Western countries must acknowledge torture is a necessary evil, lawyer says

Western societies have to consider allowing the use of nonlethal torture while interrogating suspects - for instance, when a terrorist act is about to be committed, Harvard University law professor Alan Dershowitz says.

Insisting he is not advocating its use, Dershowitz suggested yesterday to law students at the Université de Montréal that senior judges could be empowered to issue “torture warrants” permitting the limited use of torture in cases of imminent danger.

He predicted nonlethal torture will be used in certain circumstances in such countries as Canada, the U.S. and France.

“I don’t favour the use of torture, but I know it will be used,” Dershowitz said.

Torture will occur even if a country has signed international treaties against it, and even though freedom from torture comes closest to any as a desired universal right, he said.

Dershowitz said he has often cited one example of nondeadly torture: sticking a sterilized needle underneath the fingernail as a way of getting a terrorist suspect to talk.

“Should it (torture) be done secretly, without accountability, or openly? That’s the debate I want to have,” Dershowitz said in a session that drew about 50 students, professors and observers.

"An example is if the United States were to have captured a terrorist 18 months ago who laughed that a nuclear bomb were to go off in 10 hours in New York City and there were to be one million casualties.

“Put aside the moral issue - Is there anyone who does not firmly believe torture would in fact be used in a situation like that?”

Although one student questioned where this would lead, no one challenged his example.

He rejected a suggestion terrorism be viewed in a context of “humiliation.”

“Terrorism is a tactic selected by elite, wealthy leaders and there is only one cause of terrorism in the world, namely its success,” Dershowitz replied.

He agreed ready recruits can be found among people who feel they have no future.

Later, Dershowitz spoke to diplomats at a hotel reception sponsored by B’nai Brith Canada to commemorate the 55th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Last night, he addressed members of the Jewish community at the Beth Israel Beth Aaron Congregation in Côte St. Luc.

American professor calls for torture!

Whose the Real terrorist! So called freedom and democratic fanatics break every law themselves both nationaly and globally now they are wanting to become like the Mubaraks of egypt, Karimov of uzbekistan and Ghaddafi of libya who torture there citzens daily just for looking the wrong way! Bunch of sickos

A bit of a misleading title. As a Law Professor he is bringing up an issue for moral ethical and legal debate. The part you have not highlighted says:

Insisting he is not advocating its use, Dershowitz suggested yesterday to law students at the Université de Montréal that senior judges could be empowered to issue "torture warrants" permitting the limited use of torture in cases of imminent danger.

*"I don't favour the use of torture, but I know it will be used," Dershowitz said. *

Misleading title

Do you need help reading. This American professor is not talking about handing out candy and flowers hes talking but TORTURING people!

Its clear cut i don't know how you are justifying it as an ethical argument!

acceptable only if a western terrorist nations [usa, britan etc] are using torture. they will even accept the deaths of innocent civilians as mistakes but only mistakes. no responsibility for such mistakes.

Alan Dershowitz is one of the most liberal, leftist loving, civil libertarian activist, commy pinko members of the left wing university polluters of young minds you'll find in America.

Maybe before you post a misleading title like you have, you should actually read the article. As Ohio Guy said, the article is clear that he does NOT "call for torture!" He opposes the use of torture. He probably was bashing our Attorney General and the gestapo like tactics used by our Homeland Security Department during his lecture too.

His example is a good one. And his question is even better:

** * "An example is if the United States were to have captured a terrorist 18 months ago who laughed that a nuclear bomb were to go off in 10 hours in New York City and there were to be one million casualties.

"Put aside the moral issue - Is there anyone who does not firmly believe torture would in fact be used in a situation like that?"


Dershowitz apparently would not support and condone torture under those circumstances but he is realistic enough to acknowledge it would probably happen.

I, on the other hand, would support the use of torture under those circumstances (but only the most humane form of torture we could inflict mind you). I think the needle under the fingernails is going a little far but injection of drugs, sleep deprivation, hoods, shackles and no jello for desert would be OK with me.

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by myvoice: *
.....commy pinko members of the left wing university polluters of young minds you'll find in America.

[/QUOTE]

Simmer myvoice.

AK,

He is distinctly not "calling for" torture. He calls it a likely ethical dilemma.

He is posing a logical question, and opening up a debate on a topic. That is indeed what one does in a democracy. The ethical dilemma he poses is one that should take place in the open, in the light of day. It is indeed a classical example of the good of the many outweighing the needs of one, and it is probably the first chapter of any ethics text.

