No, there could have been overwhelming evidence there was going to be an attack in LA, in a certain time frame(intercepted phone calls, emails, etc.) but no details of how, when, and who exactly was the trigger man.
In that case, the evidence would not be overwhelming, would it?
The OP justified the use of waterboarding based upon an application of the doctrine of self-defense. In order to clarify what he was saying, I made an analogy of self-defense against somebody who was going to stab him. Would he need to wait until the person was actually attacking him with the knife or would he be able to shoot the person pre-emptively, before the knife was pulled. The OP responded that he believed it would be OK to shoot the attacker beforehand provided that there was overwhelming evidence that the attacker was, in fact, going to attack.
(I don’t agree and I don’t think that most police or most DAs would agree, but, that is the OP’s position)
I’m recounting that because it is important to understand, in context, what “overwhelming” means. Based upon what the OP has said (which I do not agree with), “overwhelming” indicates who, what, where, how and approximately when. And the person he said that he would shoot in self-defense would be the person who was going to do the attack, not somebody else (e.g., another member of the gang).
Me, personally, I would see that “enhanced interrogation” would be justified in only the rarest of circumstances (using the self-defense principle as a rationale). An example of such a rare circumstance is if a bomb has already been planted and you catch the bomber or the engineer who designed the bomb. There is no way to evacuate the area to render it useless. In this case, hours, minutes, and seconds count or a lot of people are going to die. The only way to get the details of how to defuse the bomb is through “enhanced interrogation.”
In MY opinion, anything short of that would not be self defense…it would be either deterrence or prevention…in neither case is the use of deadly force authorized per Aquinas, Pius XI, or any other Catholic source. If one is going to say “use of deadly force is OK, so, therefore, use of less than deadly force must be OK,” then you’ve got to use it under the same circumstances.
By the way, you all keep claiming that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed’s waterboarding. Well, there is something wrong with the timeline here.
On February 9th, 2006, President Bush
made the following statement before the National Guard:
In the weeks after September the 11th, while Americans were still recovering from an unprecedented strike on our homeland, Al Qaida was already busy planning its next attack.
We now know that in October 2001, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the mastermind of the September the 11th attacks, had already set in motion a plan to have terrorist operatives hijack an airplane using shoe bombs to breach the cockpit door and fly the plane into the tallest building on the West Coast.
BUSH: We believe the intended target was Liberty Tower in Los Angeles, California.
Rather than use Arab hijackers as he had on September 11, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed sought out young men from Southeast Asia whom he believed would not arouse as much suspicion.
(snip)
Their plot was derailed** in early 2002**, when a Southeast Asian nation arrested a key Al Qaida operative.
One minor problem. Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was not captured until
March of 2003:
The man believed to be the key planner of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 – and several al Qaeda attacks in the past five years – was among three terrorism suspects arrested in a CIA-led operation early Saturday in a house outside the Pakistani capital.
The arrest of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed is the single most important in the war on terror since September 11, said a law enforcement official close to the investigation.
So if the plan to blow up the Library Tower in Los Angeles was derailed in early 2002 and KSM was captured in March 2003 (which, to my figuring, was
after early 2002), how did his being waterboarded stop that attack?