Talya wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
When you come up with rules for how it's ok to fight, your enemy will just game those rules. He knows that you have political burdens because of them, and he doesn't.
In World War 2, American, Canadian, and British forces that were captured by Nazi Germany received fair and human treatment at the hands of those oh-so-most-evil Nazis. Why? At least in part because of the way we were known to treat our own captured PoWs. German soldiers captured in WW2 by the western allies were treated very, very well. This had so many good effects - yes, it meant they gave us the same respect back when we were captured. Also, it meant that the enemy was more likely to surrender when the battle was lost, reducing the loss of life on both sides.
A lot of this was really that they just had a different attitude towards Americans and British than they did Russians.
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If you look on the eastern front, in the same war, no such respect existed between the Soviet and German forces. They fought to the death. German soldiers knew they'd be summarily executed if captured by the soviets (assuming they bothered to capture them), and Soviet forces ended up acting the same as the Germans would send them to be tortured and killed in their own concentration camps.
Most of which had nothing to do with the treatment of either side's prisoners by the other. The Germans had adopted the Nazi attitude towards Slavic people in general that Hitler had given them and would have behaved the way they did regardless. The Soviet treatment of their prisoners could hardly be expected to be better given who was in charge there.
This should be viewed as opposed to Soviet prisoners of the Finns, who were not treated particularly harshly. Most deaths among those prisoners can be attributed to A) the cold environment of that theatre, B) the poor harvest and C) Finnish unpreparedness for the volume of prisoners, rather than any deliberate maltreatment.
While Soviet treatment of Finnish prisoners was generally better than they treated Germans, it was still vastly inferior to Finnish treatment of Soviet prisoners and involved exactly what we'd expect from the USSR of that time - forced labor camps, and very poor food and medical treatment. Furthermore Finnish prisoners were subject to being shot on the spot by partisans.
Finalnd's signing of and attempts to adhere to Hague IV had little, if any, effect on Soviet treatment of their personnel.
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These are principles we should remember, but with that said, this is not an analogous situation, I admit. The enemy the free world now faces is not an issue of politics or greed for power or land. This is a jihadist holy war, in which their eventual goal is to kill every last man, woman and child who does not submit to the will of Allah. They will accept no less, it will never end until one side or the other is exterminated. (Sadly, they understand this, and we do not. As bad as Hitler was, Nazi Germany was not nearly as villainous as our current foes.)
Nazi Germany was pretty much just as bad as anything we face now. Differences in capability make any evaluation of "how villainous" they are pretty much impossible to conduct objectively.
The simple fact is, however, that even if we accept the idea that we shouldn't conduct torture or enhanced interrogation because we don't need to, or its not worth it, or its not effective, there's still the fact that A) it happened and B) bad things do happen. Real life good guys are not Disney good guys. We do not need to act as if this is some horrendous stain on our lily-white honor.
It isn't the first stain, and everyone is stained. Most nations much worse. Those few that are less have the luxury of not being worth the effort to threaten. This report is essentially pornography. It's purpose is so that people can preen at how offended they are at the whole affair, and talk about how right they are about the Bush administration, and conveniently ignore the uncomfortable problems Khross has pointed out.