Frankly I don't know how you get so outraged when torture is an every day occurance in virtually every third world nation. You are objecting to a DISCUSSION when the real thing is happening all around you. Aim your outrage elsewhere and try to understand the process of democracy a little better.

If a nuclear weapon was planted in Islamabad and a suspect was in custody with only 10 hours to find the device, what do you think the ISI would do? Think they would have a free and open debate?

Sheesh.

MV : he only said it as an example of a nuclear bomb. your government knew exactly that some people were running around planning something big but they still let them go ahead with it and 911 happened. government knew exactly that these people were affiliated with groups that have no gopod intensions towards USA. but government did nothing. what happened then? why nothing was done to stop them? why they were never arrested and were never subjected to any investigation? its simply bcos USA didn't want to stop them from crashing those planes into WTC. they wanted something BIG to get the ball rolling and they got it in the shape of 911. now they can arrest any innocent person and throw him in jail, denying him any legal help and his basic human rights.

OG : what logical question? he is giving your government more grounds to use for torture. hundreds are rotting in jails without any charges against them but are still subjected to torture. government now can use such pathetic excuses to arrest more and torture more innocent civilians. USA is always known for flawed intelligence. how sure are you that a person subjected to extreme torture will not lie to save his life? this kind of flawed intelligence had cost USA dearly and more dearly to the civilians.

about your ethical reasoning, its right to kill one to save many. living in USA and being an american, you are sure you won't face that day in jail when you'll be subjected to torture or beating or even death. its easy for you to say.

about isb, i don't think they'll go as far as USA to use such pathetic exuses like nuclear devices and WMD to bomb the hell out of other countries. how many nuclear devices and WMD for that matter has USA found by torturing hundreds and by killing thousands? none so far.

My goodness

Its Torture folks but guess what

they giving it the nice name of friendly torture it only hurts a little bit!

give me a break please your not fooling anyone with that argument

You really don't have a clue. This guy doesn't 'call' for it. He 'predicts' it. He probably hates the US as much as you. Stop trying so hard to find fault with the US. This is an American who thinks the US is war mongering, hypocritical country run by right wing zealots. He ought to be your hero. Your hatred blinds you.

Some people are so blind they cannot see the obvious!

He probably hates the US probably is not a factor in this debate!

we talking about definites!

the article is clear he is discussing Torture and he is saying it goes on and it is acceptable

quote once again: "torture warrants" permitting the limited use of torture

in black and white folks!

Oh please people, read the WHOLE article:

"He said he mentions this notion to stimulate debate, rather than to have people believe torture will never be used.

"Should it (torture) be done secretly, without accountability, or openly? That's the debate I want to have," Dershowitz said in a session that drew about 50 students, professors and observers.

Dershowitz said the issue is the subject of a forthcoming book of essays, published by Oxford University Press, that begins with his argument."

He is trying to prompt an open debate, and that is how things should be done. The end product on the debate might be that torture should never be used, or, as he suggests in absolutely dire situations torture may be the lesser of evils. His role is to open the debate and give the rational for the debate. His personal opinion is just that, one mans opinion.

So AK47 answer my question directly. If an unknown terrorist plans an atomic weapon in YOUR home town, and it will kill your mother and your father and all your family, would you endorse non-lethal torture of the suspect to find a bomb that is due to explode in 5 hours, killing millions? Answer the question directly.

(mods help, delete one of these, double posted)

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by Ohioguy: *
Oh please people, read the WHOLE article:

"He said he mentions this notion to stimulate debate, rather than to have people believe torture will never be used.

"Should it (torture) be done secretly, without accountability, or openly? That's the debate I want to have," Dershowitz said in a session that drew about 50 students, professors and observers.

Dershowitz said the issue is the subject of a forthcoming book of essays, published by Oxford University Press, that begins with his argument."

**

He is trying to prompt an open debate, and that is how things should be done. The end product on the debate might be that torture should never be used, or, as he suggests in absolutely dire situations torture may be the lesser of evils. His role is to open the debate and give the rational for the debate. His personal opinion is just that, one mans opinion.

