Ian wrote:
{Annan's} contention is that US officials with a certain preferred interogation tried to bend the US and international rules on torture. That culture, I believe, and lack of supervision led to Abu Ghraib.
Emphasis is my own.
Just as long as we make that clear, Ian. It's your belief, and there are no facts to back it up. The rule of law existed before, during, and after Abu Ghraib.
I don't feel so much animosity towards the journeymen folks who were there to perform whatever duty the military told them to. I believe the handful of professionals - individuals who were wardens in civilian life - are the ones who should receive the harshest punishment. They REALLY should have known better.
EVERY individual faces daily ethics decisions that have consequences to others. Your fellow physicians, Ian, have reported in surveys by a MAJORITY that it's ethically OK to cheat an insurance company in order to get a patient's treatment paid for. Folks in my line of work who travel sometimes pad their expense accounts. Folks in my father's line of work think insider trading is OK if you don't get caught. Meanwhile, I believe you don't cheat insurance companies, I don't pad my accounts, and my father survived a major SEC investigation because he was the ONLY broker who wasn't cheating.
At the end of the day, Ian, it's individual ethical decisions. We think those little white lies and "minor" infractions won't have an impact on others until the day everything blows up in the face. And meanwhile, others suffer from these lapses in character.
And you may or may not like GW Bush and his approach to things. But at least the guy TRIES to work within the rule of law (domestic or international) to justify his agenda.
Ian wrote:
I'm primarily interested in hearing a more convincing renunciation of illegal techniques (happy Bill?

) from our officials and maybe, oh, letting the UN investigate concerns.
Generally it's inappropriate to comment when charges are being filed and trials are under way. Our own system presumes innocence until proven guilty. I see no reason to abandon those practices.
I believe the
actions speak louder than the words that GW's opponents want for their next political campaigns. Those who did wrong either are now being punished, or have charges against them. And that's the way it should be.
Meanwhile, letting the U.N. monitor things at Gitmo is like letting the fox in the henhouse. No way, Jose! The International Red Cross is good enough for me.
- Bill