Michael Levin
THE CASE FOR TORTURE |
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.........It is generally
assumed that torture is impermissible, a throwback to a more
brutal age. Enlightened societies reject it outright, and regimes
suspected of using it risk the wrath of the United States. I
believe this attitude is unwise. There are situations in which
torture is not merely permissible but morally mandatory. Moreover,
these situations are moving from the realm of imagination to
fact.Death: Suppose a terrorist has hidden an atomic bomb on
Manhattan Island which will detonate at noon on July 4 unless...
(here follow the usual demands for money and release of his friends
from jail). Suppose, further, that he is caught at 10 a.m. of
the fateful day, but - preferring death to failure - won't disclose
where the bomb is. What do we do? If we follow due process -
wait for his lawyer, arraign him - millions of people will die.
If the only way to save those lives is to subject the terrorist
to the most excruciating possible pain, what grounds can there
be for not doing so? I suggest there are none. In any case, I
ask you to face the question with an open mind.Torturing the
terrorist is unconstitutional? Probably. But millions of lives
surely outweigh constitutionality. Torture is barbaric? Mass
murder is far more barbaric. Indeed, letting millions of innocents
die in deference to one who flaunts his guilt is moral cowardice,
an unwillingness to dirty one's hands. If you caught the terrorist,
could you sleep nights knowing millions died because you couldn't
bring yourself to apply the electrodes?
......Once you concede
that torture is justified in extreme cases, you have admitted that
the decision to use torture is a matter of balancing innocent lives
against the means needed to save them. You must now face more realistic
cases involving more modest numbers. Someone plants a bomb on a
jumbo jet. He alone can disarm it, and his demands cannot be met
(or if they can, we refuse to set a precedent by yielding to his
threats.) Surely we can, we must, do anything to the extortionist
to save the passengers. How can we tell 300, or 100, or 10 people
who never asked to be put in danger, "I'm sorry, you'll have
to die in agony, we just couldn't bring ourselves to..."Here
are the results of an informal poll a third, hypothetical, case.
Suppose a terrorist group kidnapped a newborn baby from a hospital.
I asked four mothers if they would approve of torturing kidnappers
if that were necessary to get their own newborns back. All said
yes, the most "liberal" adding that she would administer
it herself. I am not advocating torture as punishment. Punishment
is addressed to deeds irrevocably past. Rather, I am advocating
torture as an acceptable measure for preventing future evils. So
understood, it is far less objectionable than many extant punishments.
....Opponents of
the death penalty, for example, are forever insisting that executing
a murderer will not bring back his victim (as if the purpose of
capital punishment were supposed to be resurrection, not deterrence
or retribution). But torture, in the cases described, is intended
not to bring anyone back but to keep innocents from being dispatched.
The most powerful argument against using torture as a punishment
or to secure confessions is that such practices disregard the rights
of the individual. Well, if the individual is all that important
- and he is - it is correspondingly important to protect the rights
of individuals threatened by terrorists. If life is so valuable
that it must never be taken, the lives of the innocents must be
saved even at the price of hurting the one who endangers them.
Better precedents for torture are assassination and preemptive
attack. No Allied leader would have flinched at assassinating Hitler,
had that been possible. (The Allies did assassinate Heydrich.)
Americans would be angered to learn that Roosevelt could have had
Hitler killed in 1943 - thereby shortening the war and saving millions
of lives - but refused on moral grounds. Similarly, if nation A
learns that nation B is about to launch an unprovoked attack, A
has a right to save itself by destroying B's military capacity
first. In the same way, if the police can by torture save those
who would otherwise die at the hands of kidnappers or terrorists,
they must. Idealism: There is an important difference between terrorists
and their victims that should mute talk of the terrorists' "rights." The
terrorist's victims are at risk unintentionally, not having asked
to be endangered. But the terrorist knowingly initiated his actions.
Unlike his victims, he volunteered for the risks of his deed. By
threatening to kill for profit or idealism, he renounces civilized
standards, and he can have no complaint if civilization tries to
thwart him by whatever means necessary. Just as torture is justified
only to save lives (not extort confessions or recantations), it
is justifiably administered only to those known to hold innocent
lives in their hands. Ah, but how can the authorities ever be sure
they have the right malefactor? Isn't there a danger of error and
abuse? Won't We turn into Them? Questions like these are disingenuous
in a world in which terrorists proclaim themselves and perform
for television. The name of their game is public recognition. After
all, you can't very well intimidate a government into releasing
your freedom fighters unless you announce that it is your group
that has seized its embassy. "Clear guilt" is difficult
to define, but when 40 million people see a group of masked gunmen
seize an airplane on the evening news, there is not much question
about who the perpetrators are. There will be hard cases where
the situation is murkier. Nonetheless, a line demarcating the legitimate
use of torture can be drawn. Torture only the obviously guilty,
and only for the sake of saving innocents and the line between
Us and Them will remain clear.
....There is little danger that
the Western democracies will lose their way if they choose to
inflict pain as one way of preserving order. Paralysis in the
face of evil is the greater danger. Some day soon a terrorist
will threaten tens of thousands of lives, and torture will be
the only way to save them. We had better start thinking about
this. |