Visiting the Torture Museum
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Karen Greenberg
by Tom Engelhardt
and Karen Greenberg
DIGG THIS
According to
the New Yorker's Paul Kramer, here's what A.F. Miller of
the 32nd Volunteer Infantry Regiment wrote
in a letter to the Omaha World-Herald in May 1900 from the
Philippines about the treatment of a prisoner taken by his unit:
"Now, this is the way we give them the water cure. Lay them on their
backs, a man standing on each hand and each foot, then put a round
stick in the mouth and pour a pail of water in the mouth and nose,
and if they don't give up pour in another pail. They swell up like
toads. I'll tell you it is a terrible torture."
One American
was indeed finally brought to trial for the widespread use of "the
water cure" in the Philippines at the turn of the previous century
as the Filipino insurgency was suppressed. Captain Edwin Glenn,
a judge advocate, supervised such a torture session. For this, he
was convicted and sentenced to a "one-month suspension and a fifty-dollar
fine." He retired from the Army in 1919 as a brigadier general.
Many were
the American defenses of "the water cure" back then, including the
blunt suggestion that, on racial grounds, Filipinos were not "owed
the 'protective' limits of 'civilized warfare.'" Many have been
the defenses of waterboarding and other forms of torture in the
Bush years among them, the all-but-racially based suggestion
that America's enemies (you know who) don't deserve to be dealt
with according to the laws of civilization, including the Geneva
Conventions. Then and now, a relatively small but hardy crew of
Americans, in and out of government, protested, wrote, and struggled
against such practices.
In our time,
they have included Karen J. Greenberg, co-editor of the monumental
Torture
Papers and a Tomdispatch
regular, who writes below about the latest defense of "the water
cure," this time by the Justice Department's Stephen Bradbury. Another
member of this crew is Scott Horton who, at his eloquent Harper's
Magazine blog, No
Comment, pointed out recently that Bradbury's testimony before
a congressional committee represented but the first of a Valentine's
Day torture trifecta.
Among those who stepped up to the plate that day was the President
himself who defended waterboarding in an interview with the BBC
this way: "To the critics, I ask them this: when we, within the
law, interrogate and get information that protects ourselves and
possibly others in other nations to prevent attacks, which attack
would they have hoped that we wouldn't have prevented?"
With that
in mind, enter the torture museum and history be damned. ~ Tom
Barbarism
Then and Now
By Karen J.
Greenberg
Sometimes
a little stroll through history can have its uses. Take, as an example,
the continuing debate over torture in post-9/11 America. Last week,
Stephen Bradbury, the head of the Justice Department's Office of
Legal Counsel, testified before the House Judiciary Committee about
waterboarding. In defending its use, Bradbury took a deep dive into
the past. He claimed that the CIA's waterboarding of at least three
of its prisoners bore "no resemblance" to what torturers in the
Spanish Inquisition had done when they used what was then called
"the Water Torture."
As part of
his defense of the techniques used by the Bush administration to
gain information, Bradbury went out of his way to play the historian,
claiming that the water torture of yore differed from today's American-style
version in crucial ways. The waterboarding employed by interrogators
during the infamous Spanish Inquisition, he insisted,
"involved the forced consumption of a mass amount of water." This
led, he claimed, to the "lungs filling with water" to the point
of "agony and death." The CIA, on the other hand, employed "strict
time limits," "safeguards," and "restrictions," making it a far
more controlled technique. As he put
it: "[S]omething can be quite distressing or comfortable, even
frightening, [but] if it doesn't involve severe physical pain, and
it doesn't last very long, it may not constitute severe physical
suffering" – and so would not qualify as torture. Bradbury summed
up his historical case this way, "There's been a lot of discussion
in the public about historical uses of waterboarding," but the "only
thing in common is the use of water."
To remind
readers, Bradbury is the government lawyer who, in 2005, drafted
two
secret memos authorizing the use of freezing temperatures, and
waterboarding in CIA attempts to break terrorism detainees. Nor
is Bradbury the only one with the urge to distinguish any current
American proclivity towards torture from the barbaric procedures
used until the Enlightenment set in. As Senator Joseph Lieberman
commented last week, citing
another medieval torture technique, waterboarding "is not like putting
burning coals on people's bodies. The person is in no real danger.
The impact is psychological." Waterboarding isn't torture, both
men claimed, because it leaves no "permanent damage."
Visiting
the Water Table
It's here
that our stroll down history's narrow, medieval lanes comes in.
