IRAQ WAR - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
The Invention of Porno Torture: Not One Victim Was Called to Testify |
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by LIAQUAT ALI KHAN Counter Punch Entered into the database on Sunday, October 23rd, 2005 @ 18:13:04 MST |
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Lynndie England, the Army private photographed holding a naked Iraqi
by a dog leash, has been convicted leaving behind a nagging question: how far
up does the responsibility go? By no means is Lynddie England alone. She is
the scapegoat of a larger US Torture Establishment. A related question that
demands scrutiny is the widespread use of porno torture. Photos and stories
emanating from Abu Gharib and Guantanamo, the military prisons that would live
in infamy, reveal that American soldiers, CIA interrogators, and military contractors,
all have engaged in porno torture against Muslim detainees. Unofficial stories
circulating on the internet are beyond belief. But even official acknowledgement,
though exposing only tip of the iceberg, furnishes credible clues that porno
torture has been, and probably still is, a favorite tool to degrade and torment
Muslim detainees. General Antonio Taguba, who investigated charges of torture in Iraq, reported
numerous episodes of porno torture. At Abu Gharib, detained Muslim boys were
sodomized and detained Muslim girls were raped. Detained Muslim men were stripped
naked and stacked in pyramids. Some were forced to engage in oral sex with each
other. Some were forced to wear female underwears. Reports from the Gunatanamo
gulag are no less pornographic. One Muslim detainee was smeared with the menstrual
blood of a prostitute. Another was led to believe, through long therapy sessions,
that he was a closet homosexual--torture aimed at dismantling the detainee's
self-identity. Yet another detainee reported: Americans stripped me, hit me
and beat me up. I pointed to where the pain was but they took it as a joke and
they laughed. All these sadistic episodes are examples of porno torture. Porno torture is not defined in law. However, laws do define pornography and
torture separately. Pornography is visual depictions, including photograph,
film, and video, of actual or simulated sexually explicit conduct, such as lascivious
exhibition of the genitals, sexual acts, sadistic or masochistic abuse. Torture
is the intentional infliction of severe physical or mental pain on a person
for the purposes of obtaining information or a confession, punishment, or intimidation. From these definitions, porno torture may be deduced as the intentional
infliction of severe physical or mental pain for interrogative, punitive, or
abusive purposes by forcing a person to engage in sexually explicit behavior
which is recorded, or staged before a live audience. Note that porno torture is not the same as porno conduct. What distinguishes
the two is the element of consent. The person engaged in porno conduct consents
to visual depictions of his or her actual or simulated sexual acts. By contrast,
porno torture forces the person against his or her will to engage in actual
sexual acts for or before an audience. Just like porno conduct, porno torture
is also photographed, filmed, or videotaped for the gratification of others.
At Abu Gharib, for example, an act of torture was committed when naked detainees
were forcibly stacked in a pyramid. This act of torture turned into porno torture
when sexual torture was photographed, filmed, or videotaped. Recording of sexual
torture however is not critical for pornographic purposes. Porno torture may
be committed for the gratification of a live audience, with or without producing
any visual record. Torture is by no means an exclusive American practice. Almost all states, including
Muslim nations, practice atrocious forms of torture. Porno torture, however,
is unique. It is unique not because it is harsher but because it is unusual.
Very few states have been reported to practice porno torture. So a question
arises: Why has the US Torture Establishment invented porno torture to degrade
and torment Muslim men, women, and children? There can be several believable
explanations. Here are two: The first explanation is legal. The Torture Establishment knows that the United
States has not fully accepted the concept of mental torture. The Convention
against Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment (1984), a universally
subscribed international treaty, prohibits physical or mental torture and allows
no exceptions under any circumstances. In 1994, however, the United States ratified
the Convention with several reservations. One reservation narrows the scope
of mental torture. No mental torture is actionable under US laws unless it causes
"prolonged mental harm." Accordingly, the Torture Establishment might
have foolishly concluded that porno torture may be inflicted on Muslim detainees
since it presumably causes no severe physical injury or prolonged mental harm. The second explanation is cultural-religious. The Torture Establishment interprets
the war on terror as a religious war. It presumes that terrorists are Muslim
fundamentalists with conservative sexual morality. The presumption is valid
to the extent that Islamic culture shuns porno nudity and porno sexual acts
staged for the gratification of an audience. In this sense, Islamic culture
is no different from the mainstream American culture. However while a multi-billion
dollars porn industry is permitted under the US laws, Muslim nations practice
severe censorship to minimize the entry of porno products. This awareness of
cultural difference empowers the Torture Establishment to use porno torture
as an effective tool in challenging, confusing, and degrading the religious
orientation of Muslim detainees. The Torture Establishment is betting that porno
torture would cause severe mental pain and suffering to Muslim militants but
no perpetrator will be prosecuted. It is no surprise that the military court that convicted Lynddie England found
no porno torture in the case. In fact, England was not even charged for committing
any form of torture. She has been found guilty of one count of conspiracy, four
counts of maltreating detainees, and one count of committing an indecent act.
No Iraqi detainees were summoned as witnesses to tell their story of shame,
degradation, pain and suffering that porno torture inflicted on their bodies,
minds, and souls. Meanwhile, the Torture Establishment has buried thousands
of pictures of porno torture in confidential files to avoid responsibility. |