Fine - but who gets to decide if they did the crime that they are accused of? After a trial is one thing - before a very different.
You words are confusing. If we apply your statement above there will never be another trial. There has to be a reasonable amount of evidence to have a trial, same thing in a war where the enemy doesn't wear a uniform.
This article is "what do US soldiers think of waterboarding terrorists". The pro-coddle prisoner advocates want to get into the semantics of law and what torture is comprised of. This is not my concern, as I don't view the methods used by the US as unreasonable, others are much better suited to answer those questions. But I'll play along for a little while.
Just because they are picked up doesn't mean they are guilty - even if they walk like a duck.
What causes them to be picked up...bordom? Do you really believe the US says "we'll take him and him, but not him"? There has to be a credible reason. If it is later determined the prisoner is of no interest, so be it.
If you came home one night and found an unknown man in your house. Would you call the police? I'd hope so. How would you feel if the police just let him go after he said he had the wrong house? Wouldn't you want them to hold the man and check him out? Or would you just let him go. That would be the wrong time to find out some of your daughters underwear are missing. How would you feel now? Yeah, different story with terrorists, but the principle is the same with any suspect. Some ducks take a while to quack.
Note the large numbers of people released from the bay who don't face any charges at all and walk free in what ever country they now live in.
Your point? Roman Polanski is a convicted child rapist in the US, he fled before sentencing, and yet he walked free in France.
I don't really see that much of a big difference between the two. You assume that the person you are "questioning" knows something in intelligence and then you want a confession. It's one and the same.
You appear to assume that as soon as a suspect walks into the prison at Gitmo, a water hose is waiting for him. That's not how it works. The prisoner is asked a series of questions which are verified. Witness and prisoner statements are reviewed (not much different from a fancy in court trial). Don't believe all the liberal propaganda you hear about Gitmo. If I were a prisoner, and had a choice, that is the prison I would want to go to.
Different prisoners respond to different techniques. Some will talk when treated friendly, some will throw excrement at guards no matter what. You are turning this OP into what you believe construes torture. I do not consider this torture, you apparently do. I would consider smashing fingers or toes, burning, electrical shock, etc. as forms of torture. Is water boarding, sleep deprivation, and rock music (I'd be saying turn it up) unpleasant? Sure, because that is what some prisoners respond to. If you want serious"torture" stories, talk to some US vets that experienced it first hand as prisoners. From what I've heard, 4 prisoners were water-boarded, out of over 400 prisoners. That's less than 1%. Sounds like our guys are using this method sparingly.
You know, I wonder what folks with views such as yours would do under certain circumstances. Imagine if you will - A group has taken a family member and video taped them blindfolded, with a knife at their throat, threatening to kill if their demands aren't met. In custody, standing right before you, is a person in custody with high probability of knowing this family members location. You ask him nicely and his only response is "That pig will be dead soon" with a big grin. But he has rights, better to let your family member die, than show the world how mean we are, even though we use the same techniques to train our troops. How would that make you feel? It's easy to be morally righteous when it's someone else's family isn't it? Need a real world example, ask David Pearl's father how he feels. The "man" that gave the order to kill his son is getting the show trial he wants in New York.