Black Hat wrote:Not about what I want to hear. Lets be honest, most of us, or at least I hope most of us, are far, far away from these unfortunate realities of the world we live in. What I do care about when discussion of this sort comes up is trying to get at the truth. You and fernmayo both disputed what I said earlier based upon links you provided, lets take a look at them and another one of mine, I'll add the dates as I think they're important
Going all the way back to the Bowden quotation I posted, I've never argued that torture produced a key break in the Bin Laden manhunt, nor have any of the sources I've linked to. That's a question beyond dispute for anyone who's done their research. What I take issue with is the cherry picking of quotations from officials/sources that are spun in ways that tend to exaggerate the case one way or the other. Either to make the claim that -- in spite of the fact that it wasn't moral, necessary or effective -- no detainee who was tortured ever told the CIA anything that in any way established or corroborated the importance of Bin Laden's courier, either during or after their torture, or any information that was in any way part of the intelligence picture that lead up to the final renewed focus on the courier. Or, coming from the Fox News crowd, that torture simply worked and was a clearly necessary part of the process.
Hopefully the Senate Intelligence Commitee will declassify their report soon. The senators you quote aren't quoted very extensively in that NYT piece and they are specifically refuting discredited claims by Jose Rodriguez that torture clearly produced unequivocally important information that would not have been established otherwise. When they say “Instead, the C.I.A. learned of the existence of the courier, his true name and location through means unrelated to the C.I.A. detention and interrogation program," they are likely referring to the very first mention of the courier, in the FBI interrogation of Abu Zubaydah by Ali Soufan. But that doesn't mean that other mentions of the courier that came later, sometimes in the process of torture, weren't also considered important by the team chasing Bin Laden. And this includes KSM's lies about the courier -- that he had "retired" -- which he apparently told his interrogators after (but not during) the many times he was water-boarded. In the context of everything else they knew at the time, the lies told the team something important too.
Peter Bergen, one of the few Western journalists* ever to interview Bin Laden in person, and a man who's been on the story since before almost anyone else cared, appears to draw similar conclusions. Once again, that torture produced no crucial leads but that some detainees who were tortured offered up some information that was seen to contribute to the manhunt. You can read more about it on pages 99-100 of his excellent book
Manhunt.
*(edited from "only Westerner" thanks to a notes from "who is bobby dylan" and hearthesilence later in this thread)