24.04.2006 at 07:48
Torture - the US above the law (as usual)
by: enzedder
From Adbusters, May-June 2006 issue
On torture against so-called terrorists against
whom there is no evidence. Reproduced in full from
Adbusesters.
It's not a pleasant read, but it is an example of what is
happening. Many of these detainees have nothing to do with
terrorist organisations - they were just in the wrong place at the
wrong time - picked up by Pakistani officials or Northern Alliance
warlords who received money from
the US government for every prisoner handed over.
From Adbusters, May-June 2006 issue

“You nudge him awake with a
barrel of a rifle. He says nothing, just stands in compliance,
shivering in his underwear. You give him a pair of orange
overalls. He puts them on. You shackle his wrists, then his
ankles. Heavy boots for his feet, foam plugs in his ears, a hood
over his head. You bag his hands in layers of thick fabric, bound
tightly with tape. He says nothing, but his breath is uneven.
As you push him back against a wall,
you have a chair brought in for yourself. He stands, you sit.
After an hour, coffee is brought in for you. When he slumps, you
shove him roughly back against the wall. If he slumps too
frequently, you bring your gun up against his exposed throat. He
can feel that. He stands up nicely.
On the fifth hour, while you’re having
your meal, he urinates inside of his coveralls. You can see it as
it saturates the fabric.
You turn on the bright, artificial
lights in his holding cell. After two hours, you turn them off
again. You continue – off, on, off, on – at random
intervals. He asks you what time of day it is. You don’t
tell him. Sometimes, you serve him two meals within an hour of
one another. Sometimes, you wait eight hours. He keeps
asking what time it is, what the date is. You don’t tell
him. He asks for a blanket. You don’t give him one.
He asks to see his family. You don’t answer. He asks to see
a judge. You don’t answer.
After a few weeks, he stops asking for
things, but you can still hear him talking – quietly – to no-one in
particular.
When he refuses to eat, you put him in
the restraint chair for force-feeding. When he throws up on
himself, you make him remove his clothes and lay down on the concrete
floor with his face in the vomit.
When he doesn’t remain perfectly
still, or when he makes any noise, you bring out the dogs. When
he tries to cover himself, you get the female guards to point at him,
to taunt him, to straddle him and tell him that his mother and
grandmother are whores. When he is uncooperative or
insubordinate, you put him on a leash and make him wear women’s
undergarments. When he falls asleep, you blast him with
shatteringly loud pop music. When he asks to go to the toilet,
you make him wait until he messes himself, then you force him to roll
around in it while you take pictures of him.
You and your cohorts do this for
twelve, sixteen, twenty hours at a time.
On the fiftieth day, you have him
strapped to an inclined board, with his feet higher than his
head. You explain to him that he is going to be executed.
He whimpers. You lower his head into a tank of frigid water as he
blubbers incoherently and jerks at the restraints.
You watch him carefully, making sure
that he doesn’t drown, but getting him as close as possible before
raising the board. He passes out more than once. Each time,
you revive him and then dunk him again. Then you do it
again. Then you do it again.
He begins to confess to impossible,
nonsensical plots. He asks for you to kill him. He asks to
be allowed to kill himself. You do neither.
You wonder how much longer it will be
until he gives you some real information.?
You can do a lot to a person – you can
utterly destroy a person – all without leaving a single visible
mark. Torturers have their techniques, and you have yours.
Hooding, exploitation of phobias, stress positions, sensory deprivation
– you can do all of these things, and still you are not a torturer.
So do not worry. You will not be
held accountable. You will not be punished. You are not a
torturer. Not according to your superiors, and not according to
your leaders.
But be warned: history – as well as
your victims – may judge you more harshly.
United States
Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld gave formal, written approval for all of these
techniques, along with others normally proscribed by the Army Field
Manual, in a December 2002 internal memo.
Source: Adbusters – Journal of
the Mental Environment, May/June 2006