Torturing Democracy" Documentary: Must See on PBS & Bill Moyers

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In summary, the documentary discusses how the Bush administration used harsh interrogation techniques on detainees, including waterboarding, without success. These techniques have been widely criticized as being torture. The documentary also examines how other methods, such as psychological manipulation, are more effective.
  • #36
Al68 said:
And whether Geneva applies, which, if any, category applies, and whether it forbids torture in the cases where it applies all depend on each specific case.

What specific case is claimed to be a "war crime" again?
Neither of us has used the term war crime so I am not certain to what you are referring specifically. I have yet to look up specific definitions of war crimes since I have only alledged illegal activity and not used the label "war crime".

From what I have read and heard in the news most if not all of the detainees have been illegally treated according to the GC (supposing that my arguments are valid). If any person covered by the language of the GC is not accorded its protections until such time as they are deemed by a tribunal not to be covered then they have been illegally handled. The outcome of the tribunal and any conviction for war crimes in no way alters the legality of the treatment they received before the tribunal.
 
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  • #37
TheStatutoryApe said:
Neither of us has used the term war crime so I am not certain to what you are referring specifically. I have yet to look up specific definitions of war crimes since I have only alledged illegal activity and not used the label "war crime".

From what I have read and heard in the news most if not all of the detainees have been illegally treated according to the GC (supposing that my arguments are valid). If any person covered by the language of the GC is not accorded its protections until such time as they are deemed by a tribunal not to be covered then they have been illegally handled. The outcome of the tribunal and any conviction for war crimes in no way alters the legality of the treatment they received before the tribunal.

Who are they, specifically, that were tortured? You say that "what you have heard or read" that most if not all were illegally treated (you mean tortured?). Were most illegally treated/handled? If so, how, specifically? Can you back this up with actual data? Or have been snookered by the media frenzy?

Let's start there.

If you are only talking about a couple of detainees then it would be safe to say that this is not how they were all treated. We may be talking about isolated events that need further scrutiny.
 
  • #38
TheStatutoryApe said:
Neither of us has used the term war crime so I am not certain to what you are referring specifically. I have yet to look up specific definitions of war crimes since I have only alledged illegal activity and not used the label "war crime".
Sorry, I must have mixed up the threads. What specific case are you alledging was illegal activity and on who's part?
 
  • #39
Again I must repeat that there is much more to this other than just the debate about torture. The documentary mentions dropping leaflets offering money for Arabs.

They fed them well. The Pakistani tribesmen slaughtered a sheep in honor of their guests, Arabs and Chinese Muslims famished from fleeing U.S. bombing in the Afghan mountains. But their hosts had ulterior motives: to sell them to the Americans, said the men who are now prisoners at Guantanamo Bay.

Bounties ranged from $3,000 to $25,000, the detainees testified during military tribunals, according to transcripts the U.S. government gave The Associated Press to comply with a Freedom of Information lawsuit.

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0531-10.htm [Broken]

Quite apparently in Afghanistan the U.S. just bought people who were turned in for a profit.
 
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  • #40
drankin said:
Who are they, specifically, that were tortured? You say that "what you have heard or read" that most if not all were illegally treated (you mean tortured?). Were most illegally treated/handled? If so, how, specifically? Can you back this up with actual data? Or have been snookered by the media frenzy?

Let's start there.

If you are only talking about a couple of detainees then it would be safe to say that this is not how they were all treated. We may be talking about isolated events that need further scrutiny.
Al68 said:
Sorry, I must have mixed up the threads. What specific case are you alledging was illegal activity and on who's part?

http://www.nybooks.com/icrc-report.pdf
There is the report of the International Red Cross.
I am no ones lawyer. I have no access to to personal files on detainees. I have no access to government documents that the general public does not. It is completely rediculous for you to ask me to start making their individual cases right here on this forum for you. There have been several accounts of abuse from several sources. If you want more information on them then look them up. I am no more, and far less, capable of substantiating their claims than they are.

And Drankin, as I have already pointed out torture is not the only thing illegal under the protections of the GC. If you are interested in what the GC describes as illegal treatment then read it.
 
  • #41
TheStatutoryApe said:
It is completely rediculous for you to ask me to start making their individual cases right here on this forum for you. There have been several accounts of abuse from several sources. If you want more information on them then look them up. I am no more, and far less, capable of substantiating their claims than they are.
I wasn't asking for you to make their cases, just which cases you were referring to. (Or maybe you meant that for drankin?). Thanks for the link, I'll check it out.
 
