What Torture Really Looks Like [Updated]

While the American Left moralizes over the CIA pouring water in the faces of three terroristsm the Telegraph remindes us of just what torture looks like:

THE hunt for a nest of female suicide bombers in Chechnya led an elite group of Russian special forces commandos to a small village deep in the countryside. There they surrounded a modest house just before dawn to be sure of catching their quarry unawares.

When the order came to storm the single-storey property, dozens of heavily armed men in masks and camouflage uniforms – unmarked to conceal their identity – had no difficulty in overwhelming the three women inside. Their captives were driven to a military base.

The soldiers were responding to a tip-off that the eldest of the three, who was in her forties, had been indoctrinating women to sacrifice themselves in Chechnya’s ferocious war between Islamic militants and the Russians. The others captured with her were her latest recruits. One was barely 15.

“At first the older one denied everything,” said a senior special forces officer last week. “Then we roughed her up and gave her electric shocks. She provided us with good information. Once we were done with her we shot her in the head.

“We disposed of her body in a field. We placed an artillery shell between her legs and one over her chest, added several 200-gram TNT blocks and blew her to smithereens. The trick is to make sure absolutely nothing is left. No body, no proof, no problem.” The technique was known as pulverisation.

The young recruits were taken away by another unit for further interrogation before they, too, were executed.

Considering the White House’s position on human rights with respect to China, don’t expect any official calls from the United States for reform in Russia.

[Update] Ditto for N. Korea:

The first two days of torture started with threatening questions about his family’s conspiracy. Shin Dong-Hyuk had no answers because at age 14, he was required to live in the dormitory with other teenagers in North Korea’s notorious political prison camp No.14, north of Pyongyang. He had not seen his parents and brother for weeks.

The next morning, Shin was hung upside down with his ankles cuffed, all day long. He wondered why his mother and brother tried to escape, if what the authorities claimed was true. Surely, they should have known that anything short of being out of place in this camp is punished by death.

On the fourth day Shin was dragged into cell No.7, the secret underground torture chamber. Completely stripped, legs cuffed, hands tied with rope, his legs and hands were hung from the ceiling. The torturers lit up a charcoal fire under his back. He struggled. But they pierced a steel hook near Shin’s groin to keep him from writhing. Amid the sounds and smells of flesh burning, Shin then blacked out.

2 Responses to “What Torture Really Looks Like [Updated]”

  1. Chris Says:

    Look, I think most people understand that even though it may not be the most serious form of torture, waterboarding is still torture. We’ve prosecuted and executed people who have subjected U.S. soldiers for waterboarding, so I seriously can’t see how anyone can say that waterboarding isn’t at least legally torture. Yes, it may not be the harshest form of torture ever conceived, but that’s not a justification, that’s an excuse.

  2. Yankee Sailor Says:

    We’ve prosecuted and executed people who have subjected U.S. soldiers for waterboarding.

    This canard is a dramatic oversimplification. I don’t think you or anyone can name a person who was prosecuted and executed for only authorizing or conducting waterboarding in limited, case-by-case circumstances. Every case I’ve been able to find where such extreme punishment was awarded and waterboarding is involved, the practice was employed as one of many in an unrestriced, systematic manner and the accused were charged with a whole host of greater offenses. In the Tokyo Trials, for instance, of the offenses Wikipedia notes there were at least 55 different charges, with torture-related offenses ranking #54.

    I would agree with you that many people have concluded that waterboarding is torture, but many have also concluded it is not. I’m still undecided and open to arguments.