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Island Ryhno said:the most horrible crimes against humanity since the nazis
I'd say Rwanda, Sudan, Bosnia, Stalin, Mao, the Khmer Rouge (to name a few) were a bit worse than 9/11.
Island Ryhno said:the most horrible crimes against humanity since the nazis
CFL said:A jumper with 22 years experience. You can't expect to make an omlette without breaking a few eggs. I have no doubtly upset the beehive but the thing is, is that most of us have not experienced hardship the likes of the "greatest generation" our parents and grandparents. Therefore they have no idea of what the world is like past Scarbough. heck I've only been to Bosnia and what I came with from that tour was that we are seriously blessed to live where we do. We have it VERY easy. No one in this country has a clue as to the real hardships out there. We are facing a potential cultural cleansing and not many people seem to care as long as Will and Grace is on next week.
But I see no one here defending the prisoners
Could a â Å“little old lady in Switzerlandâ ? who sent a check to an orphanage in Afghanistan be taken into custody if unbeknownst to her some of her donation was passed to al-Qaida terrorists? asked U.S. District Judge Joyce Hens Green.
â Å“She could,â ? replied Deputy Associate Attorney General Brian Boyle. â Å“Someone's intention is clearly not a factor that would disable detention.â ? It would be up to a newly established military review panel to decide whether to believe her and release her.
Leon asked if U.S. courts could review detentions based on evidence from torture conducted by U.S. personnel.
Boyle said torture was against U.S. policy and any allegations of it would be "forwarded through command channels for military discipline."
He added, "I don't think anything remotely like torture has occurred at Guantanamo," but noted that some U.S. soldiers there had been disciplined for misconduct, including a female interrogator who removed her blouse during questioning.
The International Committee of the Red Cross said Tuesday it has given the Bush administration a confidential report critical of U.S. treatment of Guantanamo detainees. The New York Timesreported the Red Cross described the psychological and physical coercion used at Guantanamo as "tantamount to torture."
big bad john said:Might I suggest we take this topic down a notch or two emotionally. It is a very emotional issue. That is not a bad thing.
I'll point out one thing that immediately strikes me with respect to your argument - the Abu Gharaib (and alledged Guantanamo) abuses were not committed by combat soldiers but by rear-area types, and in the case of what is alleged in Guantanamo, includes civilians. To say that combat soldiers develop a hatred for the enemy also rings very false. I've had many members of my family fight in WW2 (on both sides) and the one thing I never, ever heard from them was hatred for the enemy. I would posit that hatred is the last thing you want a combat soldier to feel because it will cause him to commit stupid mistakes. Combat soldiers are not ravening lunatics whose only aim is to kill - at least not in our (western) armies. Once the fight is out of the enemy, the social inhibitions against violence that were suppressed under fire, come back. POW abuse by front line troops has historically been rare enough to make it an exception - and many of those exceptions were committed by ideologically (political or religious) conditioned troops where the normal inhibitions to committing violence on unarmed people have been suppressed (the SS are an example).P Kaye said:I'm not sure how the process works for enemy combatants capture during combat... but what I have read in the media leads me to believe that they are held by the military.
I might suggest that it is a bad idea to allow POWs to be held by soldiers who are in any way linked to the combat. Understandably, soldiers who have a role in fighting will be in a combat mindset, and will be emotionally embroilled in feelings of anger towards the enemy. This, I suspect, could be the source of some of the alleged abuses that we have seen reported. Combat soldiers develop a hatred for their enemy, and when they have an enemy held captive, it may be very difficult to resist the temptation to commit abuses.
Perhaps a policy should be put in place where POWs are IMMEDIATELY transferred to the supervision of specialists who are not directly involved in combat. Perhaps these should be civilian lawyers and political scientists, with a small dedicated armed squad for security. The combat soldiers could be kept completely away from the POWs.
Perhaps this would be difficult to acheive, logistically. And of course there is always going to be a delay between the time the combat soldiers apprehend the POW and the time when they could actually be transferred out.
Does anybody know for certain how the process actually works in practice?
Perhaps these should be civilian lawyers and political scientists, with a small dedicated armed squad for security.
Brad Sallows said:I don't know under what circumstances the 5 Brits were taken prisoner. But, if they were taken in arms, they could still be in detention today if it pleased the US to retain them. I haven't heard that Al Qaeda or any similar organization has offered terms of surrender, or that the US has accepted any such terms.
Wizard of OZ said:DFW2T
That was an excellent post but to bring it in line with the topic you should have appologized for the fact that their son was captured after throwing a grenade that killed Sgt 1st class Christopher J. Speer.
We appologize that you were sent rasied in the world of radical Islam and that you had to attend Bin Ladens terror training camps in Afganistan.
We are sorry that after the death of Christopher J. Speer you were saved by another army medic who saved your *** after you took three rounds.
We are sorry that your family has no remorse for your killing of a US army Medic but now want the Canadian Public on their side to get your release.
We are sorry you had to live in Canada, you could alway go back to living with Osama bin Laden if you don't like the rights and freemdoms your family has here.
i' am sorry but but i find it hard to believe these people want my sympathy. Check the national post "Canada Liable for any Abuse" for where the appoligies of my post come from.