The evidence that Yemen’s Al Qaeda branch, and the late Mr. Awlaki, had a role in preparations for the Paris assault has accumulated steadily since Wednesday’s shootings. The two gunmen, identified by the French police as the brothers Saïd and Chérif Kouachi, seemed determined to attach the A.Q.A.P.-Awlaki label to their shooting spree.I bring this up because our friends on the right insist that torturing terrorist suspects is an excellent idea -- on Fox News last week, Ralph Peters said, "these terrorists who did this monstrous attack in Paris are the people Senator Feinstein doesn't even want to waterboard."
An eyewitness heard the brothers yell to passers-by at the shooting scene to “tell the media that this is Al Qaeda in Yemen.” They reportedly told the driver of a car they hijacked that their attack was in revenge for Mr. Awlaki’s death.
Intelligence officials and eyewitnesses said the older brother, Saïd Kouachi, 34, had spent time in Yemen between 2009 and 2012, getting firearms training from the Qaeda branch and, according to some reports, meeting with Mr. Awlaki. According to a Yemeni journalist, Mohamed al-Kibsi, Saïd Kouachi roomed briefly in the Yemeni capital, Sana, with Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who tried to blow up an airliner over Detroit on Christmas Day in 2009 with explosives hidden in his underwear. Mr. Abdulmutallab, who is now serving a life sentence in federal prison, told the F.B.I. that his plot was approved and partly directed by Mr. Awlaki.
And Chérif Kouachi, 32, in a brief telephone interview with a French television reporter before he was killed with his brother on Friday, firmly associated the attack with A.Q.A.P. and its former propagandist.
“I, Chérif Kouachi, was sent by Al Qaeda in Yemen,” the younger Mr. Kouachi said in audio later broadcast by the BFMTV channel in France. “I went there, and it was Sheikh Anwar al-Awlaki who financed me.” François Molins, the Paris prosecutor, said at a news conference later that day that Chérif Kouachi had visited Yemen in 2011.
Also on Friday, a member of A.Q.A.P.’s “media committee” sent journalists a statement explicitly claiming responsibility for the brothers’ attack.
But what's the ostensible point of torture? To extract information about a prisoner's ties to other people who threaten us. But why would we need to forcibly extract information from people who are eagerly informing us of the identities of their associates? Cherif Kouachi's "brief telephone interview with a French television reporter before he was killed" took place in the midst of a hostage standoff. That's how eager he was to tell us who his associates are.
And please note that Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, the failed underwear bomber, is also talking, even though we're not torturing him.
Calls for a renewal of "enhanced interrogation" will probably come up in the 2016 presidential campaign, and if we elect a Republican president we'll probably torture again. But why? The terrorists we've dealt with in recent years either seem to be freelancers acting under AQAP influence (the Tsarnaev brothers) or are connected to terrorist networks but seem to have no interest in concealing their ties; they appear to think that we can't (or won't) stop them and their allies even if we know what they're up to. (In France, given how much was already known about the perpetrators of this week's attacks, that certainly seems to be true.) If that's the case, what justification do rightists have for torture? Except, perhaps, the sheer joy it brings them to know that torture is taking place?
5 comments:
Steve,
It doesn't matter.
The cat's out of the bag.
The genii's out of the bottle.
And the people who get their jollies thinking about brown non-Christian people in indescribable pain and agony, won't put their dick's back in their pants.
You can bet your last dollar that the next Republican President will allow torture under the "right" circumstances! What those may be, will be up to him/her.
The real question is, will the next Democratic President bend to pressure after another inevitable terrorist attack?
And that, I can't answer.
I'd like to think not.
But I'm not willing to bet my last dollar on it.
Sad...
When I was a kid, I never in my wildest nightmares ever thought we'd condone torture under ANY circumstances!!!
Boy, how wrong I was.
And you know what?
While I'm beyond upset and disgusted by Dubya and Dick, I'm more upset and disgusted by my fellow Americans - who know seem to feel that torturing other humans is acceptable under the "right" circumstance.
You wouldn't do that to your pet, would you?
Shame...
For shame.................
I don't know, maybe they WOULD torture a pet....
Oy
"Now," not 'know.'
I wonder how far we are from torture being advocated for use by our police. I know a lot of the cops are already down wid it, but I don't see why we wouldn't, for example, waterboard a kidnapping suspect the same as we have terrorists. This is a very slippery slope. Scalia is already on record parsing what "punishment" means (as in "...cruel and unusual.."). Is an interrogation punishment? If not, all bets are off. I will not be surprised to live to see torture used domestically against America citizen criminal suspects.
Ask Mr. Garner, of Staten Island.
Oh, right!
You can't.
They choked the poor man to death for selling "loosies."
You never-the-less approach the equation under the assumption the "Terrorists" are who the corporate media and the national security state tell us they are.
We have seen this before, more wag the dog, more war propaganda.
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