I don't know how to reconcile this torture thing
-- it's just frikken anti-American. Apologies to the world won't get it. Restoration of the
Geneva Convention and habeas helps, but this is one of those things me mum
referenced when she lectured me on fibbing: when you break trust, it takes a
long loooong time to regain it.
I don't know how long it will take us as
a nation to regain our honor ... or if we can, completely. This was one of those
thresholds we dared not pass ... before we did -- which is why
George W. Bush, Barbara's first-born and the bane of Poppy's existence ...
drooling, unwitting dupe of darker forces or canny, greed-mongering participant
in the design of fascism ... should be in an orange jump suit, accessorized with
manacles.
McClatchy news, one of the few 'good ones' out there, exploded
in the last few days with accounts of the actualities at Gitmo; the Armed
Services Committee grilled the Pentagon's top lawyer yesterday, Dana Milbank
writes about that with the scathing contempt it deserves; Major General Anthony
Taguba has accused the Bushies of war crimes. And all this on the heels of the
Supreme decision has us hanging our heads in shame.
The reads are amazing
-- here's Froomkin, Juan Cole, Ted Rall, several of the McClatchy articles and
last, even George Will is peeved at John McCain for marching in lock step to
betray the Constitution.
Jude
Ann Telaes
'toon
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/opinions/cartoonsandvideos/telnaes/telnaes_main.html
The two-star general who led an Army investigation into the horrific
detainee abuse at Abu Ghraib has accused the Bush administration of war crimes
and is calling for accountability.
In his 2004 report on Abu Ghraib,
then-Major General Anthony Taguba concluded that "numerous incidents of
sadistic, blatant, and wanton criminal abuses were inflicted on several
detainees." He called the abuse "systemic and illegal." And, as Seymour M. Hersh
reported in the New Yorker, he was rewarded for his honesty by being forced into
retirement...
Abu Ghraib? Doesn't Ring a
Bell.
Dana Milbank, WaPo
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/17/AR2008061702673_pf.html
If ever there was a case that cried out for enhanced interrogation
techniques, it was yesterday's Senate appearance by the Pentagon's former top
lawyer.
William "Jim" Haynes II, the man who blessed the use of dogs,
hoods and nudity to pry information out of recalcitrant detainees, proved to be
a model of evasion himself as he resisted all attempts at inquiry by the Armed
Services Committee.
Did he ask a subordinate to get information about
harsh questioning techniques?
"My memory is not perfect."
Did he
see a memo about the effects of these techniques?
"I don't specifically
remember when I saw this."
Did he remember doing something with the
information he got?
"I don't remember doing something with this
information."
When did he discuss these methods with other Bush
administration officials?
"I don't know precisely when, and I cannot discuss it further without
getting into classified information."
Chairman Carl Levin (D-Mich.) had
had enough. "You say you don't remember it any more clearly than what you've
said," he pointed out. "Therefore, going into classified session isn't going to
give us any more information than what you've said, which is you had
conversations but your memory is bad."
"Correct," Haynes
agreed.
"And that's all you remember?"
"Correct," Haynes
repeated.
Luckily for the witness, they don't allow naked pyramids and
simulated electrocutions in the Dirksen Senate Office Building.
It was
the most public case of memory loss since Alberto Gonzales, appearing before the
Senate Judiciary Committee, forgot everything he ever knew about anything. And,
like Gonzales, Haynes (who, denied a federal judgeship by the Senate, left the
Pentagon in February for a job with Chevron) had good reason to plead temporary
senility.
A committee investigation found that, contrary to his earlier
testimony, Haynes had showed strong interest in potentially abusive questioning
methods as early as July 2002. Later, ignoring the strong objections of the
uniformed military, Haynes sent a memo to Donald Rumsfeld recommending the
approval of stress positions, nudity, dogs and light deprivation.
Before
Haynes took his seat at the witness table yesterday, a parade of underlings
pointed the finger at him. The former top lawyer for the Joint Chiefs of Staff
testified that Haynes "was aware that the services had concerns." The woman on
whose legal reasoning Haynes relied for his judgment on torture testified that
she was "shocked" that he did so. And the former general counsel for the Navy
said he had warned Haynes that the legal reasoning was
"inadequate."
Haynes knew he was in for some cruel and unusual treatment.
He took a swig from his Diet Pepsi bottle, put on his reading glasses and
announced: "I don't have a formal opening statement." He then read his formal
opening statement, in which he defended all those things he couldn't remember
doing by saying that "we all rightly fear another assault on our country, one
perhaps even more horrific than the last."
He then rested his elbows on
the witness table, revealing a big gold watch on his wrist, and allowed the
amnesia to wash over him.
Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) asked when he became
aware of a Justice Department memo justifying torture. "I don't know when I
became aware of that," Haynes replied.
Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) asked
about other legal opinions objecting to the techniques. "I do not recall seeing
the memoranda," Haynes answered.
Jack Reed (D-R.I.) asked why Haynes
didn't request the opposing viewpoints. "I don't know that I was aware of
those," he said. "I don't recall being aware of any particular
memoranda."
Haynes mixed his forgetfulness with a dash of insolence. He
suggested to McCaskill that "it's important that you understand how the Defense
Department works." He cut off Reed with a "Let me finish, Senator!" and
disclosed that he had been too busy to give more attention to the Geneva
Conventions: "I mean, there are thousands and thousands and thousands of
decisions made every day. This was one."
Reed, a West Point graduate, was
enraged. "You did a disservice to the soldiers of this nation," he said. "You
empowered them to violate basic conditions which every soldier respects, the
Uniform Code of Military Justice, the Geneva Convention. . . . You degraded the
integrity of the United States military."
Haynes, wisely, retreated to
his default position. In the span of just a few minutes, he treated the chairman
to a whole new level of forgetfulness:
"I don't recall seeing this
memorandum before and I'm not even sure this is one I've seen before. . . . I
don't recall seeing this memorandum and I don't recall specific objections of
this nature. . . . Well, I don't recall seeing this document, either. . . . I
don't recall specific concerns. . . . I don't recall these and I don't recall
seeing these memoranda. . . . I can't even read this document, but I don't
remember seeing it. . . . I don't recall that specifically. . . . I don't
remember doing that. . . . I don't recall seeing these things."
In
two hours of testimony, Haynes managed to get off no fewer than 23 don't
recalls, 22 don't remembers, 16 don't knows, and various other protestations of
memory loss.