So AK47 answer my question directly. If an unknown terrorist plans an atomic weapon in YOUR home town, and it will kill your mother and your father and all your family, would you endorse non-lethal torture of the suspect to find a bomb that is due to explode in 5 hours, killing millions? Answer the question directly.
**
(mods help, delete one of these, double posted)
[/QUOTE]

a dire and dangerous situation differs from country to country. based on your rational, every country is right in torturing people who they preceive as terrorists, unkown or known. further, if a person is an unknown terrorist, then how come he is in the custody and is subjected to torture? remember like you said, an unknown terrorist, so in that way the guy is innocent until proven guilty or related to some group. that can only be done by torturing him and making him make false confessions.

remember sampson case, the guy who was caught and tortured by saudis. he too was an UNKNOWN terrorist and he did confessed to all the charges that were filed against him. but as soon as he got pardon and released, he bashed the saudis for torturing him and taking a confession out of him through torture. now where are you going to draw the line?

[quote]

I, on the other hand, would support the use of torture under those circumstances (but only the most humane form of torture we could inflict mind you).

[/quote]

MV I am very interested to know what you think "the most humane form of torture" is (tickling the feet? stuffing french fries up the nose? what?) Secondly it has been said repeatedly that information gained as a result of torture is highly questionable since the person being tortured will say anything to make it stop (I am sure you must have heard it since they have been covering this issue on and off for a quite a while?) So would you sill support torture or was it just an off the cuff remark knowing that you or anyone you know or care about would never be the "they" being tortured?

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by mufakkar: *

MV I am very interested to know what you think "the most humane form of torture" is (tickling the feet? stuffing french fries up the nose? what?) Secondly it has been said repeatedly that information gained as a result of torture is highly questionable since the person being tortured will say anything to make it stop (I am sure you must have heard it since they have been covering this issue on and off for a quite a while?) So would you sill support torture or was it just an off the cuff remark knowing that you or anyone you know or care about would never be the "they" being tortured?
[/QUOTE]

Not being a torture expert, I don't know what all is available. I gave some examples in my post: drugs, hooding, sleep deprivation, etc. Your suggestion of french fries up the nose sounds a little too horrible for my tastes.

What you say about reliability of some information given in torture is quite right. The tortured party would ultimately say anything his inquisitors wanted him to say to avoid the continuation of torture. That's why confessions under torture are unreliable and no evidence accumulated during torture would ever be admissible in criminal proceedings.

The debate the emminent Alan D. is starting though has nothing to do with accumkulating evidence for use to prosecute someone. He gave a very distinct example where the objective is to locate a nuclear device ready to cause massive loss of life. The objective would be to find the nuke not to get evidence to present to a jury for future prosecution after the nuke went off. The torturers do not have a predisposed testimony that they are trying to get the torturee to confess to. If the torturee says the device is in a locker in some subway station, they go to the subway station to see if its there. The reliability of the information obtained from torture under these circumstances is likely to be much higher than the reliability of confessions given under torture where the only proof of the conncetion you're looking for is the confession itself.

Alan D is not the first person to pose the ethical dilemna he presented at the lecture. Heck, I have a vague recollection that we in GS debated this topic quite some time ago.

As terrible as it is to think that we are in a world where some circumstance may exist where torture may be ethically/morally excused, I think people who disavow this possibility are living in denial. If god forbid, we become aware that a nuclear device is set to go off somewhere in America and we have the guy who planted the nuke in custody, I could never forgive my government if they did not use EVERY devise at their disposal to find out where the nuke was. It is not acceptable for them to let the bomb explode killing hundreds of thousands of people only to explain to the surviving American people that they just couldn't ethically torture some guy to tell them where it was.

Every other country has my permission to do so under these circumstances as well.

Here is a little more expansive discussion between Ken Roth of Human Rights Watch and Dershowitz.

BLITZER: Alan Dershowitz, a lot of our viewers will be surprised to hear that you think there are right times for torture. Is this one of those moments?

DERSHOWITZ: I don’t think so. This is not the ticking-bomb terrorist case, at least so far as we know. Of course, the difficult question is the chicken-egg question: We won’t know if he is a ticking-bomb terrorist unless he provides us information, and he’s not likely to provide information unless we use certain extreme measures.

My basic point, though, is we should never under any circumstances allow low-level people to administer torture. If torture is going to be administered as a last resort in the ticking-bomb case, to save enormous numbers of lives, it ought to be done openly, with accountability, with approval by the president of the United States or by a Supreme Court justice. I don’t think we’re in that situation in this case.

