But the terrorists we're dealing with don't even have a base reluctance to kill civilians. In fact, that's an explicit goal of theirs. They want to wipe out our will to fight by any means necessary. They hate us and want to destroy us - all of us - and they put out videos telling us just that. These sort take a different approach. I'm not sure using torture will allow us to win (I think the war on terror is not winnable, it is only manageable at best) but it'll allow us to save civilian lives, perhaps large numbers of civilian lives. Good enough for me.
I tend to think that the "they hate us and they want to destroy us" talking point is a bit over inflated. I honestly don't believe they'd really give two *feces*s about us if we were to stay out of the political workings of their side of the globe. If they control the lion's share of the world's oil reserves, well sometimes the cookie crumbles in the other guy's favor and you are forced to bargain from an unfavorable position, that's life. And let's be fair, the Palestinians
did get sort of screwed with the whole Israel thing, regardless of which side believes they staked their historic claim on the land first.
Do we have a right to protect our own interests? Sure. Do they have a right to protect theirs? Damn right. Good guys and bad guys tend to be created by which ideology you better recognize. When we were kids and we played cowboys and indians, didn't most of us want to be the cowboys? I know I did. Indians were bad guys. As adults, can we honestly say that the indians didn't have a right to fight for what was theirs, regardless of who wore a white hat? (Yes, I am fully aware that this is really nothing more than libtard self-loathing.)
As for torture, if we are to ignore its legality and focus solely on its effectiveness, my understanding is that the only solid information we were able to extract from torture simply served to corroborate what we already knew from other intelligence gathering sources. Is that worth sacrificing our moral high ground? To me it's not.
It is also my understanding that during the 183 (or whatever the number was) water-boardings of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, we were actually able to get him to admit a link between Iraq and Al Qaeda. Now, does that prove that there was an actual link between the two, or does it show that sometimes when a guy is being tortured, he'll tell you what he believes you want to hear, whether it's factual or not?