Naval Officer Resigns over Torture

by slenderdog | December 29, 2007 at 07:55 pm | 585 views | 6 comments

This letter to the editor of The Peninsula Gateway, in Gig Harbor, Washington was written by Lieutenant Commander Andrew Williams, a Naval Reserve Officer and practicing attorney:


Despite cover-up attempts, secrets explain U.S. torture

It was with sadness that I signed my name this grey morning to a letter resigning my commission in the U.S. Navy.

There was a time when I served with pride, knowing that by serving with the finest men and women in the country, we were part of an organization whose core values required us to “do the right thing,” and that we were far different from the Soviet Union and its gulags, the Vietcong with their torture camps and a society of surveillance and informers like Nazi Germany.

We were part of the shining light on the hill who didn’t do those things. Sadly, no more.

The final straw for me was listening to General Hartmann, the highest-ranking military lawyer in charge of the military commissions, testify that he refused to say that waterboarding captured U.S. soldiers by Iranian operatives would be torture.

His testimony had just sold all the soldiers and sailors at risk of capture and subsequent torture down the river. Indeed, he would not rule out waterboarding as torture when done by the United States and indeed felt evidence obtained by such methods could be used in future trials.

Thank you, General Hartmann, for finally admitting the United States is now part of a long tradition of torturers going back to the Inquisition.

In the middle ages, the Inquisition called waterboarding “toca” and used it with great success. In colonial times, it was used by the Dutch East India Company during the Amboyna Massacre of 1623.

Waterboarding was used by the Nazi Gestapo and the feared Japanese Kempeitai. In World War II, our grandfathers had the wisdom to convict Japanese Officer Yukio Asano of waterboarding and other torture practices in 1947, giving him 15 years hard labor.

Waterboarding was practiced by the Khmer Rouge at the infamous Tuol Sleng prison. Most recently, the U.S. Army court martialed a soldier for the practice in 1968 during the Vietnam conflict.

General Hartmann, following orders was not an excuse for anyone put on trial in Nuremberg, and it will not be an excuse for you or your superiors, either.

Despite the CIA and the administration attempting to cover up the practice by destroying interrogation tapes, in direct violation of a court order, and congressional requests, the truth about torture, illegal spying on Americans and secret renditions is coming out.

Andrew Williams, Gig Harbor


Even a warmonger like John McCain knows that waterboarding is torture.   And the reason that soldiers like McCain and Williams oppose the use of torture is very simple:  if torture is American policy, guess what will happen to American soldiers who are captured? 

Sign In or Join to post comments Comments (6)

ricknight
good stuff:

Thanks for posting this.-> Good stuff.

BigT

The argument that if we torture then that opens us up to torture is a rather forced argument at this point. We don't saw off detainees heads and then send the tape to the local news outlet and yet that happens to our captured soldiers and civilians.

I honor this sailor for serving his country but I would like to point out that he is in the minority here on this one; at least when you consider our armed forces. If our military men and women were so morally opposed to what is going on why haven't more of them resigned? 

ricknight

If we torture we throw out any claim to being decent, honourable or right. 

It isn't about what the enemy does. It's about what we do. Masking the horror we do by saying they're worse doesn't remove the taint from us.

insaniac

The idea of doing just enough of what your enemy does to protect your you-ness is inherently flawed. Guantanamo, "extraordinary rendition" and their ilk have become sorry indicators of British and American behavior of late- were you to scrub the words "America" and "Britain" from these headlines, one would be forgiven for thinking we were talking about one of the "evil" countries.

insaniac

The idea of doing just enough of what your enemy does to protect your you-ness is inherently flawed. Guantanamo, "extraordinary rendition" and their ilk have become sorry indicators of British and American behavior of late- were you to scrub the words "America" and "Britain" from these headlines, one would be forgiven for thinking we were talking about one of the "evil" countries.

BigT

I will just have to respectfully disagree with both ricknight and insaniac on this one. In order to beat the terrorists, whose objective it is to spread their form of Islam throughout the world through whatever means necessary, we will have to sometimes do things that we wouldn't do under the normal circumstances of war.

The notion that "sense we torture that makes us as bad as the 'evil' enemy" just doesn't make sense. When we torture someone, which we do sparingly to begin with, we torture someone who has killed and/or is going to kill civillians in the future. On the other hand, the terrorists torture/kill anyone, especially civillians, to further their goals.

And I would also like to point out that our form of civilization is a heck of a lot more civilized than theirs. Their ideal form of civilization includes women being covered head to toe with robes and never having the chance to live their own life. Non-believers will be either killed or forced into being second class citizens. Basically all the freedoms that we all take for granted in the Western world will be greatly curtailed, at least.

Torturing some bad men to prevent further attacks and to save our way of life seems to be a common sense thing to do; especially when you consider what they're about to do or have already done to us. 

December 29, 2007 at 07:55 pm by slenderdog, 585 views, 6 comments

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First Flagged at 11:10 PM, Dec 29, 2007 by ricknight
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