From the HuffPost by Matthew Alexander:
And so we embark on another round where those who endorse torture, 
the men who have never done an interrogation, say it works and the 
anti-torture advocates, like me, who have successfully interrogated 
numerous detainees, say it doesn't and/or it isn't worth the long term 
consequences.
Well, count me in another group that says I don't care if it works 
100 percent of the time.  Chemical weapons work 100 percent of the time 
and we don't use those, even though (as the torture advocates assert), 
they would save lives.  Flamethrowers are another weapon that work very 
effectively and could save lives, especially when clearing houses with 
suicide bombers, but we don't use those either.  Not because it wouldn't
 save lives, but because these weapons cause unnecessary human suffering
 and the international community, led by the U.S., decided that they 
weren't worth the moral cost.
The sad truth is that America is morally bipolar.  The country that I
 signed up to defend with my life has become an endorser of torture, an 
evader of accountability, and a place where the rule of law is 
arbitrary, especially for government elites who craft torture programs. 
 The accountability we preach to other countries that is so important 
for a just society is absent in our own when it comes to torture.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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