Andrew Sullivan on torture
“Almost any coercive act sustained long enough against a person in captivity can become torture. Think of how we understand the drip-drip-drip of ‘Chinese water torture’ to be torture. It’s not even, as the former vice-president would say, a splash of water on the face. It’s a mere drip. But even a drip, sustained long and relentlessly enough, can break a human being. The test for torture is not whether it leaves brutal physical marks or not (that was the Gestapo standard). The test for torture is whether it is of sufficient immediate or cumulative force to rob the capacity of a human being to say voluntarily what he or she knows to be true. It is the imposition of sufficient coercion to destroy an individual’s ability to resist giving some kind of answer, true or false, or some unknowable, random blend of the two.
The point of this can therefore never be to get truly reliable information. The purpose is to get answers the victim imagines the torturers want to hear. This might be the truth; or it might be a desperate untruth. The point is that the tortured is brought to the point when such distinctions are less meaningful than simply ending the ordeal.”
(via Andrew Sullivan)






