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#11
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CWO4 Dave Mann wrote:
Charlie wrote: Here's the rub. What do you do with an enemy who is intentionally targeting innocent civilians? Such as al quaida. If you have an enemy combatant in custody, and you believe that said enemy combatant has information regarding impending attacks on said civilian targets, what do you do? As an American citizen, I want my government to do *anything* it takes to extract that information from the enemy combatant, who, by the way, by not wearing the uniform and fighting under the banner of a country, does not qualify for protection under the Geneva Convention. While the principles of not resorting to torture are noble to be sure, I am *not* willing to sacrifice the lives of my family and myself to uphold that lofty principle. In conflict after conflict, from Bataan to Hanoi to Somalia to Iraq, our enemy has proven that they have not the slightest hesitation in torturing our soldiers - our high standards not withstanding. So the argument that we need to take the high road to prevent future mistreatment of our soldiers falls flat under the weight of the facts. Just the opinion of one American civilian who has the highest respect and gratitude for the service of our fighting men and women, and wants to give them the benefit of every tool imaginable to protect us. Charlie Gentlemen and Ladies: The US military has always (at least in my service since 1961) completely rejected torture and other physical means of coercion. Now just because officially certain things are not permitted, didn't mean that torture has not taken place. The Abu Ghrab and other related incidents are examples. I personally saw torture when I was in Vietnam, torture at the hands of South Korean MI personnel handling North Vietnamese Army POW's. It was abhorrent to me then as the memory of it is now. You will ask why I didn't attempt to stop the torture, and I will answer because I was weak-willed at that time and turned my back, departing the area, in essence putting my blind eye to the telescope. Where arguments about killing or targeting civilians vis a vis military personnel fall down is in warfare which involves civilians who are exposed to that war. The bombings of Dresden and Tokyo are perfect examples where the civilian populace was specifically targeted by US and British military forces. There were monumental numbers of casualties among the "innocent" civilians. Of course, at that time, the policy of the Allies was that anyone who supported a war against the allies was not innocent but compliant. In the cases of formally recognized military powers warring against each other, practically all organized military and nations recognize the Geneva Conventions or at least some semblance of those conventions. Of course, the oriental nations, with the very different philosophy about prisoners of war and about "treatment" flies in the face of treatment of POW's by civilized nations. Excellent examples of this include the Japanese during WW2, the North Koreans and Chinese during the Korean War and, of course, the Vietnamese. The Vietnamese, specifically the communist Viets held an all time record on butchery and brutality. But, remember that culture is what drives people to do what they do. The Oriental culture is a brutal one which has a callous disregard for human life. There can be no debate upon that subject since it has been proven over and gain. Members of the Middle Eastern culture, specifically those who have Surrendered to al-Islam (The Muslim), also view treatment of people through a completely different "lens" than do Occidentals or even Orientals of the Chinese subcontinent. In the case of the case of the Muslim, the well-being, including lives, of non-Muslim (infidels and pagans) is held to a degree which is lower than that of the female. The female is held "one step down" from that of the Muslim male. Accordingly, the infidel and/or pagan is not considered a whole human being in the eyes of various Islamic dogma. They are certain non-Muslim who are protected by rules set forth in the Holy Koran .. the so-called "People of the Book". People of the Book include some Middle-Eastern Christian sects which exist to this day in Muslim countries and which are lauded for their protection of the Prophet Mohammad (Blessings and All Grace Upon Him). So, when a non-Muslim is captured or taken hostage, he or she can be treated the same as a dog or other non-sentient animal and slaughtered if necessary. This is the common thought behind the killings of hostages including beheading and shootings. As difficult as it is for Westerners to accept it, the homicide of hostages is as common to the Middle East as the killing of "surrendered and dishonored enemy" in the hands of the Japanese of World War Two. Religious or cultural beliefs in both cases, you see. This is an intense and complex situation. There is no way that it can be accepted or even understood in side the frames of reference which we Westerners have from early childhood. We can use all of the usual arguments such as "what if a terrorist has an A Bomb planted and we have