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					Originally Posted by TheAngryPostman  The "no torture" only applies to those who are identified under The Geneva Convention. And waterboarding is not torture. | 
	
 Waterboarding is international described as torture.
The US has prosecuted water torture as war crime many times in history, what should Waterboarding exclude from this?
In the case Hamdan v. Rumsfeld (2006), the 
Supreme Court of the United States decides that prisoners of terror can?t be treated as 
Unlawful Combatant.
So they fall under the 
Laws of War or 
Public International Law, and forbid torture.
It is not right to punish someone who infracted the law (terrorism) with lawless methods. That is an antinomy itself.