Anyone curious to test Bradbury's historical accuracy should consider
a visit to one of the dozens of torture museums that dot Europe's
landscape. Why not, for instance, the bluntly named Torture Museum
in Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic. Unlike other European
memorials to torture, such as the Clink Prison in London and the
torture museums in Florence and San Gimigniano, this modest two-story
building in a former private home in Prague's historic Old Town
is a relative newcomer to the continent's penchant for recording
its past mistakes.
Upon entering
one of a series of gloomy, cave-like rooms, filled with the implements
of the dismal craft that had its heyday from the fifteenth to the
eighteenth century, you would notice a range of mechanical devices
and iron tools (also illustrated in drawings galore), all once meant
to pierce, prod, or otherwise drive some poor heretic into the agony
of confession. Often in those years before video cameras were available,
all this was done in public sight.
And then,
as you wound your way through the exhibit, you would come upon one
of its centerpiece displays the "water torture table" to
which Bradbury alludes. After you'd checked out the period drawings
of prisoners being tied to the edges of the flat tabletop or read
about the interrogation method in which the water-filled abdomen
was struck repeatedly with heavy blows, you might stop for a moment
to consider the more detailed explanatory text nearby.
It would inform
you that, over the course of these centuries, several water torture
techniques were developed, one of which involved "inserting a cloth
tube into the mouth of the victim [and] forcing it as deep as possible
into his throat. The tube was then filled slowly with water, swelling
up and choking the victim." This is, in fact, an almost exact description
of what has been described as CIA-style waterboarding. Former interrogation
expert Malcolm Nance, once an instructor for the U.S. military's
SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resistance, and Escape) training program
said to have been the template for some of the interrogation
techniques the Bush administration developed himself experienced
waterboarding. He has
described the process this way:
"Unless
you have been strapped down to the board, have endured the agonizing
feeling of the water overpowering your gag reflex, and then feel
your throat open and allow pint after pint of water to involuntarily
fill your lungs, you will not know the meaning of the word…
"Waterboarding
is a controlled drowning that, in the American model, occurs under
the watch of a doctor, a psychologist, an interrogator and a trained
strap-in/strap-out team. It does not simulate drowning, as the
lungs are actually filling with water. There is no way to simulate
that. The victim is drowning. How much the victim is to drown
depends on the desired result (in the form of answers to questions
shouted into the victim's face) and the obstinacy of the subject."
The similarity
in methods across a torture gulf of at least four centuries would
have been but the first of many striking lessons for our modern
moment from a tour of this museum, only steps from the famed Charles
Bridge with its own medieval and religious statues, a museum modest
in everything but its subject matter. Perhaps the eeriest lesson
would be just how many of the torture techniques illustrated in
these rooms are still painfully recognizable, are, in fact but minor
variations on those practiced today in America's name.
Take, for
example, those etchings of the strappado or "jerking" in
which the arms were pulled up behind the prisoner in what would
now be called a "stress position" before he would be "jerked" or
dropped painfully. The weights and leather ties on display are perhaps
a reminder that a version of the strappado is perhaps the
most common form of torture reportedly used throughout America's
offshore prison systems today. It is called "short shackling."
And don't
forget the Vigil or Cradle of Judas, which today we far more mundanely
term "sleep deprivation." Or what about the medieval use of cold
water sprinkled onto naked bodies (another kind of water torture),
today mimicked with what official documents call "exposure to freezing
temperatures"? Of course, with those infamous photos from Iraq's
Abu Ghraib prison in mind, you would have no trouble recognizing
the persistent themes of nakedness and sexual humiliation endemic
to what no one back in the less civilized days of the Inquisition
hesitated to label "torture."
Torture
Lite
As you wandered
through the Prague Torture Museum, noting all the practices other
than waterboarding that have their modern American equivalents,
you shouldn't skip past the medieval forms of torture the United
States doesn't practice. Scattered through these precincts
are terrifying mechanical devices and tools that once led to permanent
physical damage and often to the death of those being questioned.
Take the Virgin of Nuremberg, a full-body casket studded with spikes
meant to slowly pierce any living being closed inside and sure to
cause a long, agonizing death.
Then, there's
the Bock, often called the Witch's Billy Goat, a wood pyramid designed
to pierce the genitals, and that torture shown in classic Hollywood
medieval costume dramas, the Rack, in which the human body was literally
stretched beyond the tearing point, or the Garrote, an instrument
whose sole task was to crush the head.
Had Stephen
Bradbury come along with you, eager to discover the differences
between pre-Enlightenment torture and today's "enhanced interrogation"
methods, he might feel satisfied indeed as he passed through this
part of the exhibit if, that is, he avoided the accompanying
texts that sit on small easels near these horrifying arrays of instruments.
