rayboyusmc
Senior Member
I love the words she uses: "Fine legal points." The Geneva Convention is quaint and anything short of organ failure or death is not torture.
Destroy any credibility we had for a moral stance and for what? Torture is used to get the information you want, not necessarily what is true. Not only did they throw out the baby with the bathwater, but then they waterboarded the little bastard.
How many dictators and other lying politicians have used this same argument to justify whatever they wanted to do?
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080523/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/rice_waterboarding
Destroy any credibility we had for a moral stance and for what? Torture is used to get the information you want, not necessarily what is true. Not only did they throw out the baby with the bathwater, but then they waterboarded the little bastard.
How many dictators and other lying politicians have used this same argument to justify whatever they wanted to do?
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. - Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Thursday defended tough interrogation techniques for terrorism suspects approved by the Bush administration in the wake of 9/11, saying they were necessary to protect America from new attacks.
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In her most extensive public comments about how the administration dealt with detainee interrogations in the aftermath of Sept. 11, 2001, and the anthrax attacks that followed, Rice insisted the methods of questioning complied with both U.S. law and treaty obligations.
But she acknowledged that those rules had since changed and that the United States was a "different place" then, adding that the administration's top priority at the time had been preventing new attacks and not necessarily observing fine legal points.
"The fact is that after Sept. 11, whatever was legal in the face of not just the attacks of Sept. 11, but the anthrax attacks that happened, we were in an environment in which saving America from the next attack was paramount," Rice said.
"But even in that environment, President Bush made clear that we were going to live up to our obligations at home and to our treaty obligations abroad," she told an audience at the headquarters of Google Inc.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080523/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/rice_waterboarding