Quote:
Originally Posted by TheDoc
Bullshit... that's just 3 top officials at one camp, and in that same report they said it took 14 minutes to break people on average. Yet they had to waterboard one person 183 times. So the average time to break a person is based on 3 people, one of which was done 183 times.... right..... that's how you know the report was bullshit.
Many that were let free, later came out and said they were tortured.. It's not like our gov is going to release a document on who/what/how may times, ect on torture - no records are kept unless some idiot takes pictures like in Iraq.
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The one that was water boarded 183 times was the planner of 911. In any kind of interrogation...no matter the method used...one often gets false information...which can often be proven to be false information...or information that is not actionable...when in fact the person does have actionable information to provide...thus the need for repeated interrogation...to get reliable information...or at the least insure that you have gotten all of the information you are going to get from the subject.
All three people that were subjected to "enhanced" interrogation were and are held at Gitmo. After these three the "enhanced" interrogation methods were suspended and ordinary military interrogations methods were used.
I suspect that the tales told by some of the hundreds of detainees from Gitmo that were eventually released that told tales about being tortured was just that...tales...and only a handful even told tales of being tortured.
BTW...there are still a significant number of detainees being held at Gitmo that we would like to release but their countries of origin will not accept them...and at this point no other country will accept them.