If Diane Feinstein's family was being held by ISIS and we captured one of their guys who could tell us how to rescue them, she would be demanding that the CIA put the screws to him. Is there anyone here who can honestly say they wouldn't?
I reserve a special kind of contempt for people who keep silent while others do the dirty but necessary work then come out after the threat has passed and start moralizing about how unacceptable it all was.
I don't know Feinstein personally, but it seems equally likely, even more likely, that under the hypothetical circumstances you put forward, she wouldn't be in favor of torture. She has made it clear that she doesn't believe that torture is effective in obtaining useful information.
Does torture work?, is an interesting question. If we knew specifically how much useful information was obtained from those who had been tortured, versus those who hadn't, and we had a large enough population of both torturees and non-torturees, we might get an answer. But unless the populations were large, selected randomly, and all information obtained was thoroughly followed up, our results would be highly unreliable. Obviously, we don't have reliable data that can provide an answer. What we have only unreliable data because someone, once tortured, can't be "un-tortured", the sample of torturees wasn't randomized among all possible candidates for torture, and all information obtained probably wasn't thoroughly followed up.
Furthermore, an equally important question, can't be addressed using the information available. That is, is the damage done to national reputation worth the information obtained by torture? We can't answer this question. We have only subjective guesses -- self-serving in many cases!
One can object to torture on moral grounds, and one can object on objective grounds. I object to it on both.
I don't know who your final remark refers to, but obviously it can't refer to Feinstein or her committee. When the CIA was engaged in torturing "detainees", Congress was kept in the dark, ironically just as the detainees were. This was a program begun in absolute secrecy. Congress was initially lied to, and only a tiny number of operatives plus Cheney and Bush knew what was really going on.
May I suggest some enlightening reading: "Secrecy", by Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
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