23 February 2013
Torture as XXX Entertainment: Zero Dark Thirty
Related: Confronting the Fact of Fiction and the Fiction of Fact:
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/23/movies/awardsseason/the-history-in-lincoln-argo-and-
zero-dark-thirty.html
Related: Ex-CIA/NSA head Michael Hayden on XXX warfare of drones, torture,
Zero Dark Thirty, TV's "Homeland:"
http://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/311052-1
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/23/us/a-theological-view-of-zero-dark-thirty.html
On Religion
Zero Dark Thirty, Through a Theological Lens
By SAMUEL G. FREEDMAN
Published: February 22, 2013
Almost nine years ago, journalists on 60 Minutes II and at The
New Yorker revealed a trove of photographs showing the abuse and humiliation
of Iraqi detainees by American soldiers at Abu Ghraib prison. The images
of inmates variously stripped, hooded, leashed like a dog, piled into naked
heaps and forced to simulate oral sex then spread widely, causing international
outcry.
Even on the patriotic home front, the revulsion was widespread. President
George W. Bush called the Abu Ghraib episode abhorrent. Senators
across party lines, having been shown more than a thousand photos, described
them as appalling and horrific.
At the 2013 Oscars on Sunday night, one of the nominees for best picture,
indeed one of the most lauded films of the year, contains scenes of prisoner
treatment that closely recreate the Abu Ghraib tactics. Yet in Zero
Dark Thirty the use of enhanced interrogation techniques,
including waterboarding, forms part of a heroic narrative, as a valiant C.I.A.
officer tracks down Osama bin Laden.
There has been much debate about the film, primarily about its historical
accuracy, but one might say not the right debate, not the deepest debate.
Aside from a few Hollywood dissidents like Edward Asner, it has been left
largely to theologians to call the film into question not on the pragmatic
ground of its fealty to facts but on the moral ground of its message: that
torture succeeds, and because it succeeds we should accept it.
Our culture has almost lost the ability to have a genuinely moral
conversation, said Prof. David P. Gushee, 50, a Southern Baptist who
directs the Center for Theology and Public
Life at Mercer University in Atlanta. The utilitarian-type reasoning
is the only vocabulary we have. The only way we can decide what to do is
whether it works. Thats a terribly impoverished moral conversation.
It leaves out the question of whether torture is intrinsically right or
wrong.
For the Rev. George Hunsinger, a Presbyterian minister who teaches at Princeton
Theological Seminary, Zero Dark Thirty evoked the same kind of
moral questions he associates with the American decision to drop atomic bombs
on Japan. But the film has the added complication of being something that
the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki never were: an instant box office
product.
What does it say about American culture that torture has become a form
of entertainment for us? asked Mr. Hunsinger, 67, who is involved with
the National Religious Committee Against
Torture. Torture has been normalized since Sept. 11 in a way
thats unimaginable.
That normalization can be measured in specific ways. Directed by Kathryn
Bigelow and written by Mark Boal, Zero Dark Thirty has grossed
$88 million at the box office and received the top prize from the
New York Film Critics Circle.
It will compete in five categories on Sundays Academy Awards, including
best picture and best original screenplay.
The film has also received some criticism, which may dampen its Oscar prospects.
Writing in The New York Review of Books,
Steve
Coll assailed Zero Dark Thirty for taking fictional liberties
from the factual record, all the while asserting on-screen that it is
based on firsthand accounts of actual events. Among the real
episodes omitted, Mr. Coll pointed out, are the objections to enhanced
interrogation techniques by certain military and legal officials during
the Bush presidency.
Senator John McCain, a former prisoner of war, joined with his Senate colleagues
Carl Levin and Dianne Feinstein in writing an open
letter
to Sony Pictures, which released the film, declaring that cruel,
inhuman, and degrading treatment of prisoners is an unreliable and highly
ineffective means of gathering intelligence.
So, by the first argument, the film is flawed because it does not follow
the historical record. By the second, the film is flawed because torture
does not work. What neither argument takes up, but what some theologians
have been wrestling with throughout the global war against terror,
is what a civilized society should think about torture even if it does work.
In that respect, Zero Dark Thirty may have done an unintended
favor to the national discourse by positing that torture, at least sometimes,
succeeds. How do we feel about that? The numerous awards for the film already
suggest that we feel tolerant, even approving. Polling by the Pew Research
Center has shown a swing between 2004 and 2011, from a majority of Americans
rejecting the use of torture against terrorist suspects to a majority favoring
it.
In 2007, as opinion was shifting, Professor Gushee of Mercer University helped
write
An
Evangelical Declaration Against Torture. While condemning Al
Qaedas attacks on the United States, and while affirming the nations
right to self-defense, the declaration stated near its end:
When torture is employed by a state, that act communicates to the world
and to ones own people that human lives are not sacred, that they are
not reflections of the Creator, that they are expendable, exploitable, and
disposable, and that their intrinsic value can be overridden by utilitarian
arguments that trump that value. These are claims that no one who confesses
Christ as Lord can accept.
At least one such person offered a prominent rebuttal. Keith Pavlischek,
who was then a fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center,
faulted
the declaration for not adequately distinguishing between captured terrorists
and prisoners of war, and for not precisely defining torture.
At a theological level, he argued that the document had explicitly
repudiated Christian just war teaching.
One can only wish that a similarly spirited discussion, one rooted in the
concept of morality, might have gotten beyond religious and ethical circles
and brought some gravitas to all the attention to the red carpet and Oscar
pools.
But moviegoing is, in part, about escapism, and now that escapism apparently
includes the matter of torture.
By transforming all of this into suspenseful entertainment, said
Prof. James Turner Johnson of Rutgers, a scholar of just-war theology, the
film is presenting actions that there was a great deal of debate over into
something that must be done, standard operating procedure. It tends to baptize
it. And the truth is that we, as a society, are looking away.
E-mail: sgf1[at]columbia.edu
|