A picture of a “water detail,” reportedly taken in May, 1901, in Sual, the Philippines. “It is a terrible torture,” one soldier wrote.
Many Americans were puzzled by the news, in 1902, that United States soldiers were torturing Filipinos with water. The United States, throughout its emergence as a world power, had spoken the language of liberation, rescue, and freedom. This was the language that, when coupled with expanding military and commercial ambitions, had helped launch two very different wars. The first had been in 1898, against Spain, whose remaining empire was crumbling in the face of popular revolts in two of its colonies, Cuba and the Philippines. The brief campaign was pitched to the American public in terms of freedom and national honor (the U.S.S. Maine had blown up mysteriously in Havana Harbor), rather than of sugar and naval bases, and resulted in a formally independent Cuba.
http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/02/25/080225fa_fact_kramer
Thursday, February 21, 2008
The Water Cure: Debating Torture and Counterinsurgency—A Century Ago
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Tuesday, February 12, 2008
U.S. Justice Department 'Cannot' Probe Waterboarding, Officials Say, and Here's Why...This Is What It Looks Like
The attorney general yesterday rejected growing congressional calls for a criminal investigation of the CIA's use of simulated drownings to extract information from its detainees.The remarks reflected a renewed effort by the Bush administration to defend its past approval of the interrogation tactic known as waterboarding, which some lawmakers, human rights experts and international lawyers have described as illegal torture.In case you were wondering, this is what waterboarding looks like:
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[Source: Disinfo.com - Posted by FreeAutoBlogger]
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