to torture him" ... all the way to "well what if it were your child held hostage" .. putting the argument on a personal and direct level versus generalities. The argument that we as "civilized countries" should never torture fails to take into consideration that no people or country should torture. We always manage to brand Muslim or Japanese or Vietnamese or Cambodians as barbaric savages -- disregarding their own thousand years of culture. That is the easy path, make out your enemy to be a savage and then you can do anything you want to him. Where does this philosophy take us? Back to the original question "To torture or not to torture". People who torture should be prepared to suffer the consequences of their violation of regulations. It is as simple as that. Those who have been punished after the Abu Ghrab fiasco, deserved what they received in punishment and in my opinion, the punishment skipped over a whole lot of other culpable people of all ranks and services. What if the regulations change? What if the rules are rewritten and officially published to say that a certain type of torture is acceptable whilst others are still OK? This is the Water-boarding versus Bright Lights theory (argument actually). Is subjecting a prisoner to high intensity flood lights 24 hours per day while strapped to a chair, torture .. or simply "harassment". Is strapping the same to an ironing board type contraption and doing a see-saw with him into a source of water to emulate drowning torture or only "physical discomfort"? And if your answer -- as an interrogator -- is that these are "Tortures" then you are honor and duty bound to refuse any order to comply with conduct of that torture. A soldier will never get into trouble for refusing an unlawful order. That, by the way, was the mistake that many made at Abu Ghrab, they didn't think about their actions, took the words or orders from someone above them, and rarely refused to act improperly. Add that mix to the Lynndie England types and her inbred trailer trash associates, and we had what we had there .. And I am including Generals Karpinsky and Fast in that description of trailer trash idiots, too. I am waiting for an answer: To torture or not to torture ... That is the question. ---------------------------------- Extract from a recent classroom lecture by the author; Some of my military career was spent conducting interrogations for Military Intelligence purposes. I am at this time a visiting "professor" at the University of Military Intelligence at Ft Huachuca, AZ, where the Department of Defense has combined efforts to train ALL counterintelligence personnel (including interrogation specialists) in the proper ways and means to extract information from prisoners. (c) 2007 by David E. Mann, PhD(Hist) how about: do unto others as they do unto us? at least it's biblical... %-) redc1c4, everyone in the chain @ Abu Ghrab should have fried. top to bottom. -- "Enlisted men are stupid, but extremely cunning and sly, and bear considerable watching." Army Officer's Guide |
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On Sat, 03 Nov 2007 00:49:25 -0800, redc1c4 wrote:
CWO4 Dave Mann wrote: Charlie wrote: Here's the rub. What do you do with an enemy who is intentionally targeting innocent civilians? Such as al quaida. If you have an enemy combatant in custody, and you believe that said enemy combatant has information regarding impending attacks on said civilian targets, what do you do? As an American citizen, I want my government to do *anything* it takes to extract that information from the enemy combatant, who, by the way, by not wearing the uniform and fighting under the banner of a country, does not qualify for protection under the Geneva Convention. While the principles of not resorting to torture are noble to be sure, I am *not* willing to sacrifice the lives of my family and myself to uphold that lofty principle. In conflict after conflict, from Bataan to Hanoi to Somalia to Iraq, our enemy has proven that they have not the slightest hesitation in torturing our soldiers - our high standards not withstanding. So the argument that we need to take the high road to prevent future mistreatment of our soldiers falls flat under the weight of the facts. Just the opinion of one American civilian who has the highest respect and gratitude for the service of our fighting men and women, and wants to give them the benefit of every tool imaginable to protect us. Charlie Gentlemen and Ladies: The US military has always (at least in my service since 1961) completely rejected torture and other physical means of coercion. Now just because officially certain things are not permitted, didn't mean that torture has not taken place. The Abu Ghrab and other related incidents are examples. I personally saw torture when I was in Vietnam, torture at the hands of South Korean MI personnel handling North Vietnamese Army POW's. It was abhorrent to me then as the memory of it is now. You will ask why I didn't attempt to stop the torture, and I will answer because I was weak-willed at that time and turned my back, departing the area, in essence putting my blind eye to the telescope. Where arguments about killing or targeting