SEVEN years after the United States banned waterboarding as an interrogation tactic, two Republican presidential candidates say they would revive its use.

One of them, billionaire businessman Donald Trump, would go even further.

“I would bring back waterboarding and I’d bring back a hell of a lot worse than waterboarding,” Trump said during Saturday night’s Republican debate on ABC, days before New Hampshire holds its primary for the November 8 election.

Trump’s rival and a fellow leader in the opinion polls, Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, said he would only allow limited use of the practice.

Waterboarding — the practice of pouring water over someone’s face to mimic drowning as an interrogation tactic — remains controversial in the United States even after Democratic President Barack Obama banned use of the method days after he took office in 2009.

The Senate Intelligence Committee released a report in 2014, despite the objection of Republicans, that detailed what it called torture tactics used by the Central Intelligence Agency, including the extensive use of waterboarding.

Waterboarding came into more common use by the United States during the early days of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

American interrogators used the tactic to try to garner more information from captives, but critics argued the method never actually yielded any intelligence information.

Republicans have been critical of Obama’s decision to eliminate the practice, saying it telegraphs a position of weakness to the nation’s enemies and concedes that the United States erred in using waterboarding.

Cruz said he would not “bring it back in any sort of widespread use” and noted that he doesn’t believe waterboarding meets the international definition for torture.

“Well under the definition of torture, no it’s not. Under the law, torture is excruciating pain that is equivalent to losing organs and systems,” Cruz said.

“So under the definition it is not. It is enhanced interrogation,it is vigorous interrogation, but it does not meet the generally recognized definition of torture.”

He added: “If it were necessary to, say, prevent a city from facing an imminent terrorist attack, you can rest assured that as commander in chief, I would use whatever enhanced interrogation methods we could to keep this country safe.”

Florida Senator Marco Rubio declined to say definitively whether he would reinstitute the use of waterboarding.

“We should not be discussing in a widespread way the exact tactics that we’re going to use because that allows terrorists to know to practice how to evade us,” Rubio said.

Former Florida Governor Jeb Bush said he would not employ waterboarding.