number of prisoners at 98, but the report found that at least 119 were detained. 26 of…
Traditionally, a folded flag in the symmetrical triangle often means the remembrance of a loved one lost in a military conflict while defending our country’s way of life. More recently, the flags have been displayed in shadow boxes and adorned by military challenge coins and accompanied by a decree of retirement. There is only one other way to receive a flag of this kind and Joint Task Force Guantanamo has three flying programs available for Troopers.…
Guantanamo bay detention camp is located in Cuba. It was opened in 2002 and is used to hold terrorist and Muslim militants. At Guantanamo bay detention center prisoners may be tortured during interrogation. This is one of the May reasons activist groups have petitioned for the closing of Guantanamo bay. On January 22, 2009 Obama started the closing of Guantanamo bay detention camp (Nolen). There have been 780 inmates that have be held at the detention camp. As of 2016 only 81 inmates remain. Those who have left have either been transferred to other prisons across the world or released in order to swap for captives (Nolen). I agree with Evan McMullin that Guantanamo bay detention camp should not be…
This paper will explore the legally approved torture tactics approved by the Bush administration in Guantanamo Bay, to the dismantlement of the prison and court-bound procedures taken by the Obama administration.…
When times that require the use of torture come to light, the media tends to give life to an already harsh experience. If a soldier needs to find out where his fellow soldiers were taken, there are ways to get this information out of the detainee. To some, the quickest way to do so is to bring the harshest aspects the…
Guantanamo Bay is a US prison for terrorists and other threatening people, located off of US soil. This means that the processes that go on in the institution, legally, do not need to follow US rules. Many painful and tortuous things are performed on the prisoners, such as force feeding and the topic of this essay, water boarding, where the victim is made to feel as though they are drowning. Although Gitmo is legal/allowed to an extent, it still begs the question how the guards consciously perform such cruel acts and what I would do if I were faced with the decision of torturing a prisoner or not.…
An investigation into the treatment of detainees at the prison was issued when photo were discovered of guards abusing detainees in 2003. The human rights violations included: physical and sexual abuse, torture, rape, sodomy, and murder. Many of the torture techniques used were developed at the Guantánamo detention center including prolonged isolation, a sleep deprivation technique where people were moved from cell to cell every few hours, short-shackling in painful positions; nudity; extreme use of heat and cold; the use of loud music and noise and preying on phobias. "Punching, slapping, and kicking detainees; jumping on their naked feet...positioning a naked detainee on a MRE box, with a sandbag on his head, and attaching wires to his fingers, toes, and penis to simulate electric torture...having sex with female detainees...using military working dogs (without muzzles) to intimidate and frighten detainees, and in at least one case biting and severely injuring a detainee...breaking chemical lights and pouring the phosphoric liquid on detainees...Beating detainees with a broom handle and a chair...Sodomizing a detainee with a chemical light and perhaps a broom stick" (qtd. in Behrens and Rosen 665-6). Eleven US soldiers were convicted of crimes relating to the Abu Ghraib scandal. A number of other service members were not charged but reprimanded. Shockingly enough, despite the level of…
What would the world be life if all the terrorists were captured? Guantanamo Bay serves this purpose and they are a detention and interrogation facility located in Cuba. The main objective of this base is to use unlawful interrogation to gain information from the enemies to defeat them. Guantanamo Bay has been around for decades and it dates all the way back to 1903. This is where the Republic of Cuba granted the United States 45 square miles of territory to build a naval station. During the late 1990s, this base was mainly used for illegal refugees. Then the 2000s hit and the U.S. was under attack. The first detainees from Pakistan and Afghanistan arrived in the month of January of 2002. Hundreds of captured terrorists would soon…
The Abu Ghraib prison was a prison in Iraq that was notorious for torturing the prisoners. Some of the violations include murder, sodomy, sexual abuse, and rape. Photographs of each torture mechanism were taken and shown to the government. Many of the American soldiers involved in the Abu Ghraib prison scandal were accused of abuse. The administration of George W. Bush tried to cover up the abuse cases as “isolated incidents”, therefore making it seem as if the torture was only happening to select inmates, and as a form of intense interrogation. It was later revealed that the torture was not conducted on a select few, but conducted throughout groups of the inmates. Some of the abusers in the prison believed that they were doing a good thing.…
Is the intentional pain that an individual experiences justified by the possibility of preserving the lives of many? Torture is the used as a weapon, but in reality does it work? The purpose of this essay is to identify what the motives are for using torture, the effectiveness of torture, and important issues or flaws with the entire process of torture.…
far better than harming thousands. However, I think there is no scenario where it is acceptable to torture innocent children.…
<br>The prevalence of torture throughout the world can be accounted for in part by the process of "routinization" in which a regime, in essence, desensitizes a given torturer to the atrocities that he is committing in its name. In such a process "what is being done to someone transforms into what is being done: information gathering" (191). The task of amassing information and confessions eclipses the reality in which the torturer lives; this is achieved through peer pressure from fellow torturers "to be a man", by intense physical and emotional training, and through the employment of propaganda claiming that the torturer is fulfilling his duty and doing the right thing as his victims are immoral enemies of the state (192). In short, the torturer becomes disoriented and unable to decipher the actuality of his existence. This disorientation is caused by repetition, or "habituation", in addition to the development of the "task-oriented frame of mind"; according to one Chilean ex-torturer ". . . after . . . not wanting to . . . but wanting to, you start getting used to it [and there] definitely . . . comes a moment when you [no longer] feel [anything] about what you are doing" (191).…
In discussions of ticking time bombs, one controversial issue has been how to deal with the alleged guilty terrorist once he is captured. On the one hand, some people, including Michael Levin, a libertarian writer and educator, argue that it is in the US government’s right to torture the guilty terrorist because his knowledge could be used to save the lives of millions. On the other hand, others, such as Philip Heymann, who is a writer that had worked in the government field, firmly states that torture should never be used because the chance that it will produce true and useful information is nearly impossible and it is vastly more crucial to preserve the international bans on torture. Shirley Jackson elaborates on Heymann’s view when she…
Imagine being taken from your family, to a cold, dark place where you are locked up, with no room to move, in a small cage. You are taken every once in a while to get your hair shaved off, and things rubbed into your skin that could potentially make your hair never grow back, or it burns you and makes your skin bleed. Or maybe you get a substance put into your eyes and are kept with that substance in your eyes for two weeks and you go blind, or maybe you are being tied up and having all your hair pulled out, knowing you’re going to be tortured like this every three to four months.…
military. The documentary discussed the horrendous, cruel and unjust “interrogation techniques”, that can be also known as torture, used by the U.S. military on Afghani prisoners following the 9/11 attack. The documentary begins with the story of an innocent Afghani Taxi driver, by the name of Dilawar, who was taken by American soldiers to Bagram prison, where five days later he was found dead. The cause of his death found by the medical examiner was brutal torture and abuse due to being strapped to a ceiling, forcing him to stand up for hours at a time and being relentlesy kicked on the legs, which pulpified them. Though very unfortunate, Dilawar was not the only prisoner who suffered such treatment under U.S. custody. Through pictures, interviews, etc, this documentary provides the viewer with the shocking effects that the War on Terrorism and Bush’s administration policy on torture had on the both the United States Military and Afghani prisoners. In the end, the film sheds a negative light on Americans as a…