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The Torturer's Dilemma: Analyzing the Logic of Torture for Information

The Torturer's Dilemma: Analyzing the Logic of Torture for Information

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CHAPTER 1<br />

TELL ME THE TRUTH:<br />

<strong>Torture</strong> <strong>for</strong> In<strong>for</strong>mation<br />

Since <strong>the</strong> terror attacks <strong>of</strong> September 11 th 2001, <strong>the</strong> utility <strong>of</strong> torture has once again become a<br />

subject <strong>of</strong> debate among politicians, pundits, and scholars in western countries. This debate has not<br />

been confined entirely to <strong>the</strong> world <strong>of</strong> academia – ra<strong>the</strong>r, it has shown up in news shows, television<br />

programs, films, and (as has become apparent since <strong>the</strong> revelations <strong>of</strong> abuse at Guantanamo Bay and<br />

Abu Ghraib) even in government policy. <strong>The</strong> consensus on torture <strong>for</strong> many years had been one <strong>of</strong><br />

opprobrium – torture is something that autocracies do, while civilized powers understand it to be<br />

morally beyond <strong>the</strong> pale. This consensus has apparently diminished in <strong>the</strong> last decade, and <strong>the</strong> debate<br />

has shifted from questions <strong>of</strong> moral philosophy (can torture ever be justified) towards a realist<br />

paradigm centered around whe<strong>the</strong>r we can af<strong>for</strong>d to consider morality in <strong>the</strong> face <strong>of</strong> an existential<br />

threat. This has led some observers to argue, in essence, that torture is useful, and can be harnessed by<br />

<strong>the</strong> state to find useful in<strong>for</strong>mation (that is assumed to be unobtainable by o<strong>the</strong>r means) while avoiding<br />

its pitfalls. Most prominent among <strong>the</strong>se observers has been <strong>the</strong> famed attorney Alan Dershowitz,<br />

whose piece in <strong>the</strong> Los Angeles Times 1 argued that torture could be made part <strong>of</strong> a liberal society if it<br />

could be regularized and subject to judicial proceedings – taking <strong>the</strong> ultimate in lawless acts and<br />

subjecting it to <strong>the</strong> rule (and regularity) <strong>of</strong> law. This debate was fur<strong>the</strong>red by a collection <strong>of</strong> essays on<br />

torture edited by San<strong>for</strong>d Levinson (2004), wherein Dershowitz defends his proposal against critics on<br />

<strong>the</strong> anti-torture left (Elaine Scarry) and <strong>the</strong> right (Richard Posner). 2 <strong>The</strong> hypo<strong>the</strong>tical nature <strong>of</strong> this<br />

debate is perhaps best exemplified by <strong>the</strong> title <strong>of</strong> Michael Ignatieff's essay in Prospect magazine, “If<br />

<strong>Torture</strong> Works...” 3<br />

In a sense, <strong>the</strong> debate has been centered on a clash <strong>of</strong> ethical systems: deontology – where<br />

actions are judged by how well <strong>the</strong>y follow a set <strong>of</strong> normative rules – and teleology – where actions are<br />

1 Dershowitz. “Want to <strong>Torture</strong>? Get a Warrant.” Los Angeles Times (January 22 nd , 2002)<br />

2 Levinson, 2004.<br />

3 April, 2006. Excerpted from "<strong>Torture</strong>: Does it Make Us Safer? Is it Ever OK?," edited by Kenneth Roth and Minky<br />

Worden. <strong>The</strong> New Press in conjunction with Human Rights Watch, 2006<br />

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