Approximately 20 years later when World War 2 ended and the cold war started, the Soviet Union joined and the Americans joined the perpetrators of torture. Torture was widely practiced brutally by the soviet secret police during Stalin’s ruling era to extract confessions from suspects. Those suspects, called enemies of the people, would often provide false confessions. “Conveyor” is the nickname given to one the methods …show more content…
Policies were also passed regarding torture and spying on citizens as well as authorization for the National Security Agency to spy on US citizens within the US custody. The “war on terror” phrase was coined early after the terrorist attack on New York. The “war on terror” was initialized by the United States to fight terrorist organizations that are said to threaten the safety of the country. Consequently, torture prohibition does not apply to “war on terror”, and there are no legal constraints on the state’s power of imprisonment. The term ghost prisoner was given to many high value detainees that were taken in by American troops outside American soil and interrogated in black sites around many countries. Interrogational torture was widely used as well after the US invasion into Afghanistan and Iraq for the purpose of collecting actionable