tlb wrote:Enhanced interrogation (ie torture) does not work as well as actually turning the subject, when that is possible. If she could be gotten to the point of actually volunteering information; then she will be much more useful to the Grand Alliance, than a defiant enemy who might reveal a few bits under coercion.
Even though she does not have the nanites, she still will have been given the standard treatments that naval officers receive to resist drugs and rough usage. Mission of Honor, chapter 40:"And assuming there's any way to verify that what he's telling us is the truth," Trenis observed. They all looked at her, and she shrugged. "All our critical naval personnel are supplied with anti-interrogation protection. It's effective against every drug therapy we know about, but we've always recognized there are likely to be therapies we don't know about. I think we have to assume the Mesans are at least as aware of that as we are—I mean, let's remember where all their traditional expertise is focused."
I'm not suggesting torture. I'm suggesting regular yet determined interrogation. She's a naval officer, not a spy, so it's not her expertise to resist interrogation. Given enough time, she could break.
Those therapies might also have an expiry date. She's been a POW for 2 years now. I'd assume that an anti-interrogation treatment lasts as long as the information in that subject's head is also valid, maybe a bit more. After that, the information isn't of tactical or strategic value any longer. But if she is from Darius, then THAT information has a shelf life of decades. Drugging her wouldn't work.
So... are we saying that turning her is actually the best way to get information?