energiewende wrote:So did the Iraqi government. The whole point of this law is that rights are extended even to groups that never owed any loyalty to a recognised state
When did the Iraqi Government sign a surrender?
Also, how is a civil war comparable to a war of aggression?
I get the impression that you do not know how to answer this point and are simply angry that I am disagreeing with you.
And I get the impression that you are an obfuscating torture apologist.
But think about it like this: if we asked "any rational person" this question in 1900 they would say that mass execution after a drumhead tribunal at most is a reasonable and moral way to proceed: those who don't abide by the law and usages of war do not receive their protection.
We are not in 1900s and the law was different back then.
If we asked someone in the CIA or military intelligence, they might say that secret torture of limitless duration is justified: the ends justify the means.
Good thing that murderous secret agencies are not the ones setting the law either then. The opinions of torturers do not matter.
If you ask Stas Bush he might say that irregular combatants should be released with block of C4 and a hundred rounds of ammunition because anyone who fights without the authority of a state is prima facie in the right about whatever his grievance is.
You are even more of an ignoramus than I thought you were if you think this is Stas' position.
There is no consensus on this issue which is precisely why these laws have changed so much and why people still argue about them. Your "any rational person" is an obvious stand-in for your own personal views which seem to be based on nothing at all.
Yes there is. The only ones who disagree here are those who support torture. Their opinions do not matter. Did you somehow sleep through the 2000s and missed the entire discussion?
So I ask you again: why is depriving someone of their liberty not torture but insulting their religion is?
Are you saying insulting their religions is the only thing the british thugs did?
Are you trying to answer "No."? If so, please say, "No."
First, prove the people tortured here were insurgents. Given that most of them were released seems to suggest that they are either innocent or that the people who caught them thought they were supposed to be free.
I don't know, since we can't agree on what torture is.
Are you trying to say torture is acceptable? If so, please say so.
What's the telephone number for The Iraqi People? There were numerous factions that formed extralegal militias in the Iraq war; what could be argued to be continuation forces of the former Ba'athist government were only one of them, and were not the most numerous, not the one that enjoyed the most support, not the one that controlled the most territory. Your argument at most gives them special privilege, but not any of the others. However, if you want to argue that, do you seriously refuse to recognise the current government, and believe that restoring the Ba'ath Party dictatorship would be the legitimate course?
Are you trying to claim the Iraqi people have no right to resist an unlawful occupation? Like, can I steel your things and you have no right to interfere? Is this seriously something you claim?