For on them, you and he would find the theory that lay behind the
practices of those torturers from a barbaric past, and he would
discover that those torturers of old, like his colleagues in the
Bush administration, distinguished between torture and Torture Lite.
The former was indeed meant to result in permanent damage or simply
death. The latter was consciously meant to cause "mere" suffering,
however protracted.
Reading these
texts, Bradbury might find himself uncomfortably at home. After
all, his Justice Department has followed similar reasoning, although,
unlike medieval torturers, its practitioners have used it as the
basis for distinguishing between torture and what they like to describe
as "enhanced interrogation techniques." They have, in other words,
declared part of the Spanish Inquisition's torture techniques too
lenient to qualify as torture. This is perhaps their unique achievement.
Medieval torturers,
of course, hadn't had the benefit of the Enlightenment and modern
American civilization when they failed to make this fundamental
distinction. They did not understand that the infliction of "mere
suffering" did not qualify as torture.
If Bradbury
were being honest with himself, however, he would certainly recognize
a parallel between the medieval distinctions and those made by his
predecessor as head of the Office of Legal Counsel, John Yoo.
In his infamous
"Torture Memo" of August 2002, Yoo parsed the definition of
torture this way: "[Torture] must be of an intensity akin to that
which accompanies serious physical injury such as death or organ
failure… Because the acts inflicting torture are extreme, there
is [a] significant range of acts that though they might constitute
cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment fail to rise
to the level of torture."
In terms of
torture as it was understood from medieval times until the Enlightenment,
what American interrogators have inflicted on terror suspects in
secret prisons around the world has amounted "only" to Torture Lite,
now redefined as "mere suffering" and so not really torture at all.
As Bradbury reminded congresspeople just the other day, what we
do is, by definition, not torture. Following Yoo's and Bradbury's
lead, the President,
Vice
President, two Attorney Generals, and the
Secretary of State have joined in the same chorus, repeatedly
insisting that "we do not torture." And in John Yoo's terms, echoing
pre-Enlightenment understandings, we don't.
Now, if Bradbury
were to stop off by that Water Torture table on his way out of the
museum and then opened his catalogue of the show, he might be intrigued
to discover as succinct a legitimization of his form of torture
as any he offered Congress. The catalogue follows a passage noting
that the medieval water torture "in all of its variations, was considered
‘light'" with this: "…and any eventual confession obtained through
this technique was considered by the courts to be ‘spontaneous'
and obtained without the application of torture."
If this isn't
a moving example of the brotherhood of torturers across the centuries,
what is? After all, just as in the distant past, there has, in recent
years, been purpose behind the seeming madness with which the Bush
administration embraced torture and then repeatedly insisted on
calling it not-torture. The purpose centuries ago was to have any
confessions admissible in court – and this, certainly, was what
Yoo and his colleagues must have been hoping for all along. In the
specific cases of the three detainees whom top administration officials
have recently admitted were waterboarded Khalid Sheikh Mohammed,
Ibn al Shayk al-Libbi, and Abu Zubaydah their confessions,
obtained by a range of "enhanced interrogation techniques," have
repeatedly been called trustworthy, valuable, and conclusive as
to guilt by administration spokespeople.
Someday, Americans
will have to reckon with this period of time and with a group
of leaders who were more comfortable with definitions out of the
darker ages than ones out of the Enlightenment era. This administration's
bold flirtation with torture, medieval-style, has led us into sorry
company, whether in the past or the present. Its top officials told
the world they would do "what it takes" in their war on terror and
in the Middle East, with or without allies. They then chose to leave
the family of nations and take up kinship in the family of torturers.
Someday,
our children may travel to Washington and somewhere near the Smithsonian
and the Holocaust Museum, perhaps they, like the Czechs and other
Europeans, will be able to visit their own official torture museum.
There, a step from the Potomac River, they will be able to view
strange instruments for inflicting pain and perhaps even watch horrifying
videos of torture happening. And they may wonder how we ever faltered
so miserably when it came to a war that was supposed to be on
terror, but ended up adopting the worst traditions of terror
in the Age of Barbarism Lite.
February
22, 2008
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
who runs the Nation Institute's Tomdispatch.com,
is the co-founder of the American
Empire Project. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His blog is The
Notion. Karen
J. Greenberg, the Executive Director of the Center on Law and Security
at the NYU School of Law, is the editor of the Torture
Debate in America and, with Joshua Dratel, The
Torture Papers: The Road to Abu Ghraib as well as the forthcoming
The Enemy Combatant Papers: American Justice, the Courts and
the War on Terror (Cambridge University Press, April 2008).
Copyright
© 2008 Karen J. Greenberg
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