Japanese soldiers convicted by the US of waterboarding Americans during WW II
Just remember, what goes around comes around. If Americans can waterboard their prisoners, then your adversaries can also waterboard their American prisoners.
Do you support waterboarding captured Americans?
After World War II, we convicted several Japanese soldiers for waterboarding American and Allied prisoners of war. At the trial of his captors, then-Lt. Chase J. Nielsen, one of the 1942 Army Air Forces officers who flew in the Doolittle Raid and was captured by the Japanese, testified: "I was given several types of torture. . . . I was given what they call the water cure." He was asked what he felt when the Japanese soldiers poured the water. "Well, I felt more or less like I was drowning," he replied, "just gasping between life and death."
Nielsen's experience was not unique. Nor was the prosecution of his captors. After Japan surrendered, the United States organized and participated in the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, generally called the Tokyo War Crimes Trials. Leading members of Japan's military and government elite were charged, among their many other crimes, with torturing Allied military personnel and civilians. The principal proof upon which their torture convictions were based was conduct that we would now call waterboarding.
Waterboarding Used to Be a Crime - washingtonpost.com
Just remember, what goes around comes around. If Americans can waterboard their prisoners, then your adversaries can also waterboard their American prisoners.
Do you support waterboarding captured Americans?