A tortuous route to the
right thing
By Wesley Pruden
PrudenPolitics.com
Torture is not nice. Nice people do not torture
(except in rare circumstances). We can all agree on
that much—depending, of course, on the definition of
“torture”. The New York Times, for example, says it
hates torture but having to read a New York Times
editorial is the pure torture forbidden by the
Geneva Convention.
“Waterboarding,” the “enhanced interrogation
technique” that makes a suspect think he’s drowning
when he actually isn’t, is not very nice—but it is
effective. The CIA estimates that up to 70 percent
of what it knows about Osama bin Laden’s terrorist
empire was obtained through “enhanced interrogation
techniques.” Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind
of the 9/11 operation, sang his entire repertoire of
insider detail after the CIA interrogators gave him
a bath.
We have the informed word of Leon Panetta, the CIA
chief and soon-to-be the chief at the Pentagon, for
that. When Brian Williams of NBC News asked him
whether waterboarding of al-Qaeda suspects led to
the capture and killing of Osama bin Laden, Mr.
Panetta hemmed a little and hawed a little, until
the interviewer pressed a little. “One final time,”
he asked, “‘enhanced interrogation techniques’—which
has always been kind of a handy euphemism in these
post-9/11 years—that includes waterboarding?”
Mr. Panetta stated the obvious when he indicated
enhanced interrogation helped lead to bin Laden’s
death.
Mr. Panetta replied with neither hem nor haw:
“That’s correct.”
Michael Hayden, who preceded Mr. Panetta as CIA
chief, tells a radio interviewer there was a
straight line between the intelligence gleaned from
interrogations of terrorist suspects and the moment
that a Navy Seal fired the shot that dispatched
Osama into eternity. The statements of Messrs.
Panetta and Hayden were statements of the perfectly
obvious for everyone but those too weak and too
delicate to bring themselves to look at the world as
it actually is.
This does not fit the story line of the ladies of
the mainstream media. The New York Times, whose
violins are tuned to play only one note and then
only with its string section mounted astride a
familiar drove of hobby horses, insists that
waterboarding and other memory enhancers contributed
only “a small role at most” in pinpointing Osama’s
hideout. Eugene Robinson, a sob sister for The
Washington Post editorial page, so far as
anyone knows was not present when interrogations
revealed the name and significance of Abu Ahmed
al-Kuwaiti, bin Laden’s prized courier.
Nevertheless, he insists there was “no proof—and not
even any legitimate evidence—that torture cracked
the case,” adding, “I believe the odds are quite
good that the CIA would have gotten onto
al-Kuwaiti’s trail somehow or other.” But “somehow
or other” presidents and the men and women
responsible for protecting the nation’s national
security can’t afford to gamble recklessly, whatever
Mr. Robinson’s reassuring “odds” may be.
The pious and the self-righteous are unable to
indulge the sentiments of gratitude and celebration
the rest of us feel. They’re severely cross about
what the Navy Seals accomplished with the help of
the CIA interrogators. Celebrating the dispatch of
Osama to a netherworld crack house of a paradise—we
can only imagine what his 72 virgins look like—would
emphasize how much Barack Obama and the rest of us
owe to George W. Bush, who organized the pursuit of
Osama bin Laden and who put in place the methods
used to run him to ground (or, if you like, to
sea).
This is something neither the Hyde Park messiah nor
what is left of his cult will talk about. President
Obama, in introducing Mr. Panetta as his CIA chief
shortly before the inauguration, gave a ringing
declaration that he would never do what George W.
did, and what he has now done himself, in pursuit of
keeping the nation safe from catastrophe. “I was
clear throughout this campaign and was clear
throughout this transition that under my
administration the United States does not torture.
We will uphold our highest ideals . . . We must
adhere to our values as diligently as we protect our
safety with no exceptions.” Hmmmmm. “No exceptions,”
the man said.
We can be grateful that Mr. Obama is capable of
distinguishing between then and now, between theory
and real life, between moonshine and the expensive
bonded stuff even if members of his cult can’t. One
day, when man is finally perfected and all rough
places are made smooth, we can live by the Golden
Rule. Until then presidents now and in future will
do what they have to do, and leave the boilerplate
piety to the blowhards of press and tube.