It was an impressive performance, to be sure. But let's see
him try to do that with a hood over his head, standing on a crate with wires
attached to his arms. ++
The Great Torture Scandal
Juan Cole, Informed Comment
Thursday, June 19, 2008
http://www.juancole.com/2008/06/great-torture-scandal.html
McClatchy and other reporters are abruptly pulling the curtain away
from the Bush team's illegal practices in arresting people arbitrarily,
declining to offer proof that they were guilty of anything, detaining them
indefinitely without trial or charges, and deliberately torturing them to the
extent of leaving long-term scars and disabilities. The torture practices
originated not with lower-level officers but with Donald Rumsfeld and others in
Bush's inner circle, who then later blamed lower-level officials for developing
the ideas that Rumsfeld ordered them to develop. Nothing they have done has
survived a court challenge where one has been permitted.
Recent reports,
taken together, provide a chilling glimpse of a vast torture operation,
deliberately planned out by serial torturers in Bush's White House and possibly
by the president himself. The program was designed to repeal the Geneva
Conventions, which the US and Israel have long found inconvenient, even though
they were legislated to prevent futher abuses such as those of the Nazis. AP
interviews with former detainees show that they were systematically tortured and
sometimes permanently injured.
A Senate report details the evidence that
Rumsfeld and other high officials were complicit in ordering torture. That is,
they are war criminals.
The Bush administration committed clear war
crimes at Guantanamo, Abu Ghraib and Bagram, according to Maj. Gen. Antonio
Taguba. The only question, he says, is whether anyone will be held
accountable.
The Underscretary of Defense for Planning, Douglas Feith
abruptly pulled out of his testimony on Capitol Hill about torture techniques,
apparently because he was afraid to testify in the same session as Lawrence
Wilkerson, the former chief of staff of Colin Powell. Wilkerson was high enough
to hear the real story on a lot of issues and could have shredded Feith's lies
into confetti if they testified together.
Medical examinations of former
US detainees shows that they were tortured. The full report is here.
CIA
counterterrorism lawyer Jonathan Fredson appears to have argued that virtually
anything short of lethal force was permitted. He told the Pentagon that torture
"is basically subject to perception." He did admit the principle that "If the
detainee dies, you're doing it wrong."
Then there is the McClatchy
series, based on extensive interviews with dozens of released former detainees
from Guantanamo and Bagram:
Tom Lasseter writes:
"The
framework under which detainees were imprisoned for years without charges at
Guantanamo and in many cases abused in Afghanistan wasn't the product of
American military policy or the fault of a few rogue soldiers. It was largely
the work of five White House, Pentagon and Justice Department lawyers who,
following the orders of President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney,
reinterpreted or tossed out the U.S. and international laws that govern the
treatment of prisoners in wartime, according to former U.S. defense and Bush
administration officials."
A lot of Bush's detainees had no
connection to international terrorism. Some had even fought the Taliban, been
captured, and then were sold to the Americans by the Taliban, who had in the
meantime changed turbans and begun pretending to be loyal to Karzai.
At
Afghan bases, the US military routinely practiced torture on
prisoners.
In fact, the US torture turned some innocent detainees into
terrorists, determining them to attack the US on their release.
McClatchy
has posted many of the documents on which its series is based.
Aljazeera
International interviews McClatchy reporters, who spent a year tracking down and
interviewing former detainees.
Part I ... and Part II:
[open link for
video]
The Public Record wonders why Bush, McCain and the Wall street
Journal are rushing to defend torture now.
The tendency of the
bureaucracy to experiment on human guinea pigs reached beyond the torture of
detainees to mentally distressed Veterans. The Veterans Administration
experimented on them with pharmaceuticals, without their knowledge. The VA
neglected to tell them the drug they were being fed had serious side effects,
including "anxiety, nervousness, tension, depression, thoughts of suicide, and
attempted and completed suicide." Oh, yeah, that's what a person who has been
through hell in Iraq and has post-traumatic stress really needs.
So all
these revelations should be on cable news 24/7, right? Not so much.
As
Gen. Taguba says, the fact of the extensive torture is not in doubt. The
question is whether the Bushies will get away with it. It is looking as though
they will. But there are going to be some European countries where Bush and his
cronies would be ill advised to visit. ++
OOPS NATION
A
Superpower of Lazy Slobs
Ted Rall
Tue Jun 17, 7:59 PM ET
http://tinyurl.com/62vpko
NEW YORK--Tens of thousands of innocent detainees have passed through
Guantánamo, Bagram, Abu Ghraib, Diego Garcia and other U.S. torture facilities.
Thousands remain "disappeared," possibly murdered. Some may be on one of the
Navy vessels recently revealed to have been repurposed as prison ships. Dozens
have been beaten to death or killed by willful medical neglect.
For
seven years, the Bush Administration, the Democratic Congress and its media
allies have denied "unlawful enemy combatants" (or, as Dick Cheney called them,
"the worst of the worst" terrorists) the right to habeas corpus, the
centuries-old right of persons arrested by the police to face their accusers and
the evidence against them in a court of law.
Thanks to a 5-4 decision by
the Supreme Court, America's latest flirtation with fascism is coming to an end.
Parts of the infamous Military Commissions Act of 2006 that eliminated habeas
corpus have been declared unconstitutional. Prisoners at Guantánamo and possibly
other American gulags, will now be allowed to demand their day in court. Since
the government doesn't have evidence against them, legal experts say, most if
not all of "the worst of the worst" will ultimately walk free. "Liberty and
security can be reconciled," Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority.
In short: Oops.
"America is back," Barack Obama has said he will
tell the world if he becomes president. Even if McCain wins, Guantánamo will
probably be closed. Torture will be re-illegalized. Which is really, really
great. But there's a problem. How do we give back the four years we stole from
Murat Kurnaz?
In December 2001, Kurnaz was a 19-year-old German Muslim
studying in Pakistan. He was pulled off a bus by Pakistani security services,
who delivered him to the CIA for a $3,000 bounty. He was flown to Guantánamo
concentration camp, where he received what The Village Voice's Nat Hentoff calls
"the standard treatment: beatings, sleep deprivation, and special month-long
spells of solitary confinement in a sealed cell without ventilation."
He
went on hunger strike, and Kurnaz's tormentors apparently worried he might
starve to death. After 20 days "they gagged me and shoved a tube up my nose,
stopping several times because the tube filled with blood," Kurnaz remembers.
What did this "worst of the worst" do to deserve such treatment?
Nothing. But don't take my word for it. Six months into his ordeal, the U.S.
military determined, there was "no definite link or evidence of detainee having
an association with Al Qaeda or making any specific threat toward the U.S."
The U.S. government knew Kurnaz was innocent. Yet they held on to him
another three and a half years.
Oops.
It would be comforting if
the torture of innocent men sold by self-interested bounty hunters were an
aberration. It wasn't. A McClatchy Newspapers analysis confirms the horrifying
results of a Seton Hall University study. "Only eight percent of Guantánamo
detainees were captured by U.S. forces," reports McClatchy. "86 percent were
turned over to the U.S. by Pakistan or by the Northern Alliance," a coalition of
Afghan warlords. "The bounty hunters were often the source of allegations."
