Presidential Aspirant Donald Trump reverses position on torture, killing terrorists' families
Republican candidate Donald Trump, on Friday, said he would not order the U.S.
military to violate international laws to fight terrorism, which is an abrupt
reversal from his earlier statements at Thursday's Republican debate.
Trump
said in a statement that he understands "that the United States is
bound by laws and treaties" and said he would "not order the military or
other officials to violate those laws and will seek their advice on
such matters."
He added, "I will not
order a military officer to disobey the law. It is clear that as
president I will be bound by laws just like all Americans and I will
meet those responsibilities."
The statement was first reported in The Wall Street Journal.
His position seems to have shifted dramatically in less than 24 hours.
During
Thursday night's debate on Fox News, Trump reaffirmed his willingness
to target the families of terrorists and supported the use of
waterboarding, implying a willingness to use torture. "We should go for
waterboarding and we should go tougher than waterboarding," he said.
His previous endorsement of these tactics had drawn condemnation from former defense and intelligence officials.
Former
Secretary of Defense William Cohen told CNN Thursday that "the notion
that we would attack and kill the families of terrorists is something
that contravenes everything the United States stands for in this world."
Cohen
warned that if the military carried out these orders, they could face a
Nuremberg-like trial, saying, "we have to be concerned about that you
have an order given by the commander in chief which violates every sense
of law and order, international law and order, that would make any of
those who carried out that dictum such to be a violation of the
international criminal code."
And
former CIA Director Gen. Michael Hayden, speaking of Trump, told HBO
this week that "if he were to order that once in government, the
American armed forces would refuse to act."
"You
are required not to follow an unlawful order. That would be in
violation of all the international laws of armed conflict," Hayden said.
Trump is really gaining ground, and one would not be surprised if he eventually becomes the one to occupy the White House.
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