Sherry Chandler » Fear and Monstering

Fear and Monstering

Tara McKelvy, author of Monstering: Inside America’s Policy of Secret Interrogations and Torture in the Terror War, in an interview at Harper’s

Tenet has said in interviews that we didn’t employ torture, that everything was authorized, and that the attorney general told us the techniques did not amount to torture. This goes back to John Yoo, who along with others broadened the definition of what was allowable. Some of the stuff, like “stress positions,” seems benign. But it covers a lot of ground. It means you can be kept crouching and not allowed to move for 45 minutes, but then they can move you into another stress position. There’s one stress position, called a “Palestinian Hanging,” which was apparently pretty common at Abu Ghraib. Your arms are pulled behind your back, and you’re hung from your arms. …We don’t know if these techniques are still allowed. Officially they say “no,” but we have no idea.

Charles C. Krulak and Joseph P. Hoar, It’s Our Cage, Too, in the Washington Post:

Fear can be a strong motivator. It led Franklin Roosevelt to intern tens of thousands of innocent U.S. citizens during World War II; it led to Joseph McCarthy’s witch hunt, which ruined the lives of hundreds of Americans. And it led the United States to adopt a policy at the highest levels that condoned and even authorized torture of prisoners in our custody.

Fear is the justification offered for this policy by former CIA director George Tenet as he promotes his new book.

The American people are understandably fearful about another attack like the one we sustained on Sept. 11, 2001. But it is the duty of the commander in chief to lead the country away from the grip of fear, not into its grasp.

The torture methods that Tenet defends have nurtured the recuperative power of the enemy. This war will be won or lost not on the battlefield but in the minds of potential supporters who have not yet thrown in their lot with the enemy. If we forfeit our values by signaling that they are negotiable in situations of grave or imminent danger, we drive those undecideds into the arms of the enemy. This way lies defeat, and we are well down the road to it.

Chapeau tip to the Political Animal.

Our country is in the hands of morally bankrupt cowards.

Thugs.

For which noun I reference Alberto Gonzales.

Fear of Narrative
The National Religious Campaign Against Torture
Fear and elections
Gonzalez
Catch 22

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