My Lai Or Yours? There are several good
reasons why a society such as ours might eschew endorsement of the use of
torture. It is notoriously
poor at providing accurate information. It irreparably damages our reputation as a
force for civilization. It
invites similar retribution against our own people.
But the best reason we should renounce torture is that it
unfits our torturers to return to society. We ask our police,
soldiers, and spies to test the bounds of decency and morality in the name of
duty, and we are only partially successful at helping them reconcile their
acts with their values. We are no better at assimilating war criminals,
nor should we aspire to be.
Unfortunately, the revelations coming out of Abu Ghraib
wont have the effect Bush opponents are hoping for. Rumsfeld
wont resign, and even if he did, it wouldnt matter; the policies
that abetted these crimes wont change without many more
heads rolling. More importantly, Bush wont take much political
damage. Despite all the indignation and rending of garments, at the
end of the day the only voters who have been permanently repulsed by
these crimes are people who werent going to vote for Bush anyway.
Bushs supporters have already condoned such "collateral
damage" as the deaths of hundreds of innocent Iraqi civilians; why would they
go wobbly over a few Mapplethorpe ripoffs?
Im reminded of the West Wing episode
where a Middle Eastern ambassador implies that exposing the Presidents role
in the assassination of an Arab politician would be politically embarrassing for
the President. Leo replies:
You think the Presidents
afraid that if he admitted complicity in Shareefs death, he would lose
votes in this country? To sweep all fifty states, the President would only need to
do two thingsblow the Sultans brains out in Times Square, then walk
across the street to Nathans and buy a hot dog. |
[The behavior of the Abu Ghraib
guards] deserves the apology that [Secretary Rumsfeld has] given today and that have
been given by others in high positions in our government and our military. I cannot
help but say, however, that those who were responsible for killing 3,000 Americans on
September 11th, 2001, never apologized. |
People in Iraq must understand that I view those
practices as abhorrent. They must also understand that what took place in that prison
does not represent the America that I know. |