Right-wingers say security matters can only be entrusted to the
military. "The courts," writes Richard Samp of the pro-government Washington
Legal Foundation in USA Today, "simply lack the expertise and resources to
justify second-guessing military experts on such issues." Maybe. But the
military is run by liars.
"The McClatchy investigation found that
top Bush Administration officials knew within months of opening the Guantánamo
detention center that many prisoners weren't 'the worst of the worst.' From the
moment that Guantánamo opened in early 2002, former Secretary of the Army Thomas
White said, it was obvious that at least one-third of the population didn't
belong there."
At least six died at Gitmo. (The Pentagon
characterized a spate of suicides as clever acts of "asymmetrical warfare.")
Oops.
Deranged leaders who carry out horrific acts of mass
murder and oppression with the consent of the people are hardly new to American
history, reminds Allen Weinstein, Archivist of the United States. "Begin with
the Salem witchcraft trials of the 1690s," he told a commencement ceremony at
Southern Methodist University.
"Move forward to the Alien and Sedition Acts
of the early Republic, and from there to the suspension of habeas corpus during
the Civil War. Turn then to the arbitrary political arrests of the First and
Second World Wars, the many abuses of the Cold War McCarthy era, and from there
the civil liberties climate in our time."
So many oopsies! But those are
temporary excesses, Weinstein reassures. "Self-corrective forces at work in
American society"--lefties, liberals, a single swing vote on the U.S. Supreme
Court--always pull us back before we careen off the brink. Disaster is avoided.
Which would be fine if it weren't for the problem that: (1) one of these
days, Justice Kennedy won't be around to restore the rule of law. The other
problem being (2): a lot of "witches" get drowned during our periodic episodes
of madness.
No one was ever held accountable for blacklisting actors or
massacring Native Americans. Such tacit endorsement of villainy sets the stage
for the next outrage committed during a future "temporary madness" driven by
national security worries. Apologies are rare. Penance is scarce and stingy. The
government stole the homes and businesses of Japanese-Americans and shipped them
to concentration camps during World War II; decades passed before Congress cut
them checks for a measly $10,000.
We think we Americans are good people
who do bad things when we're not on top of our game. "Self-corrective forces,"
we pat ourselves on our collective backsides, always kick in before we go too
far.
But that's not really how it is.
Some Americans are good.
Other Americans are bad. And the good ones are often lazy, willing to let the
bad ones get their way. ++
Exams prove abuse, torture by
U.S.
Documents confirm U.S. hid detainees from Red Cross
Warren
P. Strobel, McClatchy Newspapers
6/18
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/homepage/story/41394.html
WASHINGTON — The U.S. military hid the locations of suspected terrorist
detainees and concealed harsh treatment to avoid the scrutiny of the
International Committee of the Red Cross, according to documents that a Senate
committee released Tuesday.
"We may need to curb the harsher operations
while ICRC is around. It is better not to expose them to any controversial
techniques," Lt. Col. Diane Beaver, a military lawyer who's since retired, said
during an October 2002 meeting at the Guantanamo Bay prison to discuss employing
interrogation techniques that some have equated with torture. Her comments were
recorded in minutes of the meeting that were made public Tuesday. At that same
meeting, Beaver also appeared to confirm that U.S. officials at another
detention facility — Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan — were using sleep
deprivation to "break" detainees well before then-Defense Secretary Donald H.
Rumsfeld approved that technique. "True, but officially it is not happening,"
she is quoted as having said.
A third person at the meeting, Jonathan
Fredman, the chief counsel for the CIA's Counterterrorism Center, disclosed that
detainees were moved routinely to avoid the scrutiny of the ICRC, which keeps
tabs on prisoners in conflicts around the world.
"In the past when the
ICRC has made a big deal about certain detainees, the DOD (Defense Department)
has 'moved' them away from the attention of the ICRC," Fredman said, according
to the minutes.
The document, along with two dozen others, shows that top
administration officials pushed relentlessly for tougher interrogation methods
in the belief that terrorism suspects were resisting interrogation.
It's
unclear from the documents whether the Pentagon moved the detainees from one
place to another or merely told the ICRC they were no longer present at a
facility.
Fredman of the CIA also appeared to be advocating the use of
techniques harsher than those authorized by military field guides "If the
detainee dies, you're doing it wrong," the minutes report Fredman saying at one
point.
Beaver testified that she didn't recall making the comment about
avoiding "harsher operations" while ICRC representatives were around, but she
said she probably was referring to the need to conduct extended periods of
interrogations of detainees without disruption.
The minutes of the
Guantanamo meeting were among 25 documents released Tuesday by Sen. Carl Levin,
D-Mich., who chairs the Senate Armed Services Committee and is leading a probe
of the origins of cruel treatment of detainees in President Bush's "war on
terrorism."
The administration overrode or ignored objections from all
four military services and from criminal investigators, who warned that the
practices would imperil their ability to prosecute the suspects. In one
prophetic e-mail on Oct. 28, 2002, Mark Fallon, then the deputy commander of the
Pentagon's Criminal Investigation Task Force, wrote a colleague: "This looks
like the kind of stuff Congressional hearings are made of. ... Someone needs to
be considering how history will look back at this." The objections from the
Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines prompted Navy Capt. Jane Dalton, legal adviser
to the then-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Richard Myers, to begin
a review of the proposed techniques.
But Dalton, who's now retired, told
the hearing Tuesday that the review was aborted quickly. Myers, she said, took
her aside and told her that then-Defense Department general counsel William
Haynes "does not want this ... to proceed."
Haynes testified that he
didn't recall the objections of the four uniformed services.
Officials in
Rumsfeld's office and at Guantanamo developed the techniques they sought by
reverse-engineering a long-standing military program designed to train U.S.
soldiers and aviators to resist interrogation if they're captured.
The
program, known as Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape, was never meant to
guide U.S. interrogation of foreign detainees.
An official in Haynes'
office sought information about SERE as early as July 2002, the documents show.
Two months later, a delegation from Guantanamo attended SERE training at Fort
Bragg, N.C. Levin said, "The truth is that senior officials in the United States
government sought information on aggressive techniques, twisted the law to
create the appearance of their legality and authorized their use against
detainees." The documents confirm that a delegation of senior administration
lawyers visited Guantanamo in September 2002 for briefings on
intelligence-gathering there. The delegation included David Addington, a top
aide to Vice President Dick Cheney; Haynes; acting CIA counsel John Rizzo; and
Michael Chertoff, then the head of the Justice Department's Criminal Division
and now the homeland security secretary. Few of the Republicans at Tuesday's
hearing defended the Bush administration's detainee programs. Guidance provided
by administration lawyers "will go down in history as some of the most
irresponsible and shortsighted legal analysis ever provided to our nation's
military intelligence communities," said Sen. Lindsey Graham,
R-S.C..