civilians vis a vis military personnel fall down is in warfare which involves civilians who are exposed to that war. The bombings of Dresden and Tokyo are perfect examples where the civilian populace was specifically targeted by US and British military forces. There were monumental numbers of casualties among the "innocent" civilians. Of course, at that time, the policy of the Allies was that anyone who supported a war against the allies was not innocent but compliant. In the cases of formally recognized military powers warring against each other, practically all organized military and nations recognize the Geneva Conventions or at least some semblance of those conventions. Of course, the oriental nations, with the very different philosophy about prisoners of war and about "treatment" flies in the face of treatment of POW's by civilized nations. Excellent examples of this include the Japanese during WW2, the North Koreans and Chinese during the Korean War and, of course, the Vietnamese. The Vietnamese, specifically the communist Viets held an all time record on butchery and brutality. But, remember that culture is what drives people to do what they do. The Oriental culture is a brutal one which has a callous disregard for human life. There can be no debate upon that subject since it has been proven over and gain. Members of the Middle Eastern culture, specifically those who have Surrendered to al-Islam (The Muslim), also view treatment of people through a completely different "lens" than do Occidentals or even Orientals of the Chinese subcontinent. In the case of the case of the Muslim, the well-being, including lives, of non-Muslim (infidels and pagans) is held to a degree which is lower than that of the female. The female is held "one step down" from that of the Muslim male. Accordingly, the infidel and/or pagan is not considered a whole human being in the eyes of various Islamic dogma. They are certain non-Muslim who are protected by rules set forth in the Holy Koran .. the so-called "People of the Book". People of the Book include some Middle-Eastern Christian sects which exist to this day in Muslim countries and which are lauded for their protection of the Prophet Mohammad (Blessings and All Grace Upon Him). So, when a non-Muslim is captured or taken hostage, he or she can be treated the same as a dog or other non-sentient animal and slaughtered if necessary. This is the common thought behind the killings of hostages including beheading and shootings. As difficult as it is for Westerners to accept it, the homicide of hostages is as common to the Middle East as the killing of "surrendered and dishonored enemy" in the hands of the Japanese of World War Two. Religious or cultural beliefs in both cases, you see. This is an intense and complex situation. There is no way that it can be accepted or even understood in side the frames of reference which we Westerners have from early childhood. We can use all of the usual arguments such as "what if a terrorist has an A Bomb planted and we have to torture him" ... all the way to "well what if it were your child held hostage" .. putting the argument on a personal and direct level versus generalities. The argument that we as "civilized countries" should never torture fails to take into consideration that no people or country should torture. We always manage to brand Muslim or Japanese or Vietnamese or Cambodians as barbaric savages -- disregarding their own thousand years of culture. That is the easy path, make out your enemy to be a savage and then you can do anything you want to him. Where does this philosophy take us? Back to the original question "To torture or not to torture". People who torture should be prepared to suffer the consequences of their violation of regulations. It is as simple as that. Those who have been punished after the Abu Ghrab fiasco, deserved what they received in punishment and in my opinion, the punishment skipped over a whole lot of other culpable people of all ranks and services. What if the regulations change? What if the rules are rewritten and officially published to say that a certain type of torture is acceptable whilst others are still OK? This is the Water-boarding versus Bright Lights theory (argument actually). Is subjecting a prisoner to high intensity flood lights 24 hours per day while strapped to a chair, torture .. or simply "harassment". Is strapping the same to an ironing board type contraption and doing a see-saw with him into a source of water to emulate drowning torture or only "physical discomfort"? And if your answer -- as an interrogator -- is that these are "Tortures" then you are honor and duty bound to refuse any order to comply with conduct of that torture. A soldier will never get into trouble for refusing an unlawful order. That, by the way, was the mistake that many made at Abu Ghrab, they didn't think about their actions, took the words or orders from someone above them, and rarely refused to act improperly. Add that mix to the Lynndie England types and her inbred trailer trash associates, and we had what we had there .. And I am including Generals Karpinsky and Fast in that description of trailer trash idiots, too. I am