rawstory.com — With Congress' approval of a new attorney general who refused to describe waterboarding as torture, the Army has sent out a message to its leaders repeating that the interrogation technique is prohibited in the military. The service issued the Nov. 6 message "to eliminate any confusion that may have arisen as a result of recent public discourse.
Nov 13, 2007 View in Crawl 4
dagamer34Nov 14, 2007
Food for thought: Why did it take so long?Common sense says this could have been said weeks ago.
greaseddeafguyNov 14, 2007
who GAF if we dump some water on a bunch of crazy islamic terrorists?
wishninjaNov 14, 2007
"Various court cases have established that the methods of torture used in the interrogation of suspects included electric shock to the ears and genitalia, mock executions, suffocation, and burning."Gitmo? Afganistan? Iraq? No Chicago! What are they learning in the Army? What will they bring back with them when they return? <a class="user" href="http://humanrights.uchicago.edu/chicagotorture/index.shtml">http://humanrights.uchicago.edu/chicagotorture/ind ...</a>
joediggsitNov 15, 2007
Very nice response, I'm actually looking at it from a different way now.
tantroomNov 15, 2007
What is it with you pro-waterboarding people... The troops say it is torture... are you not going to support the troops anymore since they are not willing to use waterboarding?All I can say is Go Joe!!
delafereNov 15, 2007
Cite source. Then quibble about the definition of "combat."