Regarding the ICRC, the United States long has complained that
other countries such as China or the old Soviet Union prevented independent
access to prisoners or made their conditions look better when outsiders were
inspecting. The Bush administration appears to have engaged in similar
practices, however.
Bernard Barrett, the ICRC's Washington spokesman,
said, "We knew that we did not always have full access to all detainees. It was
a fairly serious issue." "It's been addressed," he said. "We are confident we
now have access to all detainees at Guantanamo." ++
'If the
detainee dies you're doing it wrong'
McClatchy
Tuesday, June 17,
2008
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/world/story/41388.html
Following are excerpts from some of the documents released today by the
Senate Armed Services Committee:
"The CIA is not held to the same
rules as the military. In the past when the ICRC (International Committee of the
Red Cross) has made a big deal about certain detainees, the DOD has 'moved' them
away from the attention of the ICRC. Upon questioning from the ICRC about their
whereabouts, the DOD's response has repeatedly been that the detainee merited no
status under the Geneva Convention. The CIA has employed aggressive techniques
on less than a handful of suspects since 9/11.
"Under the Torture
Convention, torture has been prohibited by international law, but the language
of the statutes is written vaguely. Severe mental and physical pain is
prohibited. The mental part if explained as poorly as the physical. Severe
physical pain described as anything causing permanent damage to major organs or
body parts. Mental torture described as anything leading to permanent, profound
damage to the senses or personality. It is basically subject to perception. If
the detainee dies you're doing it wrong.
" . . . Any of these techniques
that lie on the harshest end of the spectrum must be performed by a highly
trained individual. Medical personnel should be present to treat any possible
accidents. . . . When the CIA has wanted to use more aggressive techniques in
the past, the FBI has pulled their personnel from the theatre.
" . . . if
someone dies while aggressive techniques are being used, regardless of cause of
death, the backlash of attention would be severely detrimental. Everything must
be approved and documented."
* Jonathan Fredman, chief counsel, CIA Counter-terrorism
Center, according to the minutes of an Oct. 2, 2002, Counter Resistance Strategy
Meeting.
"This looks like the kind of stuff
Congressional hearings are made of. Quotes from LTC (lieutenant colonel) Beaver
regarding things that are not being reported gives the appearance of
impropriety. Other comments like 'It is basically subject to perception. If the
detainee dies you're doing it wrong' and 'Any of the techniques that lie on the
harshest end of the spectrum must be performed by a highly trained individual.
Medical personnel should be present to treat any possible accidents' seem to
stretch beyond the bounds of legal propriety. . . . Someone needs to be
considering how history will look back at this."
* e-mail from
Mark Fallon, deputy commander, Defense Department Criminal
Investigation Task Force to five other DOD officials, Oct. 28,
2002.
"I am forwarding Joint Task Force 170's proposed
counter-resistance technologies. I believe the first two categories of
techniques are legal and humane. I am uncertain whether all the techniques in
the third category are legal under US law, given the absence of judicial
interpretation of the US torture statute. I am particularly troubled by the use
of implied or expressed threats of death of the detainee or his family. However,
I desire to have as many options as possible at my disposal and therefore
request that the Department of Defense and Department of Justice lawyers review
the third category of techniques."
* Gen. James T.
Hill, USA, Commander, U.S. Southern Command, in a memo to the Chairman
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Oct. 25, 2002.
"The Air Force has
serious concerns regarding the legality of many of the proposed techniques,
particularly under Category III. Some of these techniques could be construed as
'torture,' as that crime is defined by 18 U.S.C. 2340.
" . . .
Implementation of these techniques could preclude the ability to prosecute the
individuals interrogated. Successful prosecutions in military commissions or
subsequent use of detainee statements in Federal prosecutions will require that
the evidence obtained be admissible.
" . . . The Level III techniques
will almost certainly result in any statements being declared as coerced and
involuntary, and therefore inadmissible. Such a finding may also exclude any
evidence derived from the coerced statement. . . .
Additionally, the
techniques described may be subject to challenge as failing to meet the
requirements outlined in the military order to treat detainees humanely and to
provide them with adequate food, water, shelter and medical treatment. Defense
counsel will undoubtedly argue that any evidence derived by the prosecution must
be excluded because the Government did not abide by its own
rules."
* Col. Donald E. Richburg, USAF, in a memo
to the United Nations and Multilateral Affairs Division of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, Nov. 4, 2002
"The suggested Tier III and certain Tier II
techniques may subject service members to punitive articles of the UCMJ (Uniform
Code of Military Justice).
" . . . any information derived from the
aggressive techniques, although admissible, will be of diminished value during
any subsequent proceedings. The taint concerning the diminished weight accorded
the statements would apply not only to the detainee making the statements, but
also against those individuals about whom the detainee has provided
incriminating information.
" . . . One detainee subjected to these
techniques could taint the voluntary nature of all other confessions and
information derived from detainees not subjected o the aggressive
techniques."
* Maj. Sam W. McCahon, Chief
Legal Advisor, Department of Defense Criminal Investigation Task Force, in a
memo to the commander of the CITF, Nov. 4, 2002
"As set forth in the
enclosed memoranda, the Army interposes significant legal, policy and practical
concerns regarding most of the Category II and all of the Category III
techniques proposed.
" . . . From a policy standpoint, employing many of
the suggested techniques would create a PA (public affairs) nightmare. The War
on Terror is expected to last many years and ultimate success requires strong
domestic and international support. Whatever interrogation techniques we adopt
will eventually become public knowledge. If we mistreat detainees, we will
quickly lose the morale (cq) high ground and public support will
erode."
* Memo from John Ley to the Office of the
Army General Counsel, undated
"Navy staff recommends, however, that
more detailed interagency policy review be conducted on proposed techniques.
Such policy review should address the possibility, if not the likelihood, that
techniques will be inadvertently disclosed through the visits to the detainees
in Cuba by the International Red Cross or foreign government delegations, which
could lead to international scrutiny. Navy staff also recommends that the
classification level of counter-resistance techniques be increased to the Top
Secret level."
* Memo from Capt. D.D.
Thompson, USN, special assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations for
Joint Chiefs of Staff matters, to the Director for Strategic Plans and Policy
Directorate of the Joint Staff.