waiting for an answer: To torture or not to torture ... That is the question. ---------------------------------- Extract from a recent classroom lecture by the author; Some of my military career was spent conducting interrogations for Military Intelligence purposes. I am at this time a visiting "professor" at the University of Military Intelligence at Ft Huachuca, AZ, where the Department of Defense has combined efforts to train ALL counterintelligence personnel (including interrogation specialists) in the proper ways and means to extract information from prisoners. (c) 2007 by David E. Mann, PhD(Hist) how about: do unto others as they do unto us? at least it's biblical... %-) Perhaps you are being facetious, but it is really not biblical at all. That is known as a reversal of what is called the "Ethic of Reciprocity," aka The Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. Even more simplistically, "treat others as you would like to be treated." Quite different. The first appearance in English was in 1477, citing a quotation from Socrates (470 BC-399 BC): "Do to others as thou wouldst they should do to thee, and do to none other but as thou wouldst be done to." 'The Golden Rule' is virtually universal. To see equivalent versions of the Golden Rule in 21 world religions, check out: http://www.religioustolerance.org/reciproc.htm SW redc1c4, everyone in the chain @ Abu Ghrab should have fried. top to bottom. -- The quality of our thoughts is bordered on all sides by our facility with language. -J. Michael Straczynski, author (b.1954) |
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CWO4 Dave Mann wrote in
: To read this: of the Prophet Mohammad (Blessings and All Grace Upon Him). ....followed by this: So, when a non-Muslim is captured or taken hostage, he or she can be treated the same as a dog or other non-sentient animal and slaughtered if necessary. This is the common thought behind the killings of hostages including beheading and shootings. ....makes me want to puke. If those are in fact the teachings of Mohammad, then may nothing but pain and death be upon his satanic ass and his pig ******* sycophants... |
#14
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"NO Political, social, or religious discussions of ANY sort..."
Wise words indeed. Of course, they're not mine - I'm just quoting them. They're in the FAQ for this group. Or doesn't the FAQ apply any more? Anyone interested in seeing the full FAQ will find it at: http://www.photogshangar.com/GuideforABPA.htm http://www.aerophotointernational.com/guide.htm -- |
#15
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Bob Harrington wrote:
CWO4 Dave Mann wrote in : To read this: of the Prophet Mohammad (Blessings and All Grace Upon Him). ...followed by this: So, when a non-Muslim is captured or taken hostage, he or she can be treated the same as a dog or other non-sentient animal and slaughtered if necessary. This is the common thought behind the killings of hostages including beheading and shootings. ...makes me want to puke. If those are in fact the teachings of Mohammad, then may nothing but pain and death be upon his satanic ass and his pig ******* sycophants... I know what you mean and how you feel. Like all religious writings in foreign languages, statements are changed, distorted, or don't read true as the original. The Holy Koran is not alone in this; I have read source documents of the Holy Bible in the Greek and Latin translations and when comparing those to my own copy of the Holy Bible which I take with me each Wednesday night and Sunday morning ... let's just say that I keep my own counsel when a member of our Bible study groups and usually do not try to make up minds which are already made up. People believe what they wish to believe. Certainly culture and emotion drives any religious interpretation. Nothing is more emotional than a group of religious zealots who have been stirred up by a rabble rouser. John Brown comes to mind when I write this, although I can't condemn his goals. Look at the various religions and their sects, and you will find wack-jobs (OK, not a scientific term but it works for me) every place. The Christians, particularly the Southern Baptists, in which faith I was raised, educated and still belong certainly produced their fair share of extremists, specifically the Klu Klux Klan, the Snake Handlers, and the anti-Integration movement of the 1950's 60's. Now as to the Muslim: Americans mostly are tolerant people, or rather a tolerant culture, or more specifically, we own the patent on cultural tolerance and sensitivity. This, of course, is a relatively modern event considering the Irish, Poles, Jews, Catholics, Negroes, Chinese, Japanese, Atheists, Animists (have I missed anyone?) who have been persecuted in one way or another here in the USA. I would point you towards your local Register of Deeds office where you may ask to see some deeds to properties dated back in the 1940's; I am sure you know that there were "Restrictive Covenants" on almost all land and real estate which discriminated against anyone not of Anglo-Saxon Protestant origin. My point is not to take America to task .. we have taken ourselves to task on the