BLITZER: Well, how do you know …

DERSHOWITZ: So we might be close.

BLITZER: Alan, how do you know he doesn’t have that kind of ticking-bomb information right now, that there’s some plot against New York or Washington that he was involved in and there’s a time sensitivity? If you knew that, if you suspected that, you would say [to] get the president to authorize torture.

DERSHOWITZ: Well, we don’t know, and that’s why [we could use] a torture warrant, which puts a heavy burden on the government to demonstrate by factual evidence the necessity to administer this horrible, horrible technique of torture. I would talk about nonlethal torture, say, a sterilized needle underneath the nail, which would violate the Geneva Accords, but you know, countries all over the world violate the Geneva Accords. They do it secretly and hypothetically, the way the French did it in Algeria. If we ever came close to doing it, and we don’t know whether this is such a case, I think we would want to do it with accountability and openly and not adopt the way of the hypocrite.

BLITZER: All right. Ken, under those kinds of rare, extreme circumstances, does Professor Dershowitz make a good point?

ROTH: He doesn’t. The prohibition on torture is one of the basic, absolute prohibitions that exists in international law. It exists in time of peace as well as in time of war. It exists regardless of the severity of a security threat. And the only other comparable prohibition that I can think of is the prohibition on attacking innocent civilians in time of war or through terrorism. If you’re going to have a torture warrant, why not create a terrorism warrant? Why not go in and allow terrorists to come forward and make their case for why terrorism should be allowed?

DERSHOWITZ: Well, in fact, we’ve done that. Of course, we’ve done that. We have bombed civilian targets during every single one of our wars. We did it in Dresden. We did it in Vietnam notwithstanding these rules. So you know, having laws on the books and breaking them systemically just creates disdain … It’s much better to have rules that we can actually live within. And absolute prohibitions, generally, are not the kind of rules that countries would live within.

I want to ask you a question. Don’t you think if we ever had a ticking-bomb case, regardless of your views or mine, that the CIA would actually either torture themselves or subcontract the job to Jordan, the Philippines or Egypt, who are our favorite countries, to do the torturing for us?

ROTH: OK, there is no moral or legal difference between torturing yourself and subcontracting torture to somebody else. They’re equally absolutely prohibited.

DERSHOWITZ: But we do it.

ROTH: In the case – the fact that sometimes laws are violated does not mean you want to start legitimizing the violation by getting some judge to authorize it. Imagine, you’re always thinking about the U.S. Supreme Court, but any rule you apply to the United States has to be applied around the world. Do you want Chinese judges authorizing torture of say, Muslim dissidents?

DERSHOWITZ: It wouldn’t make any difference. They just torture anyway. It wouldn’t make any difference. They torture now.

ROTH: Once you open the door to torture, once you start legitimizing it in any way, you have broken the absolute taboo. President Bush had it right in his State of the Union address when he was describing various forms of torture by Saddam Hussein and he said, “If this isn’t evil, then evil has no meaning.”

BLITZER: Well, let me interrupt, Ken. Let me ask you about a hypothetical case. Professor Dershowitz talks about it in one of his articles and one of his books. There’s a terrorist attack. A lot of people have just been killed in New York. They capture one of the terrorists, who says, “Guess what, there’s another bomb out there, it is going to kill a lot more, but I’m not telling you where it is.”

ROTH: Yes, that’s the ticking-bomb scenario, which everybody loves to put forward as an excuse for torture. Israel tried that. Under the guise of just looking at the narrow exception of where the ticking-bomb is there and you could save the poor schoolchildren whose bus was about to be exploded some place. They ended up torturing on the theory that – well, it may not be the terrorist, but it’s somebody who knows the terrorist or it’s somebody who might have information leading to the terrorist.

They ended up torturing say 90 percent of the Palestinian security detainees they had until finally the Israeli supreme court had to say this kind of rare exception isn’t working. It’s an exception that’s destroying the rule. We have to understand the United States sets a model for the rest of the world. And if the United States is going to authorize torture in any sense, you can imagine that there are many more unsavory regimes out there that are just dying for the chance to say, “Well, the U.S. is doing it, we’re going to start doing it as well.”

DERSHOWITZ: And I think that we’re much, much better off admitting what we’re doing or not doing it at all. I agree with you, it will much better if we never did it. But if we’re going to do it and subcontract and find ways of circumventing, it’s much better to do what Israel did. They were the only country in the world ever directly to confront the issue, and it led to a supreme court decision, as you say, outlawing torture, and yet Israel has been criticized all over the world for confronting the issue directly. Candor and accountability in a democracy is very important. Hypocrisy has no place.