  • #42
Al68 said:
I wasn't asking for you to make their cases, just which cases you were referring to. (Or maybe you meant that for drankin?). Thanks for the link, I'll check it out.

Sorry, I guess I am still not understanding. My argument primarily refers to detainees taken from Afghanistan and perhaps from Pakistan who are allegedly linked to al Quada and/or the Taliban. I know that others have been taken from other locations and for other reasons. With out trying to look them up I can't really comment and I'm not going to look them up right now.
 
  • #43
edward said:
Again I must repeat that there is much more to this other than just the debate about torture. The documentary mentions dropping leaflets offering money for Arabs.



http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0531-10.htm [Broken]

Quite apparently in Afghanistan the U.S. just bought people who were turned in for a profit.

This would border on hiring Mercenaries. Also a no no.
 
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  • #44
TheStatutoryApe said:
You are arguing against a single point as opposed to the totality of my argument. Note please, again, that Afghanistan is a Party to the Geneva Conventions which means that the articles automatically apply unless it can be demonstrated they have breeched the rules of the Convention where upon the protections will be lifted. I believe the language of the GC provides that any challenges to application be made before "a compotent tribunal".
Please note Article 1

Would you care to endevour to explain what circumstances one might come up with to excuse a lack of respect for the Convention with regard to its signatories which would fall outside the set of "all circumstances"?
Two points.

First, yes Zahir Shah signed the signed the GC in '56. Was he 'Afghanistan'? The 'failed states' legalisms makes an argument about what Afghanistan is, in the sense of the entity that originally signed the GC. The government of Afghanistan that signed the GC no longer even remotely exists. One could even argue that society no longer exists. The Soviets and the Taliban did more than rearrange the furniture. Now, I likely could be quickly persuaded that the failed state construction is not valid, though I don't see that treaties signed by Alexander the Great must be honored because he happened to run the place for awhile. Anyway, as you pointed out earlier, the point is moot: the US signed the GC and must adhere to it regardless of Afghan status.

Second, adherence to the the GC under all circumstances also means adherence to Article 4. Article 4 does not vanish because one signed the treaty. GC signers have long been, for example, summarily executing spies and other out of uniform rogue actors.

... Your seeming insistence on strict adherence to article 4 definitions would seem to be the argument which ignores that clause.
Sorry I don't know what this means.
 
  • #45
mheslep said:
Two points.

First, yes Zahir Shah signed the signed the GC in '56. Was he 'Afghanistan'? The 'failed states' legalisms makes an argument about what Afghanistan is, in the sense of the entity that originally signed the GC. The government of Afghanistan that signed the GC no longer even remotely exists. One could even argue that society no longer exists. The Soviets and the Taliban did more than rearrange the furniture. Now, I likely could be quickly persuaded that the failed state construction is not valid, though I don't see that treaties signed by Alexander the Great must be honored because he happened to run the place for awhile. Anyway, as you pointed out earlier, the point is moot: the US signed the GC and must adhere to it regardless of Afghan status.
So there aren't any signatories to the GC that have rather different governments now other than Afghanistan?
Are there any judicial bodys that have upheld this contention that Afghanistan is no longer covered as a signatory of the GC? Does the US or anyone else not consider the new government put in place to not be covered by the GC? Has the UN invited the new Afghan government to come sign and once again be a GC signatory?

mheslep said:
Second, adherence to the the GC under all circumstances also means adherence to Article 4. Article 4 does not vanish because one signed the treaty. GC signers have long been, for example, summarily executing spies and other out of uniform rogue actors.

Sorry I don't know what this means.

I was referring to your comment that I had "obliterated" the "Should any doubt arise..." clause of article 5. I stated that I think rather that I had appealed to it and that you are the one ignoring it with strict adherence to article 4.
And execution makes things a bit difficult. You see you can't really argue that someone has been mistreating a person who is dead. If you ask whether or not the person received a fair trial and found guilty of espionage I am certain you would be told that they had and there wouldn't really be anyone to argue.
Besides, many of the GC signatories have broken the rules in the GC. Not all of those breeches have actually been brought before the attention of a court and dealt with. Not all persons who break the law, even including the ones that are caught, are brought before a court. That doesn't mean that they were not breaking the law.
 
