Generals with whom Bush should talk

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While much of the press was consumed with the tumult about the immigration bills, the gladiators campaigning for the presidency and Paris Hilton, little attention has been paid to the May 10 letter from the plainspoken Gen. David Petraeus to "Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines and Coast Guardsmen" in his Multinational Force in Iraq. Said Petraeus: "Some might argue that we would be more effective if we sanctioned torture or more expedient methods to obtain information from the enemy. That would be wrong.

"We are, indeed, warriors," he continued. "We train to kill our enemies ... (but) what sets us apart from our enemies in this fight, however, is how we behave. In everything we do, we must observe the standards and values that dictate that we treat noncombatants and detainees with dignity and respect."

Also largely swept aside in the 24-hour news cycle was a May 17 Washington Post article ("It's Our Cage, Too: Torture Betrays Us and Breeds New Enemies.") The authors were Gen. Charles C. Krulak (former Marine Corps commandant from 1995 to 1999) and Gen. Joseph P. Hoar (commander in chief of U.S. Central Command from 1991 to 1994.)

Criticizing former CIA Director George Tenet for defending in his new book "the secret CIA interrogation and torture techniques," which he oversaw, they cite: "water boarding, sensory deprivation, sleep deprivation and stress positions - conduct we used to call war crimes."

These generals then recalled that "Former defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld once wondered aloud whether we were creating more terrorists than we were killing. In counterinsurgency doctrine, this is the right question. Victory in this kind of war comes when the enemy loses legitimacy in the society from which it seeks recruits." Losing legitimacy among such incipient terrorists, the enemy, the generals note, "loses its recuperative power."

But, contrary to what it takes to conquer this enemy, Krulak and Hoar continue, "the torture methods that Tenet defends (and have been extensively documented in our press and by human rights groups) have nurtured the recuperative power of the enemy (by adding to its recruits). ... If we forfeit our values by signaling that they are negotiable in situations of grave or imminent danger, we drive those undecideds into the arms of the enemy."

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