issue of Tolerance many times; sometimes we have come up wanting, but mostly our tolerance beams forth as if a bright light in the darkness of other countries. If you want examples, I can give them, but without demonizing a particular country, I would point out that if you have a "lower class accent" or if you are a Catholic versus a Protestant, or if you are a member of the State Church but also a practicing Scientologist or Christian Scientist, or an avowed Agnostic, you will hear and see the consequences of your choice. But, back to those who have Surrendered to al-Islam: The Muslim are a multi-ethnic group; it is a religion which is supposed to be "all-inclusive" In other words, if you Surrender, your fellow Muslim are not permitted by their faith to discriminate or even act or treat you differently. I recommend, however, that you read accounts by some Caucasian Americans who went on the pilgrimage to Mecca. You will find that they had some "interesting" conversations with non-American English speakers. They were universally viewed with suspicion; not ostracized, but it wasn't until they had done the proper obeisances required of Pilgrims, that they began to be accepted. All of this behavior tells me that the Islamic world has the same problems with religious tolerance within their own ranks as do other religions. Here, if you are a Catholic, go to your local Pentecostal Church for a service -- this is not to say that this is the only place you would be observed as a "stranger", (witness the furor in Israel when African Jews who came to Israel were denounced by some Jewish religious leaders -- was that because they didn't fit the stereotype of an Eastern European white person or that among Jews there are great divides among the various sects of Judaism?). You get my drift, I am sure. Personally I think it would be a hoot to sit in the front pew and do the usual Catholic genuflections and so forth, but I digress. The Middle Eastern culture is just as violent and as barbaric as other cultures. We Westerners have just had the benefit of no deserts and no camels to tame, nor have we a nomadic culture (unless you count the Roma or Traveling People which are pretty much marginalized in the USA). Nomadic cultures are, a priori, violent and judgmental; they are closed societies of extended families with ties only to other strong families with which their war and peace histories reach back hundreds of years in competition for the same space of desert, steppes, mountains or valleys. Muslims at this juncture of time in the same place as were the Kaiser's Huns in WWI, the "Japs" and "Krauts" of WW2, the "Gooks: of the Korean War, and the "Slopes" and "Dinks" of the Vietnam war. We call them "Hajji's", "Camel Jockeys", "Rag Heads" .. all with the view of depersonalizing the process of war. The Muslim view us as "pagans", "infidels", "the great shaitan", and host of other monikers, likewise to depersonalize us. This coupled with the fact that most Muslim have never lived or even visited the USA, have never known an American (of any color, creed or ethnic background), has created an extremely intolerant and Zealous culture of hatred. Remember that most Muslim in Third and Fourth World countries are only a generation removed from the oxen, bullock, camel and influence of the Gen'ni of the sands. When such cultures are taken over into foment by nut-cases such as the present Fuhrer of Iran, the only outcome is disaster. There is no way to agreeably cope with someone who is driven by an insane desire to die in a glorious manner for his or her god. I can only point you back to the origins of the Kamikazi by example. And the Japanese youth who flew their Baka model guided bombs into their enemy's ships off the coast of Okinawa, they were likewise whipped to a religious fervor by zealotry. Finally, I will tell you that having been a soldier for most of my adult life, and have spoken at length to our oldest son who served three tours of duty in Iraq, I believe in my heart that the American spirit will prevail no matter what. America is the only nation of peoples in the world where a penniless immigrant can arrive via the Port of New York, begin driving a taxi the next week and send his children to Columbia University to become professionals, thus insuring that that imiigrant's successor generation will become prosperous integrated citizens of the greatest Republic this world has ever produced. (c) 2007 by David E. Mann, PhD(Hist) Part of my lecture series to future intelligence officers given April 2007. |
#16
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Netko wrote:
"NO Political, social, or religious discussions of ANY sort..." Wise words indeed. Of course, they're not mine - I'm just quoting them. They're in the FAQ for this group. Or doesn't the FAQ apply any more? Anyone interested in seeing the full FAQ will find it at: http://www.photogshangar.com/GuideforABPA.htm http://www.aerophotointernational.com/guide.htm Of course the FAQ still applies. This thread is a momentary aberration and will hopefully cease. I have made my last post to the thread. Here, have a picture. Regards, Dave |
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