  • #46
TheStatutoryApe said:
So there aren't any signatories to the GC that have rather different governments now other than Afghanistan?
Sure, the U.S. for example. The relevant thing is whether the current party at war adheres to it. Even if an enemy is not a signatory, it's to our advantage not to preempt their opportunity to choose to adhere to it. So we should treat any enemy as an "adherer" until they show otherwise.
Besides, many of the GC signatories have broken the rules in the GC. Not all of those breeches have actually been brought before the attention of a court and dealt with.
A big reason for this is that taking action against officials for breaches is generally reserved for "serious breaches".

The GC states the kind of breaches that are considered serious: "Any unlawful act or omission by the Detaining Power causing death or seriously endangering the health of a prisoner of war in its custody is prohibited, and will be regarded as a serious breach of the present Convention. In particular, no prisoner of war may be subjected to physical mutilation or to medical or scientific experiments of any kind which are not justified by the medical, dental or hospital treatment of the prisoner concerned and carried out in his interest."
 
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  • #47
Al68 said:
Sure, the U.S. for example. The relevant thing is whether the current party at war adheres to it. Even if an enemy is not a signatory, it's to our advantage not to preempt their opportunity to choose to adhere to it. So we should treat any enemy as an "adherer" until they show otherwise.

I believe that Mheslep is pointing out that the government of Afghanistan was effectively removed. The US is not so different as that. The same government, generally speaking, still exists even though the people in office are different. There are arguments that could be made about Afghanistan but I would say they ought to be made in court before their conclusions are acted upon. At least before the UN if nothing else though the US generally does not like to concede anything to the UN.

As far as whether or not a power adheres to the GC that's again not something that ought to be decided by the parties involved. Obviously its easy for one to say that the other did not adhere to the GC and so they no longer need to adhere to the GC in respect to that party. Its particularly easy for a powerful country like the US.

When it comes right down to it seeking out legal loopholes to excuse and continue abusive treatment of detainees is just plain bad form and I hardly believe that it is at all in the spirit of the Geneva Convention.
 
  • #48
TheStatutoryApe said:
So there aren't any signatories to the GC that have rather different governments now other than Afghanistan?
Are there any judicial bodys that have upheld this contention that Afghanistan is no longer covered as a signatory of the GC? Does the US or anyone else not consider the new government put in place to not be covered by the GC? Has the UN invited the new Afghan government to come sign and once again be a GC signatory?
I agree the US is obliged to follow the GC in any conflict because the US signed it. Whether or not other countries join the GC does not relieve the US of its obligations, as I understand it. How other individual enemy combatants behave makes a great deal of difference as to whether or not the US is obligated to treat them as prisoners of war, the conditions of behavior being laid out in article 4, and a tribunal is not required for clear cases.
 
  • #49
mheslep said:
How other individual enemy combatants behave makes a great deal of difference as to whether or not the US is obligated to treat them as prisoners of war, the conditions of behavior being laid out in article 4, and a tribunal is not required for clear cases.

If you read the GC you will see that the language through out places the onus upon the detaining power. Article 4 defines guidelines for the detaining power to determine POW status not guidelines for the behavior of the other party to the conflict. The Hague outlines general standards of behavior in war, Geneva outlines only the standard of behavior incumbent upon the detaining power with regard to prisoners of war. The only article that can be construed as to relieve any party to the conflict of their obligation to respect the provisions of the GC based on lack of respect of the other power is if the other power is not a "High Contracting Party". Otherwise article 1 stipulates that the Convention be respected by all partys with regard to one another "in all circumstances".

As for "clear cases" reread articles 4 & 5 remembering that the onus of the entire document is placed upon the detaining power, not the detained.
"Should any doubt arise as to whether persons, having committed a belligerent act and having fallen into the hands of the enemy, belong to any of the categories enumerated in Article 4..."
Looking at the relationship of the "any doubt" clause and the "belong to any of the catagories" clause it would seem to indicate that the only "clear cases" not requiring tribunal are those where the prisoner clearly belongs to one of the catagories in article 4.
I believe you will find that commentary and legal precedent both support this interpretation as well as the general rule of thumb taken as granted in most western courts of law usually worded "Innocent until proven guilty".
 
  • #50
TheStatutoryApe said:
...As for "clear cases" reread articles 4 & 5 remembering that the onus of the entire document is placed upon the detaining power, not the detained.
"Should any doubt arise as to whether persons, having committed a belligerent act and having fallen into the hands of the enemy, belong to any of the categories enumerated in Article 4..."
Looking at the relationship of the "any doubt" clause and the "belong to any of the catagories" clause it would seem to indicate that the only "clear cases" not requiring tribunal are those where the prisoner clearly belongs to one of the catagories in article 4.
Yes, agreed this is about applicability of the art. 4 categories. So then you would agree that not every combatant out of uniform(b), with no military accountability(a), and hiding a suicide bomb under his cloak (c,d) requires a tribunal under the GC? That there are clear, easy to observe cases of Art 4 categories? We may still choose to treat combatants behaving in this way as POWs, but I assert the GC does not always require it.
 
