A majority of Americans polled recently by the Pew Research Center were okay with the CIA's "enhanced interrogation techniques," which are widely considered to amount to torture.
Of those polled, 51% said the CIA was justified in using these techniques, 29% said it was not, and 20% said they didn't know.
An even larger majority of those surveyed (56%) said they believed the torture provided intelligence that prevented terrorist attacks — an assertion the Senate's report on CIA torture largely disputes.
Pew's poll includes 1000 adults from across the country. The poll was conducted between Dec. 11 and Dec. 14, right around the time the Senate report was released. The report notes that the CIA used "rectal rehydration" and waterboarding as means of extracting information from detainees after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
A minority of those Pew surveyed (41%) thought the decision to release the Senate Intelligence Committee's report was the right one. A larger proportion (43%) said it was the wrong decision.
Here's a look at how the survey responses stack up:
Predictably, there's a partisan divide when it comes to whether the torture is justified:
Aaron Blake at The Washington Post offers this theory on why Americans support torture: "They think torture works, period."
He writes:
Many opponents of the program contend not only that the United States should not be torturing people, but also that torturing people simply doesn't work. They say it provides information that is often wrong, because the subject of torture (or "enhanced interrogation techniques," in Bush administration-speak) will say anything to make the treatment stop.
Americans don't believe it.
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