[quote]

Your suggestion of french fries up the nose sounds a little too horrible for my tastes.

[/quote]

Oh come on, have you never watched "A Fish called Wanda"?

[quote]

The objective would be to find the nuke not to get evidence to present to a jury for future prosecution after the nuke went off. **The torturers do not have a predisposed testimony that they are trying to get the torturee to confess to. **If the torturee says the device is in a locker in some subway station, they go to the subway station to see if its there. The reliability of the information obtained from torture under these circumstances is likely to be much higher than the reliability of confessions given under torture where the only proof of the conncetion you're looking for is the confession itself.

[/quote]

So don't you think the assumption that the torturee will simply cough up the truth is a bit simplistic? Come to think of it the entire scenario is overly simplistic. Security agencies get thier best info from moles. I would charge the head of the security agency that waited until some terrorist laughed about a nuke with direlection of duty. Torture/short term interrogations are simply devices meant to show that the public that the security apparatus is doing something. If the spooks are really doing thier duty, the need for torture should never arise...as the great villians in Bond movies say "Come gentlemen let us not be so crude."

[QUOTE]
*Originally posted by mufakkar: *

So don't you think the assumption that the torturee will simply cough up the truth is a bit simplistic? Come to think of it the entire scenario is overly simplistic. Security agencies get thier best info from moles. I would charge the head of the security agency that waited until some terrorist laughed about a nuke with direlection of duty. Torture/short term interrogations are simply devices meant to show that the public that the security apparatus is doing something. If the spooks are really doing thier duty, the need for torture should never arise...as the great villians in Bond movies say "Come gentlemen let us not be so crude."
[/QUOTE]

I don't think anyone believes someone would "simply cough up the truth." I think the point is that you've got to try anything and everything at your disposal in the event something like that worst case scenario plays out. If it doesn't work, oh well....at least you tried.

And yes, I agree that if that scenario plays out it means that the intelligence agencies were unable to effectively do the job that they are there to do. Wouldn't be the first time. I'd guess the number of critical intelligence failures that have occured over the last 100 years or so is pretty high. Further, at least in our society, I don't think it is possible for intelligence to ever be good enough to thwart all possible terrorist scenarios. Despite all the complaints about how the Patriot Act is destroying our civil liberties, our intelligence agencies will never get the kind of represive/oppressive powers that would enable them to ever get close to 80% effectiveness never mind 100%.

[quote]

Further, at least in our society, I don't think it is possible for intelligence to ever be good enough to thwart all possible terrorist scenarios. Despite all the complaints about how the Patriot Act is destroying our civil liberties, our intelligence agencies will never get the kind of represive/oppressive powers that would enable them to ever get close to 80% effectiveness never mind 100%.

[/quote]

That is precisely why the gestapos of the world are doomed. The Shah of Iran and his secret police are a case in point. The greatest trick of intelligence agents is to convince others that they are not spooks. That is why I think that the Patriot act and its surrounding hype is counter protuctive. Its like a bacteria...as long as it is in its resting state you can get it with almost anything. But once it senses a threat, it forms a cyst and then you can'y do anything.

The US professor is actually talking about regulating the use of torture, instead of it being "somewhere there" and its use be decided arbitrarily by zealous intelligence agencies.

The issue is slightly more gray, than the black and white opinion expressed by the topic starter and some other fellows.

It becomes even more murky when you know that most middle eastern countries (arguably muslim people, though not Islamic governments (sic)) and even Pakistan and other countries have security forces who routinely deploy worse torture methods even for petty crimes (let alone terrorism suspects). The courts system either turns a blind eye or only kicks into affect if some one actually dies in detention.

All that is tertiary data. Not the core of the argument. Point being that through out history, there is a cost-benefit balance between torture and human rights. A dead person loses a very critical human right, which is to live. So the intelligence agencies frequently consider it ok to trample over the right of a detainee for no torture, if they feel it will save other human lives. Yes, its questionable, yes its discussable. But its a matter of fact. I believe, not only US/Canada/Europe need to get a better handle on this sensitive and abhorent issue, but also all other civilized nations too. Whats the line in the sand? Who approves it? What methods are being use? And why?

There are no easy answers.