![]() |
Quote:
|
no, what I'm saying is that we are better and have always been better than the rest of the world in this regard....don't know about the universe but certainly the world....unless I'm mistaken...post waterboarding, lights left on all night, blaring Hannah Montana, bugs in boxes...these guys still had their heads.... right?....and probably have no lasting ill effects and are likely far better cared for than they were in their terrorist training camps or in the field...Abu Ghraib was not common practice for military personell but it was sure characterized as such by the media and left simply for political advantage....most people still have no idea what waterboarding actually is...they just know that they've been told over and over that it is the worst kind of torture...I wonder how the public will feel regarding waterboarding if/when the rest of these memos are released and we find that a major attack on LA was interrupted because we waterboarded one of these rats....
|
It's a scary time when a new administration can prosecute the fromer administration based on their feelings on right and wrong. Think Bush could have locked up Clinton for blowing up an asprin factory.This has Pelosi all over it. It would never happen under a Republican administration and will do more harm to the country, then good. This has nothing to do with moral high ground. It's petty politics at it's worst and we can expect more from this bunch. I will reiterate my stance, Obama is bad for America.
|
Quote:
Did you ever stop and think that maybe the real reason some are so upset over the torture issue is because they do believe we really are better and don't want our nation to be seen as hypocrites? Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
-spence |
Quote:
I know from very reliable sources of a few other cells and attacks that were prevented, but for now,... those are still classified. I guess only time will tell if the public ever learns exactly what could have/almost happened. But if they come clean with these details, then they would have to admit "Bush was Right". (at least on the terrorists). |
Quote:
I agree with this. I also believe that if you know someone has info that could save lives you do what is best for the situation. It's a tough call. Politicizing it the way I fear Obama is about to, is dead wrong. |
Quote:
My take is the administration knows it's a %$%$%$%$storm, and only wants legal action to move forward if there's a real case to be made. They want to balance the interests of the Left with reality. -spence |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Why is it that that Boston Globe report left out the fact that because of the use of waterboarding on one of these friggin TERRORIST another 911 type attack that was planned to Los Angeles never happened ??? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
According to Bush KSM was captured in March 2003. Also according to Bush the LA attack was thwarted in February 2002. Hmmm... It appears as if KSM was confessing to something that was already defunct, we just didn't know we had already disrupted the same plot. Others have said that this LA attack never got beyond the very early planning stages and wasn't a real threat. I've yet to read anything that substantiates the argument that waterboarding stopped an attack on LA. -spence |
Quote:
http://premium.edition.cnn.com/TRANS...28/ltm.03.html Quote:
|
Quote:
Lloyd Mann LA Legal Profession Examiner Lloyd is one of... 330 Los Angeles Examiners Lloyd S. Mann has been an attorney for more than 25 years. His law firm, Mann & Zarpas, LLP, was recently listed as one of the top 30 firms in the San Fernando Valley Business Journal, and for his entire career he has been passionate about explaining the law, lawyers, and the legal system to others - which is precisely what he intends to do with his column. He can be reached at Lmann@mannzarpas.com. Next ArticleLA Legal Profession Examiner Did Waterboarding save Los Angeles lives? April 21, 5:57 PM · Add a Comment ShareThis Feed Was Los Angeles saved from a 9/11 type brutal attack as a result of the controversial tactic of "Waterboarding?" According to a report on a popular website that is exactly what happened. CNSNews.com, a conservative leaning website, is claiming that waterboarding, which has now been banned by the Obama administration, induced captured terrorist, Khalid Sheik Mohammed, to give American interrogators information that enabled authorities to prevent a major attack upon Los Angeles that could have resulted in the murder of tens of thousands of American citizens and others living in Los Angeles. CNSNews.com is the creation of the conservative lobbying group, Media Research Center. Its leader, L. Brent Bozell III, certainly makes no claim of being an Obama supporter. According to the CNSNews story, the Central Intelligence Agency continues to defend an assertion it made that appeared in a May 30, 2005 Justice Department memo to the effect that the use of "...enhanced techniques" of interrogation on Mohammed led to this invaluable information getting into the hands of American intelligence officials which, in turn, saved Los Angeles from a major terrorist attack by Islamic extremists. As reported in the CNSNews report, Mohammed, who was the master-"mind"-if you can call it that-behind the first hijacked-airliner in the 9/11 attack upon New York and Washington D.C., was not cooperative after he was captured by the American military. The American officials had reason to believe, given Mohammad’s position as such a significant leader in the Al Qaeda terrorist organization, that he would have information regarding potential imminent attacks upon Americans. Under the Obama administration edict