Okay, here's the punch line. First, the original scenario...
The scenario actually happened, but the facts were significantly different. The actual fact pattern is printed below, with the changes in bold to reflect what actually happened..."The terrorist mastermind had slipped through their fingers before, and American forces were not about to let it happen again... Unable to track him down, they managed instead to locate and detain his wife... For several days, they interrogated her at an air base, but she repeatedly insisted that he was dead. Finally, they tried a new tactic. They noisily put a plane on a nearby runway, its engines running. As the commanding officer later recalled: 'We then informed [her] that the plane was there to take her three sons to [a repressive country nearby] unless she told us where her husband was... If she did not do this then she would have ten minutes to say goodbye to her sons...' Having threatened, in essence, to kill her sons - for nobody doubted what the secret police would do to them when they arrived at their destination - the interrogators got the information they wanted. And they got their man, disguised as a farm laborer, that evening."
A few things stick out about this in my mind."Rudolph Hoess, the commandant of Auschwitz had slipped through their fingers before, and British forces were not about to let it happen again... Unable to track him down, they managed instead to locate and detain his wife... For several days, they interrogated her at an air base, but she repeatedly insisted that he was dead. Finally, they tried a new tactic. They noisily put a train on some nearby tracks, its engine running. As the commanding officer later recalled: 'We then informed [her] that the train was there to take her three sons to [a repressive country nearby] unless she told us where her husband was... If she did not do this then she would have ten minutes to say goodbye to her sons...' Having threatened, in essence, to kill her sons - for nobody doubted what the secret police would do to them when they arrived at their destination - the interrogators got the information they wanted. And they got their man, disguised as a farm laborer, that evening."
- The concentration camps had been liberated. Rudolph Hoess posed no further threat.
- The war was over. That is generally when prisoners are released, not continued to be hunted down.
- Hoess was sought in order to stand trial at Nuremberg, not to prevent him from continuing hostilities.
- His wife was detained and coerced with the threat of her sons being mistreated.
Today, on the other hand...
- We suspect that certain Gitmo detainees are still threats.
- The war is not over, so prisoners would, by historical precedent, be expected to remain in custody.
- Gitmo prisoners are held, in part, to prevent them from continuing hostilities.
- Interrogations that have drawn criticism in this decade have been...
- - those applied to the actual terrorist, not a family member
- - applied in order to obtain information about existing/continuing threats, not to obtain a witness for a court hearing
- - applied while hostilities are ongoing
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