Even if you’re not a fan of Christopher Hitchens, you’ve got to respect someone who volunteers to be tortured for the sake of a story. As Hitchens relates this week in Vanity Fair, with accompanying video, he ventured to a secret location “deep in the hill country of western North Carolina” to discover “as nearly as possible what real waterboarding might be like.”
The question, of course, is whether waterboarding — a sort of controlled drowning that the United States admits to having used on al-Qaeda suspects — really amounts to torture, or is just what the Bush administration calls an “enhanced interrogation technique”.
Late last year, Hitchens argued in Slate that there are techniques of “extreme interrogation” and techniques of “outright torture” and that waterboarding is the former, notes Jon Henley in The Guardian. So the writer’s incensed critics challenged Hitchens to try it for himself. Which, amazingly, he did.
Hitchens’s verdict is unequivocal: “If waterboarding does not constitute torture, then there is no such thing as torture.
As luck would have it, Hitchens’s report coincided with the revelation by the New York Times of just where the administration has been getting its “advanced techniques” from. A chart used for a class in interrogation at Guantanamo Bay in 2002 was found to have been copied verbatim from a 1957 study of Chinese techniques used in Korea.
All that had changed was the omission of the title: Communist Coercive Methods for Eliciting Individual Compliance.
The Times had already revealed back in 2005 how what started out as a study of torture for defensive purposes — where Americans, in Hitchens’s words, “were introduced to the sorts of barbarism that they might expect to meet at the hands of a lawless foe who disregarded the Geneva Conventions” — was transformed into a set of techniques for Americans to use, oblivious to the fact that the communists were not even trying to get decent intelligence but simply to break the will of prisoners.
There has been deafening silence on the subject from the Bush administration’s usual supporters — including presidential candidate John McCain, who was himself tortured by the communists as a prisoner of war in Vietnam. After initially making a brave stand in Congress against the administration’s abuses, McCain later gave in and agreed to legislation that permitted “enhanced interrogation” to continue. Only last month he attacked the Supreme Court for allowing Guantanamo prisoners to challenge their detention in the courts.
Andrew Sullivan put his finger on it:
How is it possible to know that everything John McCain once said on videotape for the enemy was false, because it was coerced, and yet assert that everything we torture out of terror suspects using exactly the same techniques, is true? …
Nothing more accurately exposes the classic moral error of the Bush administration and its enablers in war crimes. If the enemy tortures, it defines their moral evil and all intelligence gleaned from such coercion is self-evidently false propaganda. If we do it, it isn’t wrong, and it leads to good intelligence.
Got that? And these people have the gall to describe their ideological opponents as moral relativists.
Yes Lucy but Hitchens should stay of the turps for a while. He was a vocal advocate for the illegal Iraq Invasion. and therefore one of those responsible for all that happened after . I’m surprised he could actually feel anything in any torture experiment with the soothing effects of alcohol in his veins. Torture isn’t just about the physical deeds-it’s about the fact that a person’s mind is driven crazy as they are powerless. Hitchen’s experiment is bogus-whatever he believes about it.
Miranda, um, did you read Hitchens’ account, or even, dare I ask, the above article? He’s not dismissing it lightly. Look, Hitchens can be really painful, I agree, but in this instance he’s displayed a certain amount of physical as well as moral courage, the former in subjecting to water-boarding in the first place and the latter in repudiating the waterboarding-is-not-torture maxim of his new neocon bedfellows. That’s nothing to sneeze at.
Yes-but Hitchens could leave at any time couldn’t he ?, or ask his torturers to stop. I propose he vist Gitmo and stay in a cell there for 5 years and then give us a report and kill 2 birds with stone-spare us from Hitchen’s rantings and give him a real dose of what he dismisses so lightly.
lucy idid read the article a mild condemnation of tourture wapped in a pile of sculch about our plucky men in the field fighting for freedom. apalling.
I’ve grown to see Hitchens as an upmarket, intelligent version of that annoying lightweight Derryn Hinch whose mantra has always been ” do anything, and I mean anything, neccesary to keep your name in the headlines”.
Therefore, Hitchen’s opinions are in effect worthless ‘cos as he flip flops from Left to Right he’s going to be in agreement with approx 50% of the total audience at all times., while infuriating the other 50% in turn. Cynical, self serving, but very profitable journalism at its best
Hitchens is an empty vessel who writes very readable Vanity Fair style copy…nothing more, nothing less.
To overcome Hitchens & his low brow Aussie equivalents (F S Ackerman, ‘ Dizzy ‘ Devine et ‘ Stockholm ‘ Janet ) simply never mention them to anyone again .