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The "abuses" (that was humiliation, not torture) of prisoners in Iraq may be a good example.
Many prisoners have died during interrogation. The US forces admit to using suffocation and chest compressions as interrogation techniques. Chest compression = doing CPR on a person whose heart is working. That's a basic "no" they teach you in simple first aid. When you do that to someone and they die, it's murder so long as you know it could kill. The infliction of that kind of suffering is torture.
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No "grunt" (they're "lower enlisted", by the way, not "grunts") was under direct supervision from the Commanding Officer. There was no Officer that said, "Private, I order you to strip these prisoners naked and pose for pictures with them!"
I used "grunt" to emphasise the deliberately callous way in which these lower-ranks are being used by their superiors as scapegoats. Torture techniques like the ones I described above have been given approval from the highest levels, but it's always the enlisted men and women who pay the price.
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I by no means condone such behavior, but, A) it's nothing compared to the real torture Saddam put people through; and B) those responsible are being, have been, or will be dealt with accordingly.
Those who're ultimately responsible are getting away with continuing to order the same abuses. Hussein had people tortured and killed; the US army is torturing and killing. Except for scale, there's little difference. You might as well try to say that Hussein wasn't that bad because his crimes were less serious than what the Nazis did.
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As for the "suspects" in Gitmo, they are not being held as enemy combatants, they are being held as terrorists, and are thus exempt from Geneva Code and Due Process laws concerning enemy Prisoners of War.
That's a nonsense. The rules against torture, and the rules dictating basic human rights, apply to all human beings without reservation. They are within the US's jurisdiction (even though Camp X-Ray is on rented land), so the US is guilty of their illegal detention. The cry that "they're not POWs!" doesn't excuse any abuses at all. The Geneva Convention is merely the statute that applies to POWs. There's all the other stuff - ICCPR, etc - that covers how absolutely anyone should be treated.
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Some have been released, proving that it is an issue
Yeah, the ones from US-allied countries (Australia, the UK) are being released as a result of immense pressure from diplomats and from the US's own courts. Virtually all of the prisoners freed have been immediately released by their own countries, because there's no evidence at all to support any terrorism charges.
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but there should be no "time limit" or Statute of Limitations on terrorism.
Why not? These people aren't being held as terrorists, they're "suspected terrorists" or "enemy combatants". They've not been charged with anything. If the US can arbitrarily detain absolutely anyone for indefinite periods of time without giving a reason, then frankly everyone in the world - US citizen or otherwise - is potentially in the poo. Ask yourself this... would you still think you live in a free, fair, peace-loving society if your family was abducted and whisked away to goodness-knows-where, beyond any contact, for an indefinite period and into unknown conditions, simply because someone thought they might know something about a potential terrorist threat?
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As for "the most basic of human rights", unless you're talking about the "rights", or lack thereof, concerning law and punishment, they are being cared for with normal, basic human rights. It's far from a concentration camp. It's not even a POW camp.
How do we know what the standards are? There's been virtually no independent inspection of those facilities. Besides, nothing excuses the large-scale, arbitrary detention of people captured at home or abroad.
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Ah. I apologize, I didn't know that the United States must answer to Nicaragua. The U.S. supported the Contras, which fought against the government of Nicaragua. The government of Nicarague hated the Contras, and hated the United States, even moreso when the United States supported the Contras. This is equivalent to an Aryan claiming that he was beat up by black police officers. A reliable source? Did the Contras use brutal tactics, and did the U.S. support the Contras, yes. Were they targeting civilians for the sake of targeting civilians? Or were they targeting logistics? The Nicaraguan government used tactics that would have made the Contras look like Boy Scouts.
Yes, it's all very well documented. The US legislature passed enactments to provide monetary, strategic and other support to the Contra rebels. Civilian buildings and vessels were targetted by Contra, both of their own volition and under the guidance of their CIA supporters. The aim was to undermine the communist government; destroying vital infrastructure like public buildings and harbours achieves that aim. It also kills plenty of innocents who get in the way. The US has never denied the nature or scope of its paramilitary activities in Central America. It just says that they're OK, because the defeat of Communism was a goal worthy of any sacrifice.
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There is a big difference between a Kamikaze pilot and a suicide bomber.
I was never implying any similarity.[q=Sasquatch]Congratulations on your International Law education. I'm studying Engineering. That must mean that anybody who disagrees with me on a topic concerning engineering--combat, civil, mechanical, or otherwise--is wrong. Because I know engineering.[/q] I was responding to your unwarranted and quite provocative statement:
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(By the way, I'm sure your definition of "torture" and the definition set down by the Geneva Code differ greatly.) Of course, I'm not expecting any unbiased references, if any at all, but...hey, surprise me.
How did you expect me to respond to that? I explained why I'm making the kind of statements I'm making. Explained where and how I acquired the knowledge I'm purporting to use here.
I've had the misfortune of studying a whole slew of human rights abuses, including torture, genocide and mass rape, in a whole lot of different conflicts. Recent abuses by US personnel don't even come close to what others have done, and I'd never suggest they were worse. The problem I have is with the US's repeated attempts to somehow justify or explain away its behaviour, taking the 'moral high ground' while subverting the very rules it (admirably) seeks to promulgate.
You've made one inflammatory statement after another, accusing me of bias and outright lies. I'm trying to be reasoned here, and make a point - albeit a disturbing one that others mightn't like to hear.