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Is Dick Cheney Writing the WaPo’s Articles Now?

If the Pulitzer Prize Committee had a category for stenographic journalism, this WaPo piece by Peter Finn, Joby Warrick, and Julie Tate surely would win it. The article is three full screens of tripe like this:

After enduring the CIA’s harshest interrogation methods and spending more than a year in the agency’s secret prisons, Khalid Sheik Mohammed stood before U.S. intelligence officers in a makeshift lecture hall, leading what they called “terrorist tutorials.”

In 2005 and 2006, the bearded, pudgy man who calls himself the mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks discussed a wide variety of subjects, including Greek philosophy and al-Qaeda dogma. In one instance, he scolded a listener for poor note-taking and his inability to recall details of an earlier lecture.

Speaking in English, Mohammed “seemed to relish the opportunity, sometimes for hours on end, to discuss the inner workings of al-Qaeda and the group’s plans, ideology and operatives,” said one of two sources who described the sessions, speaking on the condition of anonymity because much information about detainee confinement remains classified. “He’d even use a chalkboard at times.”

These scenes provide previously unpublicized details about the transformation of the man known to U.S. officials as KSM from an avowed and truculent enemy of the United States into what the CIA called its “preeminent source” on al-Qaeda. This reversal occurred after Mohammed was subjected to simulated drowning and prolonged sleep deprivation, among other harsh interrogation techniques.

This is what Serious Journalism has become: There is not a single named source for this paean to the awesomeness of torture which, as Glenn Greenwald points out, directly contradicts the just-released report by the CIA’s inspector-general about the efficacy of torture — adding that the efficacy argument itself begs the central issue about torture:

The debate over whether torture extracted valuable information is, in my view, a total sideshow, both because (a) it inherently begs the question of whether legal interrogation means would have extracted the same information as efficiently if not more so (exactly the same way that claims that warrantless eavesdropping uncovered valuable intelligence begs the question of whether legal eavesdropping would have done so); and (b) torture is a felony and a war crime, and we don’t actually have a country (at least we’re not [supposed] to) where political leaders are free to commit serious crimes and then claim afterwards that it produced good outcomes.  If we want to be a country that uses torture, then we should repeal our laws which criminalize it, withdraw from treaties which ban it, and announce to the world (not that they don’t already know) that, as a country, we believe torture is justifiable and just.  Let’s at least be honest about what we are.  Let’s explicitly repudiate Ronald Reagan’s affirmation that ”[n]o exceptional circumstances whatsoever . . . may be invoked as a justification of torture” and that “[e]ach State Party is required [] to prosecute torturers.”

  • Kastanj
    Kathy Kathy Kathy, what your post-modernist relativist nazoleftist mind cannot comprehend is that laws can be changed under special circumstances! For example, when that guy mugged and beat me on September 11th, it was absolutely OK for me to threaten people with rape and subject other people I had a "good feeling" about (using my investigation skills - some people are just allowed to make such judgments) to very violent and dehumanizing treatment because that mugging changed everything and I didn't want it to happen again.

    In Sweden (where there are no leftismo-über-nihilists) I get full support - half of our politicians and many in the media fully support my manly and brave strategy of self-defense and want to let bygones be bygones. If that bothers you mega-secularist intellectuals I'll just tell you what I told my last vict- er, suspect (turns out he was innocent - bummer!): "Your resistance will only make this hurt more!"
  • JSpencer
    Ah yes, let's just keep throwing that rotten meat to the jackals and see what sort of parady of a once halfway intelligent democracy we can turn this country into. The people who scream about patriotism the loudest seem to also be the same ones who are willing to rationalize the abandonment of human standards the quickest, and by doing so are turning any semblance of American honor into a sick joke. Ronald Reagan understood this, along with the rest of his generation, but this new breed of neo-rightwing fools don't have a clue. They are a noisy bunch though.
  • daveinboca
    Looks like Kathy can't handle any facts that confound her Hate_America mindset. Actually, the sources are kept secret as a matter of policy to protect intelligence professionals from journalistic nasties like Glenn Greenwald [and his "ex-" Andy Sullivan]. The Inspector General's Report doesn't "directly contradict" the WaPo story, it contradicts GG & his ex-type pals INTERPRETATION of the IG Report.

    And, IG Reports are written with a lot of artful language that ideologues and insincere agitpreppies like GG & KK deliberately overlook. And finally if you put the IG report on the same level as the IIM report on Iran which said in '04 that Iran had stopped tried to make nukes [which subsequent intelligence has proven false], the IG's ClA report didn't contradict the WaPo story, but was politicized to contradict the truth!

    In Sweden (where there are no leftismo-über-nihilists) Yeah, what ever happened to the guy who murdered Olaf Palme?
  • Silhouette
    I agree, where are the links to sources that can be verified? Propaganda has a funny way of sneaking in if a story can't be cross-referenced...Citing sources is as american as apple pie. Good question Kathy.
  • redbus
    Kathy, you've made an excellent point on the "unnamed sources" issue. Here's an interesting article from the Seattle Times that talks about how rare this practice should be:

    Using unnamed resources
  • Leonidas
    Don't worry Kathy you still got MSNBC and CNN.

    Read a report from someone in the middle east saying how Al Jezera had a more favorable coverage of the US than those networks and the BBC.
  • deanesmay
    The "central issue" of so-called "torture" (leaving out the debate over whether most enhanced interrogation techniques really are torture, as opposed to hysterically and viciously and wrongly called torture) has not always been whether it's moral. Because the claim has been made, over and over by at least some, that it is ineffective and doesn't work. As we see, week after week, the evidence is in: yes, it does work, and yes it does save lives.

    Therefore, now that we can dispense with the lie that it "doesn't work," we can move on and make the morality of it the central issue. And if so, then it becomes a moral debate over the best way to save lives and the most effective way to do that while causing minimal necessary suffering.

    I'm happy to have that debate. I think it's healthy. Just so long as we can dispense with hyper-partisan lies like "it doesn't work" or that it's all about simply being morally depraved. Because from where I sit, those who claim that enhanced interrogation techniques are all torture (thus scaring someone is the same as taking a blowtorch to their face) and that such techniques are never acceptable no matter how many innocent lives are at stake, look themselves to be just about as morally depraved as anyone who happily advocates willy-nilly torture of any and all suspects.

    It's time you folks who behave as if anything that makes someone remotely uncomfortable is a moral abomination have to answer for your own, quite arguably, morally depraved stance.
  • JSpencer
    It strikes me that if we made morality the priority to begin with we wouldn't be debating any of this.
  • DLS
    Nothing stops the Bush-Cheney revanchists on the far left. The sad thing isthat Obama wouldn't only stoop to agitating for the climate bill and worse with the health care the crazy lib Dems want, but now has chosen to go Code Pink with the torture issue. (Aside from wondering how likely it was that the earlier position Obama expressed in his Gitmo speech was a lie, the other question is why this highly political stunt was performed -- to distract from the health care problems, or as someone else wrote, to give the far left fringe a sop before additional likely problems and possible compromises on health care.)

    As I said regarding my observation of Holder and Gore chatting during Kennedy's funeral, they probably had a good laugh (at the expense of decent people) at Obama saying this is Holder's action and even his decision -- "Barack probably won't say that he has 'no controlling authority, either! HA HA HA HA"
  • DLS
    "with the lie that it 'doesn't work'"

    It's not a lie at all; people often are willing to (actually) lie to stop the torture. That it, in this instance, ispartisan is correct, obviously. This isn't about torture, but about Code Pink and related Dem politics.
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