Zuruck wrote:this is what I'm surmising. You all believe that since we haven't killed as many people or that more people died in WW2, that this is acceptable.
Go get some reading and surmising sk1llz please. Here, let me give you a couple quotes from this thread:
Lothar wrote:The fact that it's being investigated should make it clear that, in fact, it's not acceptable.
index_html wrote:It doesn't excuse unlawful killings by the U.S. military and they should be investigated and prosecuted, if any have occured.
I don't see how you get that anyone is saying it's "acceptable". I clearly stated it is
not acceptable.
What we're saying is that it should be investigated, and that any wrongdoing that occured should be punished, because such wrongdoing is not acceptable.
Furthermore, we're saying that you should get some perspective -- the fact that there were 30 suspicious deaths (many of which were found to be justifiable homicide, or natural deaths) in 2 wars over the course of 2 years does NOT point to "the next coming of Saddam". Clearly, the abuses we're talking about are of very different character -- with Saddam, it was a widespread pattern, where hundreds or thousands would be killed at a time in an organized campaign. With the US military, it's isolated incidents where one guard goes off and kills one prisoner, or a few prison guards go off and torture (quite mildly, as torture goes) a few prisoners on one single day. The fact that you'd even consider making a Saddam comparison means you have zero credibility.
Z wrote:none of the guards were court martialed UNTIL 60 Minutes broke the story
How long do you suppose a court martial normally takes? It typically requires a lot of investigation, evidence gathering, and case building -- just like legal cases. When's the last time you heard of any non-trivial legal case that went through in under 3 months? And yet you're surprised that when 60 minutes broke the story ~3 months later, nobody had been court-martialed yet?
Now, let me ask you: how many of the people were still on active duty, and still in a position where they could continue doing what they had been doing, once the army began investigating them? From what I understand, every one of them was placed on some sort of leave when the investigations started.
Z wrote:Do you think they were going to do anything had it not been put in the media?
Yes, I do.
Z wrote:I think it's safe now to all agree to the fact that it was not JUST these MPs acting out on their own.
I don't agree. You call me an idiot for disagreeing, but I think my intelligence has been fairly well established here, so if your point requires you to think that I'm an idiot, that probably means your point is wrong.
What *evidence* is there that these MP's weren't acting out on their own? How many levels up the chain of command does the evidence point? If you can't present evidence, I don't think it's safe to say we should all agree unless we're idiots.
So far, the only piece of "evidence" I've heard that this goes farther than the actual perpatrators or their immediate supervisors has been reference to someone in the administration (Rumsfeld?) saying to "do whatever it takes" to get information. You interpret this to mean "including torture practices, unlawful killings, and so forth". I have to wonder, if a sports executive says "do whatever it takes to sign this player away from our rivals" do you interpret it the same way? Your interpretation says more about your preconceptions than it does about the actual situation.
Consider this: if Bush or Rumsfeld had ordered torture and unlawful killing, how many incidents would there have been? The number wouldn't be growing to 30 -- it would be growing to more like 3000. There would be incidents probably every day in a few prisons across the nation. The people involved would not be placed on leave soon afterwards; they'd be allowed to continue as long as possible. And, chances are, the military would've tried to keep it all under wraps. Now, when something is being kept under wraps and then allegations begin to surface, it tends to snowball really quickly -- you hear about a single incident on Tuesday, and by Friday all of a sudden hundreds allegations are surfacing everywhere.
None of the patterns match with what you'd get from widespread abuse or abuse sanctioned by the top echelons of command.
Z wrote:Deaths because the agents didnt like the answers they were getting and cracked his head with the butt of a gun are much worse.
Agreed. Which is why every one of us has said that these things should be investigated, and if any wrongdoing is found, the person should be punished accordingly.
Z wrote:Bush has done more than enough in the last 3 years that this doesn't even matter to me. Do I think he was aware? Yes. Do I think he allowed it? I think he gave Rumsfeld the authority to dictate it.
Which means I was 100% correct in my assessment of your position:
Lothar wrote:what you really mean is that Bush should pay, because you blame him for every single atrocity or alleged atrocity that could possibly have happened in Iraq. You already thought Bush should pay even if there were not atrocities, and every atrocity that is committed by anyone even remotely related to the US, you add to the stack of things you think Bush should pay for -- and then when some terrorist beheads a civilian, you blame Bush for that, too.
Now, the fact is, you *believe* Bush knew and you *believe* he gave Rumsfeld authority to dictate it -- but you have no legitimate evidence. You have what, one quote? A quote that most reasonable people would not take to mean "go ahead and torture and murder people" if it was spoken by someone outside of the Bush administration about anything other than Iraq? Yeah, I was right -- you think Bush should pay, and you'll take any piece of evidence that can possibly be construed that direction, no matter how flimsy it is.
To wrap up:
1) Torture and unlawful killing is *NOT* acceptable, which is why these people were under investigation, and would have been punished whether or not the media picked up the story.
2) The incidents we've heard of are still, clearly, isolated -- all of the patterns match with isolated incidents, and none with widespread coverups. There are no snowballing accusations; people involved were placed on leave quickly; investigations and court martials have been and continue to be taking place.
3) The evidence tying Bush and the nebulous "chain of command" to these incidents has been, so far, extremely weak.