lives at additional risk.
End it. Now. Close Guantanamo and all the US’s extraterritorial prisons. Return our country to the rule of law.