"How would the national debate over torture have changed if we'd known about the CIA tapes all along? How would our big terror trials and Supreme Court cases have played out? Yes, this is also a speculative enterprise, but it's critical to understanding the extent of the CIA's wrongdoing here. And we have a benchmark. When the photos from Abu Ghraib were leaked in 2004, a national uproar ensued. Video of hours of repetitive torture could have had a similarly significant impact- the truism about the power of images holds. If we are right about that - and we think we are - this evidence that has been destroyed would have fundamentally changed the legal and policy backdrop for the war on terror in ways we've only begun to figure out." (story)
Comments (1)
Top representatives of Al Qaeda have said that the Abu Ghraib photos were a prime recruiting tool for them. Consequently, the leak of those photos produced an increase in the number of deaths to Iraqi nationals as well as to coalition forces. Comparing behavior that was had already been been discovered, stopped and in the middle of being prosecuted and which involved no killing to that which produced significant killing puts the release of the photos in its proper perspective.
Posted by Menlo Bob
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December 14, 2007 10:32 AM
Posted on December 14, 2007 10:32