on waterboarding, this tactic is beneath the dignity of the American people. Under the Bush administration, where-under a limited number of circumstances-it was permitted, the CIA claim, as reported in CNSNews, is that it saved lives of Los Angeles residents. According to the May 30, 2005 memo, which quoted from an August 2, 2004 letter that CIA Acting General Counsel John A. Rizzo had sent to the Justice Department, waterboarding could only be used on a "high value detainee" if the CIA had "credible intelligence" that a terrorist attack was imminent, substantial and credible indicators that the subject has actionable intelligence that can prevent, disrupt or deny the attack, and where other interrogation methods have failed to elicit this information within the perceived time limit for preventing the attack. The CIA memo contends that prior to waterboarding being used Mohammad was not only "...uncooperative but also appeared contemptuous of the will of the American people to defend themselves." However, the CIA contends that after Mohammad was subject to the waterboard technique, he became "...cooperative, providing intelligence that led to the capture of key al Qaeda allies and, eventually, the closing down of an East Asian terrorist cell that had been tasked with carrying out the 9/11-style attack on Los Angeles." Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal is suggesting that President Obama should "...immediately declassify all memos concerning what intelligence was gleaned, and what plots foiled, by the interrogations of high-level al Qaeda detainees in the wake of September 11. It sounds nice when President Obama talks about how certain American values that distinguish us from the terrorists are what allow us to say how proud we are to be Americans. That sounds fine. It is nice to know that President Obama evidently and correctly believes that Americans are morally superior to the Islamic extremists. Here, however, are the relevant questions if this legal issue involving an interrogation technique had ever reached closing arguments in a courtroom: Under what circumstances was waterboarding permitted? Was it only in rare instances where "high value detainees" were believed to possess invaluable information concerning imminent attacks upon Americans? Have there been instances where waterboarding has saved American lives where other techniques were used which were not successful in obtaining information that led to saving Americans? If the answers are that waterboarding was a technique that was used only in extraordinary instances where nothing else was working, and where it was believed that the captured terrorist suspect had information about imminent harm to Americans, and American lives have actually been saved in the past by such techniques, would it not now be reasonable to conclude that in an effort to be and sound reasonable, in an effort to be Americans and not terrorists, we have actually caused serious harm to our goal of fighting terrorism and saving American lives? Let us hope that these questions are simply hypothetical, and that we won’t get definite answers during the remainder of the Obama administration by way of additional 9/11 type attacks. |
CNS News ??? :rotflmao:
-spence |
[QUOTE=spence;683580]You should really try placing quotes in context...
I can understand the tensions that exist, but I think the way to resolve it is, in fact, the way Secretary Powell has proposed, which is to say these are not people who are prisoners of war as that has been defined, but who are entitled to, in our own interests, entitled to be treated in a very humane way and almost consistent with all of the dictates of the Geneva Convention. and they have absolutely been treated in a very humane way considering they act like something far less than human and we have been "ALMOST" consistent with all of the dictates Geneva Convention dictates......unbelieveable... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
-spence |
we don't read the RIGHT news, thats the problem.
|
Quote:
NY Times OK for you? Intel chief: Harsh techniques brought good info Private memo says interrogation methods helped nation in terrorism fight updated 10:21 p.m. ET, Tues., April 21, 2009 WASHINGTON - President Obama’s national intelligence director told colleagues in a private memo last week that the harsh interrogation techniques banned by the White House did produce significant information that helped the nation in its struggle with terrorists. “High value information came from interrogations in which those methods were used and provided a deeper understanding of the al Qa’ida organization that was attacking this country,” Adm. Dennis C. Blair, the intelligence director, wrote in a memo to his staff last Thursday. Admiral Blair sent his memo on the same day the administration publicly released secret Bush administration legal memos authorizing the use of interrogation methods that the Obama White House has deemed to be illegal torture. Among other things, the Bush administration memos revealed that two captured Qaeda operatives were subjected to a form of near-drowning known as waterboarding a total of 266 times. Some parts of memo deleted Admiral Blair’s assessment that the interrogation methods did produce important information was deleted from a condensed version of his memo released to the media last Thursday. Also deleted was a line in which he empathized with his predecessors who originally approved some of the harsh tactics after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. HUH?, wonder why they deleted that????? |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:51 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Copyright 1998-20012 Striped-Bass.com