"I have discussed this with the
Deputy (Secretary of Defense Paul D. Wolfowitz), (Under Secretary of Defense for
Policy) Doug Feith and (Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff) Gen. (Richard)
Myers. I believe that all concur in my recommendation that, as a matter of
policy, you authorize the Commander of USSOUTHCOM to employ, at his discretion,
only Categories I and II and the fourth technique listed in Category III ('Use
of mild, non-injurious physical contact such as grabbing, poking in the chest
with the finger, and light pushing').
" . . . While all Category III
techniques may be legally available, we believe that, as a matter of policy, a
blanket approval of Category III techniques is not warranted at this time. Our
Armed Forces are trained to a standard of interrogation that reflects a
tradition of restraint."
* Memo to then-secretary of defense Donald
H. Rumsfeld from William J. Haynes II, General Counsel of the
Department of Defense, Nov. 27, 2002. Rumsfeld, who used a stand-up desk in this
Pentagon office, approved the recommendation, but wrote at the
bottom:
"However, I stand for 8-10 hours a day. Why is standing
limited to 4 hours?"
"LEA (law enforcement agency) does not believe that
coercive interrogation techniques are effective. However, on those rare
occasions when these techniques have yielded results, the reliability of the
information gathered has proven to be highly questionable. Detainees who are
coerced into making admissions often develop strong feelings of anger and
resentment toward their interrogators. Instead of creating an environment
conducive to fostering continued cooperation, the interrogation process ends up
fueling hostility and strengthening a detainee's will to resist.
"A
recovered Al Qaeda training manual instructs its members to expect Americans to
use coercive interrogation tactics, even torture, to elicit information. The
manual draws attention to these techniques and characterizes them as further
proof of the evil and unjust acts which Americans commit against Muslims. Thus,
the use of coercive techniques only serves to reinforce these erroneous
perceptions. In essence, we end up proving ourselves worthy of the detainees'
righteous resolve and inspiring continued resistance.
"Despite the advice
of LEA behavioral experts who have consistently advocated the use of a
rapport-based approach, there seems to be a tendency to revert to a shortsighted
coercive model of interrogation."
* Memo from Timothy C.
James, Special Agent in Charge, Criminal Investigation Task Force,
Guantanamo, to Joint Task Force-Guantanamo, Dec. 17, 2002.
++
America's prison for terrorists often held the wrong
men
Tom Lasseter, McClatchy Newspapers
6/15/08
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/world/story/38773.html
GARDEZ, Afghanistan — The militants crept up behind Mohammed Akhtiar as he
squatted at the spigot to wash his hands before evening prayers at the
Guantanamo Bay detention camp.
They shouted "Allahu Akbar" — God is
great — as one of them hefted a metal mop squeezer into the air, slammed it into
Akhtiar's head and sent thick streams of blood running down his
face.
Akhtiar was among the more than 770 terrorism suspects imprisoned
at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, after the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks. They are the men the Bush administration described as "the
worst of the worst."
But Akhtiar was no terrorist. American troops had
dragged him out of his Afghanistan home in 2003 and held him in Guantanamo for
three years in the belief that he was an insurgent involved in rocket attacks on
U.S. forces. The Islamic radicals in Guantanamo's Camp Four who hissed "infidel"
and spat at Akhtiar, however, knew something his captors didn't: The U.S.
government had the wrong guy.
"He was not an enemy of the government, he
was a friend of the government," a senior Afghan intelligence officer told
McClatchy. Akhtiar was imprisoned at Guantanamo on the basis of false
information that local anti-government insurgents fed to U.S. troops, he
said.
An eight-month McClatchy investigation in 11 countries on three
continents has found that Akhtiar was one of dozens of men — and, according to
several officials, perhaps hundreds — whom the U.S. has wrongfully imprisoned in
Afghanistan, Cuba and elsewhere on the basis of flimsy or fabricated evidence,
old personal scores or bounty payments.
McClatchy interviewed 66 released
detainees, more than a dozen local officials — primarily in Afghanistan — and
U.S. officials with intimate knowledge of the detention program. The
investigation also reviewed thousands of pages of U.S. military tribunal
documents and other records.
This unprecedented compilation shows that
most of the 66 were low-level Taliban grunts, innocent Afghan villagers or
ordinary criminals. At least seven had been working for the U.S.-backed Afghan
government and had no ties to militants, according to Afghan local officials. In
effect, many of the detainees posed no danger to the United States or its
allies.
The investigation also found that despite the uncertainty about
whom they were holding, U.S. soldiers beat and abused many prisoners.
Prisoner mistreatment became a regular feature in cellblocks and
interrogation rooms at Bagram and Kandahar air bases, the two main way stations
in Afghanistan en route to Guantanamo.
While he was held at Afghanistan's
Bagram Air Base, Akhtiar said, "When I had a dispute with the interrogator, when
I asked, 'What is my crime?' the soldiers who took me back to my cell would
throw me down the stairs."
The McClatchy reporting also documented how
U.S. detention policies fueled support for extremist Islamist groups. For some
detainees who went home far more militant than when they arrived, Guantanamo
became a school for jihad, or Islamic holy war.
Of course, Guantanamo
also houses Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11
attacks, who along with four other high-profile detainees faces military
commission charges. Cases also have been opened against 15 other detainees for
assorted offenses, such as attending al Qaida training camps.
But
because the Bush administration set up Guantanamo under special rules that
allowed indefinite detention without charges or federal court challenge, it's
impossible to know how many of the 770 men who've been held there were
terrorists.
A series of White House directives placed "suspected enemy
combatants" beyond the reach of U.S. law or the 1949 Geneva Conventions'
protections for prisoners of war. President Bush and Congress then passed
legislation that protected those detention rules.
However, the
administration's attempts to keep the detainees beyond the law came crashing
down last week.
The Supreme Court ruled Thursday that detainees have the
right to contest their cases in federal courts, and that a 2006 act of Congress
forbidding them from doing so was unconstitutional. "Some of these petitioners
have been in custody for six years with no definitive judicial determination as
to the legality of their detention," the court said in its 5-4 decision,
overturning Bush administration policy and two acts of Congress that codified
it.
One former administration official said the White House's initial
policy and legal decisions "probably made instances of abuse more likely. ... My
sense is that decisions taken at the top probably sent a signal that the old
rules don't apply ... certainly some people read what was coming out of
Washington: The gloves are off, this isn't a Geneva world anymore."
Like
many others who previously worked in the White House or Defense Department, the
official spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the legal and political
sensitivities of the issue.
McClatchy's interviews are the most ever
conducted with former Guantanamo detainees by a U.S. news organization. The
issue of detainee backgrounds has previously been reported on by other media
outlets, but not as comprehensively.
McClatchy also in many cases did
more research than either the U.S. military at Guantanamo, which often relied on
secondhand accounts, or the detainees' lawyers, who relied mainly on the
detainees' accounts.
