I agree that it is a PC thing to say now in the US liberal circles that torture doesn’t work. The original context was different, however: torture is not necessarily more effective than other interrogation techniques, and is often worse and less reliable, so, given its high ethical cost to the interrogator, it should not be a first-line interrogation technique. This eventually morphed into the (mostly liberal) meme “torture is always bad, regardless of the situation”. This is not very surprising, lots of delicate issues end up in a silly or simplistic Schelling point, like no-spanking, zero-tolerance of drugs, no physical contact between students in school, age restrictions on sex, drinking, etc.
FM 34-52 Intelligence Interrogation, the United States Army field manual, explains that torture “is a poor technique that yields unreliable results, may damage subsequent collection efforts, and can induce the source to say what he thinks the interrogator wants to hear.”[4] Not only is torture ineffective at gathering reliable information, but it also increases the difficulty of gathering information from a source in the future.
I agree that it is a PC thing to say now in the US liberal circles that torture doesn’t work. The original context was different, however: torture is not necessarily more effective than other interrogation techniques, and is often worse and less reliable, so, given its high ethical cost to the interrogator, it should not be a first-line interrogation technique. This eventually morphed into the (mostly liberal) meme “torture is always bad, regardless of the situation”. This is not very surprising, lots of delicate issues end up in a silly or simplistic Schelling point, like no-spanking, zero-tolerance of drugs, no physical contact between students in school, age restrictions on sex, drinking, etc.
Could you provide evidence for this claim?
Going by the links on Wikipedia. A quote:
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