Another Torture Victim

From the WaPo:

The lead interrogator at the DIF had given me specific instructions: I was to deprive the detainee of sleep during my 12-hour shift by opening his cell every hour, forcing him to stand in a corner and stripping him of his clothes. Three years later the tables have turned. It is rare that I sleep through the night without a visit from this man. His memory harasses me as I once harassed him.

Despite my best efforts, I cannot ignore the mistakes I made at the interrogation facility in Fallujah. I failed to disobey a meritless order, I failed to protect a prisoner in my custody, and I failed to uphold the standards of human decency. Instead, I intimidated, degraded and humiliated a man who could not defend himself. I compromised my values. I will never forgive myself.

American authorities continue to insist that the abuse of Iraqi prisoners at Abu Ghraib was an isolated incident in an otherwise well-run detention system. That insistence, however, stands in sharp contrast to my own experiences as an interrogator in Iraq. I watched as detainees were forced to stand naked all night, shivering in their cold cells and pleading with their captors for help. Others were subjected to long periods of isolation in pitch-black rooms. Food and sleep deprivation were common, along with a variety of physical abuse, including punching and kicking. Aggressive, and in many ways abusive, techniques were used daily in Iraq, all in the name of acquiring the intelligence necessary to bring an end to the insurgency. The violence raging there today is evidence that those tactics never worked. My memories are evidence that those tactics were terribly wrong.

C’mon, Jonah, C’mon, Steyn. C’mon, JPod. Have a good laugh. It’s fucking hilarious, isn’t it?

Faith in Faith

Obamajeffhaynesafp

A reader writes:

As a faithless former altar boy, I love your colloquy with Sam Harris. I think it will be a colloquy without resolution, however, as trying to rationally describe the mystery of faith is like trying to unzip fog. In fact, when the expression of faith becomes codified in a liturgy it becomes leaden, earthbound, and encourages rote recitation. It dies a little. Nothing creeps me out like hearing the thoughtless, unfeeling droning of the Nicene Creed at Mass. Beautiful words, rendered dead. I did it myself without thinking for years, until I began to feel like some kind of body-snatched cultist. Like I said, I was once a pious little altar boy, but I no longer believe. But here’s the thing: I find myself living in the limbo of not believing in God, but rather having a fervent belief in faith. I deeply envy faith. Funny world, huh? And no place in the world offers me the solace of a semi-darkened, stain-glassed cathedral, with statuary of saints and a hint of incense.

I was raised to believe that we must believe these things because they have inherent power and meaning, and that is why I eventually fell away, because my faith was too weak to stand up to the challenges of the rational world. What I now believe is the obverse: that because we believe in these things they take on a very real power and meaning. And no less powerful or meaningful than what I believed as a child. The Obama quote you cited yesterday afternoon really resonated with me for that reason, as he entered into his life of faith by choice, and not by revelation.

(Photo: Barack Obama by Jeff Haynes/AFP.)

Friendly Fire

It happens in wartime; it’s tragic; it’s embarrassing. But why did the Pentagon have to lie about it? It’s the lying that undermines alliances, not the incidents. The Telegraph rightly vents here:

It is the Pentagon’s resistance to assisting in L/Cpl Hull’s inquest that is the most disturbing aspect of the case. As the United States’ most loyal ally, frankly we deserve better. The Ministry of Defence has presented a feeble spectacle, wringing its hands but unwilling to press the issue with Washington. Then, out of the blue, the video is leaked to a Labour-supporting tabloid (which, to its credit, defied Pentagon threats and published it). If it proves to be the Government that leaked it in an attempt to bounce Washington into action, what a depressing reflection that is on New Labour’s methods – and our alleged special relationship with Washington.

Clive Davis notices similar spluttering at the conservative Spectator:

There is little grasp in Washington of the resentment felt in this country by people who are instinctively pro-American but also rightly reluctant for Britain to be treated as the 51st State, a ploddingly dependable Delaware off the coast of mainland Europe … Each time America treats its most trusted ally in this way, the harder it becomes for Atlanticists to take a stand against those who, in increasing numbers, would like to see Britain put some distance between itself and the US.

Bush and Cheney have managed to lose even the British Tories. And they hope to win over the world’s Muslims?

Email of the Day

A reader writes:

Welcome to 2004! Your rate of catching up to reality has been increasing. Information has a way of doing that. I will over-look the fact that you called Joseph Wilson a two-bit, irrelevant jerk and a political bug. After all you were just articulating what the administration thought of him and not what you think, right? Good. No, the point I want to make is that you are presenting a false choice: Cheney is, in fact, both arrogant and scared. He was arrogant in thinking that he could use the resources of the most powerful nation on Earth to pursue a strategy of global dominance in petroleum production by trumping up a false story of an imminent Iraqi threat and he then became scared that the deception would be discovered by brave reporters investigating the only honest man to emerge from that period.

If you need somebody to draw this out in picture form then please let me know.

More on these lines here. Suffice to say I do not agree that the war in Iraq was about "global dominance in petroleum production."

A Welsh Prayer

A reader writes:

You have made me very happy recently by 1) posting the YouTube I sent you of the Barbarians and the Best Try Ever – note that all the key players were Welsh, and 2) posting that picture of the Welsh team ahead of the match with Ireland. Which they of course lost.

However, this is what I imagine they were praying in the photo, and I imagine it’s pretty similar before every Six Nations game but one:

Dear God, it would be nice if we win this one
But if we don’t, at least let us beat England,
And if we do, please let me be in the team.
Yes, that’s it, I’ll play my heart out on this one
And hope we win.
But if I have to choose between winning this or beating England,
I’ll take beating England.
Amen.