I just read about another complicit party to the Bush
administration’s use of torture: doctors and psychologists.
Apparently, “a new
report by Physicians for
Human Rights assembles the evidence and reaches a sickening but inescapable
conclusion: ‘Health professionals played central roles in developing,
implementing and providing justification for torture.’”, which I read in Eugene
Robinson’s column in the Washington Post today.
It’s a scary thought, and I was naïve to think
accountability for torture was limited in scope to those who gave the orders
and those who carried those orders out.
Of course, this “revelation” if you will, is not a
reflection of the medical community in general. There were certain, and
hopefully few, individual doctors and psychologists who were complicit.
Interrogations techniques are seen by the American Psychological Association’s
President James Bray, as "tantamount to torture as defined by APA
and international law."
Unfortunately, there were exceptions.
So the pool of individuals that contributed to torture, that we know of, grows larger. I’ve learned from my naiveté. The ACLU is
continuing to demand for greater transparency and accountability. You can take
action too, by clicking here.