Since this is the topic of the day, I thought I would post this article by Professor Maria Arrigo. She is also on the advisory board of the American Psychological Association on the ethics of pyschologists involved in torture programs.
""Introduction
Since the September 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States, much support for torture interrogation of terrorists has emerged in the public forum, largely based on the “ticking bomb” scenario. National polls have reported 45% and 32% approval; a large web-site vote indicated 65% approval. The appeal is that rare use of torture interrogation of key terrorists could thwart terrorist plans of mass destruction at minimal cost to civil liberties and democratic process. Moreover, a strictly monitored legal program is expected to replace current, illegal covert programs.
Ethicist John Rawls proposed that consequentialist moral argument for a program of action should include assessment of the practices required to implement that program. For with careful attention to implementation, there is less danger of adopting means that do not actually reach the desired ends. As a social psychologist, this is the course I pursue. I pass over foundational issues, such as the definition of “torture” and the morality of torture per se. I do not reach as far as state-level issues, such as international covenants banning torture. Rather, I draw from criminology, organizational theory, the historical record, and my own interviews to explore the design, implementation, and consequences of such a program. This strategy makes visible the mid-level social processes that lead from an official program of torture interrogation to serious dysfunctions in major institutions—health care and biomedical research, police and the judiciary, and the military and government.
Policy studies demonstrate that the quintessential element of program design and implementation is a sound causal model relating input to output. Can we send only key terrorists into the torture chamber and produce at the other end only knowledge of terrorist plans and harmless prisoners? For orderliness of exposition, I present three, increasingly realistic models of how torture interrogation leads to truth: (I) the animal instinct model, (II) the cognitive failure model, and (III) the data processing model. The inadequacies of each model lead on to the next, with increasing involvement and compromise of key social institutions—that is to say, with unintended inputs and unintended outputs of great consequence. To these causal models, I append (IV) the rogue models of outsourcing torture interrogation to foreign or illegal information services, without regard for causal explanation.
In outline:
Practical Mid-Level Considerations for Programs of Torture Interrogation of Terrorist Suspects
Causal Models of How Torture Leads to Truth
1. Animal Instinct Model
In order to escape pain or death, the subject complies with the demands of the torturer. The model fails when (a) physiological damage impairs ability to convey the truth and (b) torturers cannot control subjects’ interpretation of pain.
Prototypical Interrogation Scenarios
2. Cognitive Failure Model
The physiological and psycho-logical stress of torture renders the subject mentally incompetent to muster deception or to maintain his own interpretations of pain. The model fails due to (a) time delays and (b) torturers’ inability to distin-guish truth from deceit or delirium.
3. Data Processing Model
Torture provokes ordinary subjects to yield data (both true and false) on an opportunistic basis, for comprehensive analysis across subjects. The model fails when (a) analysts are overwhelmed by data and (b) torture motivates many new terrorists.
Non-Causal Models of How Torture Leads to Truth
4. Rogue Models
Torture is emotionally, culturally, or historically inseparable from other methods, or it is one tactic among many in a hit-or-miss approach. The model fails when (a) biases and ulterior motives of torturers invalidate results or (b) torture tactics empower competing political or criminal entities.
http://www.usafa.af.mil/jscope/JSCOPE03/Arrigo03.html