  • #51
mheslep said:
Yes, agreed this is about applicability of the art. 4 categories. So then you would agree that not every combatant out of uniform(b), with no military accountability(a), and hiding a suicide bomb under his cloak (c,d) requires a tribunal under the GC? That there are clear, easy to observe cases of Art 4 categories? We may still choose to treat combatants behaving in this way as POWs, but I assert the GC does not always require it.

It seems that you missed something in my reasoning. You seem to interpret article 5 as referring to doubt of exclusion as opposed to doubt of inclusion. I am holding that it is obviously the latter.
 
  • #52
TheStatutoryApe said:
It seems that you missed something in my reasoning. You seem to interpret article 5 as referring to doubt of exclusion as opposed to doubt of inclusion. I am holding that it is obviously the latter.
Yes I think that is our point of disagreement. As a practical matter I think it must be the other way around.
 
  • #53
mheslep said:
Yes I think that is our point of disagreement. As a practical matter I think it must be the other way around.

As a matter of practicality it is probably much cheaper and easier to not honour the GC at all.

"Should any doubt arise as to whether persons ... belong to any of the categories enumerated in Article 4..."

The language is obviously inclusive rather than exclusive. Aside from the convenience of it can you make any argument as to why it should be interpreted the other way around? You realize that an interpretation of exclusion means that all POWs be tried to determine innocence save those that are apparently clearly guilty?
 
<h2>1. What is the main focus of the "Torturing Democracy" documentary?</h2><p>The main focus of the "Torturing Democracy" documentary is the use of torture by the United States government in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. It examines the actions taken by the government, including the use of enhanced interrogation techniques, and the impact it had on both the victims and perpetrators.</p><h2>2. Who is Bill Moyers and what is his role in the documentary?</h2><p>Bill Moyers is a renowned American journalist and political commentator. In the "Torturing Democracy" documentary, he serves as the narrator and interviewer, providing insight and analysis on the events surrounding the use of torture by the US government.</p><h2>3. Why is this documentary considered a must-see?</h2><p>This documentary is considered a must-see because it sheds light on a controversial and important topic that has had a significant impact on American society. It presents a thorough and unbiased examination of the use of torture and its consequences, allowing viewers to form their own opinions and engage in meaningful discussions.</p><h2>4. What kind of evidence is presented in the documentary?</h2><p>The documentary presents a variety of evidence, including government documents, interviews with key figures involved in the use of torture, and footage from congressional hearings and news reports. It also includes personal accounts from victims and their families, providing a human perspective on the issue.</p><h2>5. Is the documentary biased in any way?</h2><p>The "Torturing Democracy" documentary strives to present a balanced and unbiased view of the use of torture by the US government. It includes perspectives from both supporters and critics of the actions taken, allowing viewers to form their own opinions based on the presented evidence.</p>

1. What is the main focus of the "Torturing Democracy" documentary?

The main focus of the "Torturing Democracy" documentary is the use of torture by the United States government in the aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. It examines the actions taken by the government, including the use of enhanced interrogation techniques, and the impact it had on both the victims and perpetrators.

2. Who is Bill Moyers and what is his role in the documentary?

Bill Moyers is a renowned American journalist and political commentator. In the "Torturing Democracy" documentary, he serves as the narrator and interviewer, providing insight and analysis on the events surrounding the use of torture by the US government.

3. Why is this documentary considered a must-see?

This documentary is considered a must-see because it sheds light on a controversial and important topic that has had a significant impact on American society. It presents a thorough and unbiased examination of the use of torture and its consequences, allowing viewers to form their own opinions and engage in meaningful discussions.

4. What kind of evidence is presented in the documentary?

The documentary presents a variety of evidence, including government documents, interviews with key figures involved in the use of torture, and footage from congressional hearings and news reports. It also includes personal accounts from victims and their families, providing a human perspective on the issue.

5. Is the documentary biased in any way?

The "Torturing Democracy" documentary strives to present a balanced and unbiased view of the use of torture by the US government. It includes perspectives from both supporters and critics of the actions taken, allowing viewers to form their own opinions based on the presented evidence.

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