The Pentagon declined to discuss the findings. It
issued a statement Friday saying that military policy always has been to treat
detainees humanely, to investigate credible complaints of abuse and to hold
people accountable. The statement says that an al Qaida manual urges detainees
to lie about prison conditions once they're released. "We typically do not
respond to each and every allegation of abuse made by past and present
detainees," the statement said.
LITTLE INTELLIGENCE
VALUE
The McClatchy investigation found that top Bush
administration officials knew within months of opening the Guantanamo detention
center that many of the prisoners there weren't "the worst of the worst." From
the moment that Guantanamo opened in early 2002, former Secretary of the Army
Thomas White said, it was obvious that at least a third of the population didn't
belong there.
Of the 66 detainees whom McClatchy interviewed, the
evidence indicates that 34 of them, about 52 percent, had connections with
militant groups or activities. At least 23 of those 34, however, were Taliban
foot soldiers, conscripts, low-level volunteers or adventure-seekers who knew
nothing about global terrorism.
Only seven of the 66 were in positions to
have had any ties to al Qaida's leadership, and it isn't clear that any of them
knew any terrorists of consequence.
If the former detainees whom
McClatchy interviewed are any indication — and several former high-ranking U.S.
administration and defense officials said in interviews that they are — most of
the prisoners at Guantanamo weren't terrorist masterminds but men who were of no
intelligence value in the war on terrorism.
Far from being an ally of the
Taliban, Mohammed Akhtiar had fled to Pakistan shortly after the puritanical
Islamist group took power in 1996, the senior Afghan intelligence officer told
McClatchy. The Taliban burned down Akhtiar's house after he refused to ally his
tribe with their government.
The Americans detained Akhtiar, the
intelligence officer said, because they were given bad information by another
Afghan who'd harbored a personal vendetta against Akhtiar going back to his time
as a commander against the Soviet military during the 1980s.
"In some of
these cases, tribal feuds and political feuds have played a big role" in people
getting sent to Guantanamo, the intelligence officer said.
He didn't want
his name used, partly because he didn't want to offend the Western officials he
works with and partly because Afghan intelligence officers are assassinated
regularly.
"There were Afghans being sent to Guantanamo because of bad
intelligence," said Helaluddin Helal, Afghanistan's deputy interior minister for
security from 2002 to early 2004. "In the beginning, everyone was trying to give
intelligence to the Americans ... the Americans were taking action without
checking this information."
Nusrat Khan was in his 70s when American
troops shoved him into an isolation cell at Bagram in the spring of 2003. They
blindfolded him, put earphones on his head and tied his hands behind his back
for almost four weeks straight, Khan said.
By the time he was taken out
of the cell, Khan — who'd had at least two strokes years before he was arrested
and was barely able to walk — was half-mad and couldn't stand without help. Khan
said that he was taken to Guantanamo on a stretcher.
Several Afghan
officials, including the country's attorney general, later said that Khan, who
spent more than three years at Guantanamo, wasn't a threat to anyone; he'd been
turned in as an insurgent leader because of decades-old rivalries with competing
Afghan militias.
Ghalib Hassan was an Interior Ministry-appointed
district commander in Afghanistan's Nangarhar province, a man who'd risked his
life to help the U.S.-backed government. Din Mohammed, the former governor of
that province and now the governor of Kabul, said there was no question that
local tribal leaders, offended by Hassan's brusque style, fed false information
about him to local informants used by American troops.
The Pentagon
declined requests to make top officials, including the secretary of defense,
available to respond to McClatchy's findings. The defense official in charge of
detainee affairs, Sandra Hodgkinson, refused to speak with McClatchy.
The
Pentagon's only response to a series of written questions from McClatchy, and to
a list of 63 of the 66 former detainees interviewed for this story, was a
three-paragraph statement.
"These unlawful combatants have provided
valuable information in the struggle to protect the U.S. public from an enemy
bent on murder of innocent civilians," Col. Gary Keck said in the statement. He
provided no examples.
Rear Adm. Mark H. Buzby, until recently the
commanding officer at Guantanamo, said that detainees had supplied crucial
information about al Qaida, the Taliban and other terrorist
groups.
"Included with the folks that were brought here in 2002 were, by
and large, the main leadership of al Qaida and the Taliban," he said in a phone
interview.
Buzby agreed, however, that some detainees were from the
bottom rung.
"It's all about developing the mosaic ... there's value to
both ends of the spectrum," he said.
Former senior U.S. defense and
intelligence officials, however, said McClatchy's conclusions squared with their
own observations.
"As far as intelligence value from those in Gitmo, I
got tired of telling the people writing reports based on their interrogations
that their material was essentially worthless," a U.S. intelligence officer said
in an e-mail, using the military's slang for Guantanamo.
Guantanamo
authorities periodically sent analysts at the U.S. Central Command "rap sheets
on various prisoners and asked our assessment whether they merited continued
confinement," said the analyst, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because
of the sensitivity of the subject. "Over about three years, I assessed around 40
of these individuals, mostly Afghans. ... I only can remember recommending that
ONE should be kept at GITMO."
'WAR COUNCIL' REWRITES DETAINEE
LAW
At a Pentagon briefing in the spring of 2002, a senior Army
intelligence officer expressed doubt about the entire intelligence-gathering
process.
"He said that we're not getting anything, and his thought was
that we're not getting anything because there might not be anything to get,"
said Donald J. Guter, a retired rear admiral who was the head of the Navy's
Judge Advocate General's Corps at the time.
Many detainees were "swept up
in the pot" by large operations conducted by Afghan troops allied with the
Americans, said former Army Secretary White, who's now a partner at DKRW Energy,
an energy company in Houston.
One of the Afghan detainees at Guantanamo,
White recalled, was more than 80 years old.
Army Spc. Eric Barclais, who
was a military intelligence interrogator at Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan from
September 2002 through January 2003, told military investigators in sworn
testimony that "We recommended lots of folks be released from (Bagram), but they
were not. I believe some people ended up at (Guantanamo) that had no business
being sent there."
"You have to understand some folks were detained
because they got turned in by neighbors or family members who were feuding with
them," Barclais said. "Yes, they had weapons. Everyone had weapons. Some were
Soviet-era and could not even be fired."
A former Pentagon official told
McClatchy that he was shocked at times by the backgrounds of men held at
Guantanamo.
" 'Captured with weapon near the Pakistan border?' " the
official said. "Are you kidding me?"
"The screening, the understanding of
who we had was horrible," he said. "That's why we had so many useless people at
Gitmo."
In 2002, a CIA analyst interviewed several dozen detainees at
Guantanamo and reported to senior National Security Council officials that many
of them didn't belong there, a former White House official said.
