This article originally provided by the Guardian/UK
June 16, 2004
Rumsfeld & Torture
This Won't Hurt Much
by Terry Jones
For some time now, I've been trying to find out where my
son goes after choir practice. He simply refuses to tell me.
He says it's no business of mine where he goes after choir
practice and it's a free country.
Now it may be a free country, but if people start going
just anywhere they like after choir practice, goodness knows
whether we'll have a country left to be free. I mean, he
might be going to anarchist meetings or Islamic study
groups. How do I know?
The thing is, if people don't say where they're going
after choir practice, this country is at risk. So I have
been applying a certain amount of pressure on my son to tell
me where he's going. To begin with I simply put a bag over
his head and chained him to a radiator. But did that
persuade him? Does the Pope eat kosher?
My wife had the gall to suggest that I might be going a
bit too far. So I put a bag over her head and chained her to
the radiator. But I still couldn't persuade my son to tell
me where he goes after choir practice.
I tried starving him, serving him only cold meals and
shaving his facial hair off, keeping him in stress
positions, not turning his light off, playing loud music
outside his cell door - all the usual stuff that any
concerned parent will do to find out where their child is
going after choir practice. But it was all to no avail.
I hesitated to gravitate to harsher interrogation methods
because, after all, he is my son. Then Donald Rumsfeld came
to my rescue.
I read in the New York Times last week that a memo had
been prepared for the defense secretary on March 6 2003. It
laid down the strictest guidelines as to what is and what is
not torture. Because, let's face it, none of us want to
actually torture our children, in case the police get to
hear about it.
The March 6 memo, prepared for Mr Rumsfeld explained that
what may look like torture is not really torture at all. It
states that: if someone "knows that severe pain will
result from his actions, if causing such harm is not his
objective, he lacks the requisite specific intent even
though the defendant did not act in good faith".
What this means in understandable English is that if a
parent, in his anxiety to know where his son goes after
choir practice, does something that will cause severe pain
to his son, it is only "torture" if the causing of
that severe pain is his objective. If his objective is
something else - such as finding out where his son goes
after choir practice - then it is not torture.
Mr Rumsfeld's memo goes on: "a defendant" (by
which he means a concerned parent) "is guilty of
torture only if he acts with the express purpose of
inflicting severe pain or suffering on a person within his
control".
Couldn't be clearer. If your intention is to extract
information, you cannot be accused of torture.
In fact, the report went further. It said, if a parent
"has a good-faith belief [that] his actions will not
result in prolonged mental harm, he lacks the mental state
necessary for his actions to constitute torture". So
all you've got to do to avoid accusations of child abuse is
to say that you didn't think it would cause any lasting harm
to the child. Easy peasy!
I currently have a lot of my son's friends locked up in
the garage, and I'm applying electrical charges to their
genitals and sexually humiliating them in order to get them
to tell me where my son goes after choir practice.
Dick Cheney's counsel, David S Addington, says that's
just fine. William J Haynes, the US defense department's
general counsel, agrees it's just fine. And so does the US
air force general counsel, Mary Walker.
In fact, practically everybody in the US administration
seems to think it's just fine, except for the state
department lawyer, William H Taft IV, who perversely claims
that I might be opening the door to people applying
electrical charges to my genitals and sexually humiliating
me.
So I'm going to round up all the children in the
neighborhood, chain them and set dogs on them. I might
accidentally kill one or two - but I won't have intended to
- and perhaps I'll take some photos of my wife standing on
the dead bodies, and then I'll show the photos to the other
kids, and finally, perhaps, I might get to find out where my
son goes after choir practice. After all, I'll only be doing
what the US administration has been condoning since 9/11.
· Terry Jones is a writer, film director, actor and
Python terry-jones.net
© Guardian Newspapers Limited 2004
|