By Badri Raina, ZNet, May 6, 2010
Sauce for the Goose is not
Sauce for the Gander.
Unlike my friend, J. Sriraman, the reputed columnist, I am no expert on matters nuclear.
As a lay student of contemporary international history (where “contemporary” goes back , for purposes of this note, to the second world war), I agree with some six billion others that nuclear weapons are unacceptably evil in a usually acceptably evil world.
Everybody of course says so, including those who remain in control of the largest stockpiles.
Yet what stares you in the face is the unconscionable gap between the ethics of the issue which hardly anyone denies, and the record of performance through the decades.
And strikingly here, those that bear the most onus, even opprobrium, seem the most self-righteous.
Which is, after all, what the reviled President of Iran, Ahmedinejad, underscored in his recent appearance at a nuclear disarmament conclave in America.



Khadr routinely trussed up in cage, hearing told
May 7, 2010Khadr routinely trussed up in cage, hearing told
Canadian defendant Omar Khadr attends a hearing in the courthouse at the Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base on Thursday. REUTERS
‘We could do basically anything to scare the prisoners,’ retired soldier testifies
Paul Koring, The Globe and Mail, May 5, 2010
Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Station, Cuba — From Thursday’s Globe and Mail Published on Wednesday, May. 05, 2010 12:11PM EDT Last updated on Thursday, May. 06, 2010 3:31AM EDT
Omar Khadr, then a gravely wounded 15-year-old, was routinely trussed up in a cage “in one of the worst places on Earth,” according to a hulking former military interrogator nicknamed Monster who says he felt sorry for the Canadian and brought him books and treats.
Former specialist Damien Corsetti was testifying via video link to a pretrial hearing in the war-crimes trial of Mr. Khadr, now 23, on charges of terrorism and murder in the killing of a U.S. Special Forces soldier during a firefight in eastern Afghanistan in July of 2002.
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Tags: Damien Corsetti's testimony, human rights violated, Khadr's imprisonment at Guantanamo, Obama administration, treatment of detainees, war-crimes trial of Mr. Khadr
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