Despite
the analyst's findings, the administration made no further review of the
Guantanamo detainees. The White House had determined that all of them were enemy
combatants, the former official said.
Rather than taking a closer look at
whom they were holding, a group of five White House, Justice Department and
Pentagon lawyers who called themselves the "War Council" devised a legal
framework that enabled the administration to detain suspected "enemy combatants"
indefinitely with few legal rights.
The threat of new terrorist attacks,
the War Council argued, allowed President Bush to disregard or rewrite American
law, international treaties and the Uniform Code of Military Justice to permit
unlimited detentions and harsh interrogations.
The group further argued
that detainees had no legal right to defend themselves, and that American
soldiers — along with the War Council members, their bosses and Bush — should be
shielded from prosecution for actions that many experts argue are war
crimes.
With the support of Bush, Cheney and then-Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld, the group shunted aside the military justice system, and in
February 2002, Bush suspended the legal protection for detainees spelled out in
Common Article Three of the 1949 Geneva Convention on prisoners of war, which
outlaws degrading treatment and torture.
The Bush administration didn't
launch a formal review of the detentions until a 2004 Supreme Court decision
forced it to begin holding military tribunals at Guantanamo. The Supreme Court
ruling last week said that the tribunals were deeply flawed, but it didn't close
them down.
In late 2004, Pentagon officials decided to restrict further
interrogations at Guantanamo to detainees who were considered "high value" for
their suspected knowledge of terrorist groups or their potential of returning to
the battlefield, according to Matthew Waxman, who was the deputy assistant
secretary of defense for detainee affairs, the Defense Department's head
official for detainee matters, from August 2004 to December 2005.
"Maybe
three-quarters of the detainees by 2005 were no longer regularly interrogated,"
said Waxman, who's now a law professor at Columbia University.
At that time,
about 500 men were still being held at Guantanamo.
So far, the military
commissions have publicly charged only six detainees — less than 1 percent of
the more than 770 who've been at Guantanamo — with direct involvement in the
9-11 terrorist attacks; they dropped the charges in one case.
Those few
cases are now in question after the high court's ruling Thursday.
About 500
detainees — nearly two out of three — have been released.
During a
military review board hearing at Guantanamo, Mohammed Akhtiar had some advice
for the U.S. officers seated before him.
"I wish," he said, "that the
United States would realize who the bad guys are and who the good guys
are."
HOW FOOT SOLDIERS, FARMERS GOT SWEPT UP
How
did the United States come to hold so many farmers and goat herders among the
real terrorists at Guantanamo? Among the reasons:
After conceding control
of the country to U.S.-backed Afghan forces in late 2001, top Taliban and al
Qaida leaders escaped to Pakistan, leaving the battlefield filled with ragtag
groups of volunteers and conscripts who knew nothing about global
terrorism.
The majority of the detainees taken to Guantanamo came into
U.S. custody indirectly, from Afghan troops, warlords, mercenaries and Pakistani
police who often were paid cash by the number and alleged importance of the men
they handed over. Foot soldiers brought in hundreds of dollars, but commanders
were worth thousands. Because of the bounties — advertised in fliers that U.S.
planes dropped all over Afghanistan in late 2001 — there was financial incentive
for locals to lie about the detainees' backgrounds. Only 33 percent of the
former detainees — 22 out of 66 — whom McClatchy interviewed were detained
initially by U.S. forces. Of those 22, 17 were Afghans who'd been captured
around mid-2002 or later as part of the peacekeeping mission in Afghanistan, a
fight that had more to do with counter-insurgency than
terrorism.
American soldiers and interrogators were susceptible to false
reports passed along by informants and officials looking to settle old grudges
in Afghanistan, a nation that had experienced more than two decades of
occupation and civil war before U.S. troops arrived. This meant that Americans
were likely to arrest Afghans who had no significant connections to militant
groups. For example, of those 17 Afghans whom the U.S. captured in mid-2002 or
later, at least 12 of them were innocent of the allegations against them,
according to interviews with Afghan intelligence and security
officials.
Detainees at Guantanamo had no legal venue in which to
challenge their detentions. The only mechanism set up to evaluate their status,
an internal tribunal in the late summer of 2004, rested on the decisions of
rotating panels of three U.S. military officers. The tribunals made little
effort to find witnesses who weren't present at Guantanamo, and detainees were
in no position to challenge the allegations against them.
++
Militants found recruits among Guantanamo's wrongly
detained
Tom Lasseter, McClatchy Newspapers
Tuesday, June 17,
2008
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/227/story/38779.html
GARDEZ, Afghanistan — Mohammed Naim Farouq was a thug in the lawless
Zormat district of eastern Afghanistan. He ran a kidnapping and extortion
racket, and he controlled his turf with a band of gunmen who rode around in
trucks with AK-47 rifles.
U.S. troops detained him in 2002, although he
had no clear ties to the Taliban or al Qaida. By the time Farouq was released
from Guantanamo the next year, however — after more than 12 months of what he
described as abuse and humiliation at the hands of American soldiers — he'd made
connections to high-level militants.
In fact, he'd become a Taliban
leader. When the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency released a stack of 20 "most
wanted" playing cards in 2006 identifying militants in Afghanistan and Pakistan
— with Osama bin Laden at the top — Farouq was 16 cards into the deck.
A
McClatchy investigation found that instead of confining terrorists, Guantanamo
often produced more of them by rounding up common criminals, conscripts,
low-level foot soldiers and men with no allegiance to radical Islam — thus
inspiring a deep hatred of the United States in them — and then housing them in
cells next to radical Islamists.
The radicals were quick to exploit the
flaws in the U.S. detention system.
Soldiers, guards or interrogators at
the U.S. bases at Bagram or Kandahar in Afghanistan had abused many of the
detainees, and they arrived at Guantanamo enraged at America.
The Taliban
and al Qaida leaders in the cells around them were ready to preach their
firebrand interpretation of Islam and the need to wage jihad, Islamic holy war,
against the West. Guantanamo became a school for jihad, complete with a council
of elders who issued fatwas, binding religious instructions, to the other
detainees.
Rear Adm. Mark H. Buzby, until recently the commanding officer
at Guantanamo, acknowledged that senior militant leaders gained influence and
control in his prison.
"We have that full range of (Taliban and al Qaida)
leadership here, why would they not continue to be functional as an
organization?" he said in a telephone interview. "I must make the assumption
that there's a fully functional al Qaida cell here at Guantanamo."
Afghan
and Pakistani officials also said they were aware that Guantanamo was churning
out new militant leaders.
In a classified 2005 review of 35 detainees
released from Guantanamo, Pakistani police intelligence concluded that the men —
the majority of whom had been subjected to "severe mental and physical torture,"
according to the report — had "extreme feelings of resentment and hatred against
USA."
