But if your concern is over the larger threat that inheres in who the
Tsarnaev brothers were and are, what they did, and what they represent,
then worry—a lot.
For starters, you can worry about how
the High-Value Interrogation Group, or HIG, will do its work. That unit
was finally put in place by the FBI after so-called underwear bomber Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab
tried to blow up the airplane in which he was traveling as it flew over
Detroit on Christmas Day in 2009 and was advised of his Miranda rights.
The CIA interrogation program that might have handled the interview had
by then been dismantled by President Obama.
At the behest of such Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated groups as the
Council on American Islamic Relations and the Islamic Society of North
America, and other self-proclaimed spokesmen for American Muslims, the
FBI has bowdlerized its training materials to exclude references to
militant Islamism. Does this delicacy infect the FBI's interrogation
group as well?
Will we see another performance like the Army's after-action report following Maj. Nidal Hasan's
rampage at Fort Hood in November 2009, preceded by his shout "allahu
akhbar"—a report that spoke nothing of militant Islam but referred to
the incident as "workplace violence"? If tone is set at the top, recall
that the Army chief of staff at the time said the most tragic result of
Fort Hood would be if it interfered with the Army's diversity program.
Mukasey, his hatred for Islam (and Democratic presidents, with not much space between them apparently) is saying torture and waterboarding could have saved lives. He dares to say this a mere week after an independent report and review of Bush-era "enhanced interrogation" confirmed that yes, we did torture suspects for information and no, it got zero useful intelligence.
As a result of the Bush administration’s green-lighting of “enhanced
interrogation techniques,” the report says, “U.S. forces, in many
instances, used interrogation techniques on detainees that constitute
torture. American personnel conducted an even larger number of
interrogations that involved ‘cruel, inhuman, or degrading’ treatment.”
“Both categories of actions violate U.S. laws and international
treaties. Such conduct was directly counter to values of the
Constitution and our nation,” The Constitution Project report said.
To recap, we committed war crimes under Bush, and not only are the people responsible for that running free, they are writing op-eds in the Wall Street Journal complaining we're not committing more war crimes.
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