Army intelligence officer concludes: 'Zero Dark Thirty' is more right than wrong


By Lt.
Col. Douglas Pryer, U.S. Army






Best
Defense department of war movie reviews



Torture
has once again become a matter of noisy public debate. This time (thank
goodness!), the reason has nothing to do with new revelations of U.S.
servicemembers or CIA employees going amuck on prisoners. Instead, the cause de
célèbre is a movie, Zero Dark Thirty.
Critics of the movie say that it promotes the use of torture by linking torture
to a piece of evidence that proved indispensable in America's search for bin
Laden. This, critics like Senators McCain, Feinstein, and Levin say, is a
dangerous fiction not rooted in historical reality.



Fans of
the movie disagree. They argue that the movie portrays this evidence as far
less valuable than that obtained by clearly legal means. What is more, they
say, the movie performs a service by leaving no doubt in the audience's mind
that so-called "enhanced interrogation techniques" (EITs) were torture, and
also by shocking the conscience of these same viewers, causing them to wonder
how the U.S. government could so easily surrender founding national values to
such little good effect.



I agree
with the movie's apologists. The movie does not depict torture as producing
indispensable evidence. It shows morally repugnant torture producing a piece of
evidence that the CIA already had but had tucked away in a file and forgot
about. Seven years of torture, the movie says, produced little if any
intelligence that clearly legal methods could have (and did) provide. The real
narrative of the movie: A new sheriff (President Obama) comes to town who
outlaws torture; subsequent CIA detective work relies exclusively on more
cunning, ethical techniques involving, not just humane interrogations, but
other intelligence methods; and -- presto!
-- in two short years, bin Laden's hideout is found and, a few months later, he
is killed. Even if the movie gets many details wrong, it at least gets the
basic story right.



But far
more important than the movie's historical accuracy is the deeper debate it has
resurrected: Does torture work? And, even if it does work, is torture something
Americans ought to be using on "hardened" terrorists
(or on anyone else for that matter)?



This debate
is sorely needed since most opinion polls show Americans' support for torture
steadily climbing. A 2011 Pew Research Center survey reported that 53 percent
of Americans believe that torture should often (19 percent) or sometimes (34
percent) be used against terrorism suspects to gain information. That marked a
steady 10 percent climb from 2004. A recent YouGov poll commissioned by a
Stanford University professor indicated that, over a five-year period, the
number of Americans approving of torture climbed 14 percent to 41 percent in
2012.



This
trend is something that those against "torture as American policy" should be
watching carefully. U.S. legislation, military regulations, and Army doctrine
-- most notably the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005 and U.S. Army Field Manual
2-22.3 Human Intelligence Collector
Operations
-- now enshrine prisoner treatment that is in keeping with
international standards and the national values expressed by such principled
American leaders as George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. In our republic,
though, all laws are subject to change -- even those in the Constitution -- if
enough Americans support this change.



There is
no question which side of the torture debate I fall on. First and foremost, it
is clear to me that torture fails as a tactic within the most important domain
of war, the moral one. It is thus something that we Americans simply ought not
to do.



When
people see images of torture, most empathize with the tortured rather than the
torturer. This is especially true for those who identify strongly with the
tortured in the first place because of in-group, out-group bias, say, because
the tortured is a fellow Muslim or a fellow Iraqi. The moral judgment that this
empathy has naturally generated -- the judgment that those torturing are
"cruel," "evil," or worse still, "inhuman" -- has inspired legions of America's
enemies to fight us. At the same time, shame has decreased the will to fight of
some Americans within the ranks and at home and damaged the political ability
of coalition allies to support America's military adventures abroad. Choosing
torture as policy is thus rightly seen as a kind of slow moral suicide,
strengthening the fighting spirit of our enemies while sapping our own fighting
spirit and that of our allies.



It is
also clear to me that torture is an extremely poor method for collecting
reliable intelligence. This clarity derives in part from military doctrine,
training, and professional reading. But it is also rooted in personal
experience.



During
the summer and fall of 2003, my boss and I managed interrogation operations for
Task Force 1st Armored Division (TF 1AD) in Baghdad. My boss was Major Nathan
Hoepner, who wrote an email in August 2003 that would one day be quoted by Tom
Ricks in Fiasco. When told by the
highest command in Iraq that "the gloves are coming off" and that our unit must
provide a "wish list" of harsh interrogation techniques, Major Hoepner emailed
a passionate rebuttal: "We need to
take a deep breath and remember who we are...It comes down to standards of right
and wrong -- something we cannot just put aside when we find it inconvenient." He
concluded: "BOTTOM LINE: We are American soldiers, heirs of a long
tradition of staying on the high ground. We need to stay there."



Tragically,
his impassioned plea fell on deaf ears. Lieutenant General Ricardo Sanchez soon
signed a policy memo encouraging the use of EITs on prisoners, tactics employed
at U.S. military Survival, Escape, Resistance, and Evasion (SERE) schools to
teach trainees how to survive torture with honor. Sanchez replaced this memo with
another in October that ostensibly required interrogators to obtain his
approval for non-doctrinal techniques. However, it actually reinforced the
belief of some interrogators that they themselves had the authority to order
that clothing, food, shelter, light, and warmth be withheld from detainees.
Thus it was that degrading, formally promulgated tactics laid the foundation
for more serious crimes at Abu Ghraib and elsewhere in Iraq.



At the
height of the worst abuses at Abu Ghraib, I regularly communicated with an
interrogation chief working at the prison. The reason was to press him to have
TF 1AD detainees re-interrogated. Despite his team's conducting numerous
interrogations for us, we did not receive ANY useful intelligence whatsoever
from Abu Ghraib. Sure, they produced reports on our detainees, but invariably,
these reports contained either useless information or different versions of the
same stories we had already extracted using humane, rapport-based approaches.



I was
not alone in my frustration with Abu Ghraib. For example, Kyle Teamey, the S2X
(senior human intelligence officer) for 1st Brigade, 1st
Infantry Division, in Ramadi at the time, said: "The folks at Abu Ghraib not only failed to provide any intel
of value, they turned the entire Sunni population against us. Meanwhile, we
were getting actionable intel by giving detainees Skittles and a cup of
coffee."



Despite
our nation's and military's gross failures at Abu Ghraib and several other
detention facilities, most interrogators
at Gitmo, Iraq, and Afghanistan did not choose to torture. Why is this
the case? One reason is that many
shared the idealism expressed by Major Hoepner, which holds that torture is
just something that Americans should not do.



But we should not dismiss professional competence as a
reason, either. Those interrogators who had done their professional reading
were less likely to engage in torture. In a future guest column, "Top 10 Books
on U.S. Interrogation," I will provide a list of some of these books. Interrogators
had also learned doctrine and conventional wisdom at the military intelligence
schoolhouse that taught that torture is an ineffective intelligence tool. This
conventional wisdom included the proverb, "The longest list of lies in the
world is that given by the tortured." Many interrogators had taken doctrine and
such conventional wisdom to heart, before they deployed.



Lieutenant
Colonel
Douglas
A. Pryer
is a military intelligence
officer who has served in various command and staff positions in
Iraq ,
Kosovo, Germany, the United Kingdom, the United States, and, most recently,
Afghanistan. He is the author of the Command and General Staff College
Foundation Press's inaugural book,
The
Fight for the High Ground: The U.S. Army and Interrogation During Operation
Iraqi Freedom, May 2003 - April 2004
. The views
expressed in this article are those of the author and do not reflect the
official policy or position of the Department of the Army, Department of
Defense, or the U.S. Government.

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Published on February 25, 2013 07:40
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