The report warned that unless steps were taken to rehabilitate the
men, they had the potential of "becoming another Abdullah Mehsud," a former
Guantanamo detainee who became a high-ranking Taliban commander in the Pakistani
tribal areas bordering Afghanistan. Mehsud killed himself with a grenade last
July to avoid being taken prisoner by Pakistani troops.
"A lot of our
friends are working against the Americans now, because if you torture someone
without any reason, what do you expect?" Issa Khan, a Pakistani former detainee,
said in an interview in Islamabad. "Many people who were in Guantanamo are now
working with the Taliban."
According to Afghan authorities, Mohammed Naim
Farouq was a rural gangster, not a terrorist.
"He was with a group that
was kidnapping people. It was a criminal group. It did a lot of extortion," said
Attorney General Abdul Jabar Sabit, who interviewed Farouq in
Guantanamo.
But, Sabit found, Farouq wasn't linked to the Taliban or al
Qaida when the Americans arrested him.
No more. Since Farouq was released
from Guantanamo, the Defense Intelligence Agency said, he's had a relationship
with al Qaida and the Taliban and heads a group of Taliban
militiamen.
"Naim was a very, very small guy before, but now that he's
been released, he's a very big problem," said Taj Mohammed Wardak, a former
Afghan interior minister who also served as the governor of Farouq's province.
"It has a really bad effect when these men return to their
communities."
Discussing the effect that Guantanamo had on him, Farouq
measured his words.
"Why did the Americans treat me this way?" he said
during an interview with McClatchy in Gardez. "I wanted to keep my district
peaceful."
A NETWORK FOR RADICALIZING
In
interviews, former U.S. Defense Department officials acknowledged the problem,
but none of them would speak about it openly because of its implications: U.S.
officials mistakenly sent a lot of men who weren't hardened terrorists to
Guantanamo, but by the time they were released, some of them had become just
that.
Requests for comment from senior Defense Department officials went
unanswered. The Pentagon official in charge of detainee affairs, Sandra
Hodgkinson, declined interview requests even after she was given a list of
questions.
However, dozens of former detainees, many of whom were
reluctant to talk for fear of being branded as spies by the militants, described
a network — at times fragmented, and at times startling in its sophistication —
that allowed Islamist radicals to gain power inside Guantanamo:
Militants
recruited new detainees by offering to help them memorize the Quran and study
Arabic. They conducted the lessons, infused with firebrand theology, between the
mesh walls of cells, from the other side of a fence during exercise time or, in
lower-security blocks, during group meetings.
Taliban and al Qaida
leaders appointed cellblock leaders. When there was a problem with the guards,
such as allegations of Quran abuse or rough searches of detainees, these "local"
leaders reported up their chains of command whether the men in their block had
fought back with hunger strikes or by throwing cups of urine and feces at
guards. The senior leaders then decided whether to call for large-scale hunger
strikes or other protests.
Al Qaida and Taliban leaders at Guantanamo
issued rulings that governed detainees' behavior. Shaking hands with female
guards was haram — forbidden — men should pray five times a day and talking with
American soldiers should be kept to a minimum.
The recruiting and
organizing don't end at Guantanamo. After detainees are released, they're
visited by militants who try to cement the relationships formed in prison.
"When I was released, they (Taliban officials) told me to come join
them, to fight," said Alif Khan, an Afghan former detainee whom McClatchy
interviewed in Kabul.
"They told me I should move to Waziristan," a
Taliban hotbed in Pakistan.
Most of the 66 former Guantanamo detainees
whom McClatchy interviewed were hesitant to talk about their religious and
political transformations in prison.
Ilkham Batayev, a Kazakh, described
his stay at Guantanamo in bitter, angry terms. "I learned the traditions of many
people," he said. "Of course it changed me inside, but this is something
private." He said that Arab detainees spent a lot of time teaching him Arabic
and giving him lessons about the Quran.
Others said that fellow detainees
showed them the path of fundamentalist Islam.
Taj Mohammed, an Afghan
detainee, said that the time he spent at Guantanamo studying the Quran and
discussing Islam with radicals helped him see the world more
clearly.
"There were detainees who did not pray or who spoke with female
soldiers," Mohammed said. "We stopped speaking with these men. Sometimes we beat
them."
The U.S. government accused Mohammed of being a member of two
insurgent groups in Afghanistan's Konar province and taking part in an attack on
a U.S. military base.
Mohammed maintained that he was a shepherd.
Mohammed Roze, an official with the Afghan government's peace commission in
Konar province, said Mohammed was set up by a cousin with whom he was
feuding.
U.S. ATTEMPTS AT SEPARATION BACKFIRE
American officials tried to stop detainees from turning Guantanamo into
what some former U.S. officials have since called an "American madrassa" — an
Islamic religious school — but some of their efforts backfired.
The
original Guantanamo camp, Camp X-Ray, was little more than a collection of wire
mesh cells in which detainees were grouped together without much concern for
their backgrounds.
In April 2002, U.S. officials shifted the detainees to
Camp Delta, which grew to include a series of camps organized by security
level.
For example:
Camp One was for better-behaved detainees, who
were given toiletry items such as toothpaste and shampoo and more time for
outdoor exercise.
Camp Two was set up for cooperative detainees —
especially those who helped interrogators — who still posed a high security
threat to guards. They were given time in exercise areas, but were watched
carefully.
Camp Three was a high-security facility where detainees spent
most of their time in cells with steel mesh walls and little more than
mattresses and copies of the Quran.
Camp Four was for the best-behaved
detainees, and featured communal living spaces, librarian visits and lawns for
soccer.
Camp Five resembled a U.S. maximum-security prison, with
automatic sliding cell doors and a central guard station.
The idea was
that detainees who presented graver threats and were uncooperative would be
separated from those with looser ties to international terrorism.
What
the plan overlooked — according to several detainees and a former U.S. defense
official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of
the subject — is that even midlevel al Qaida members had been trained in
resistance techniques, and that one of them was to avoid calling attention to
yourself. An angry cabdriver from Kabul, in other words, may have been more
likely to attack a guard and end up in Camp Three than an al Qaida militant
was.
As a result, some senior radicals ended up in Camp Four, free to
preach their message of international jihad to petty criminals, Taliban
conscripts and detainees who had little or no previous affiliation with Islamic
militancy.
At times, detainee leaders would order other men to break camp
rules so that the guards would send them to higher-security blocks, where they
could carry messages from their leaders, said Charles "Cully" Stimson, who was
the deputy assistant secretary of defense for detainee affairs from January 2006
to February 2007.
"The communications network there is like the
communications network in any jail," Stimson said. "When Americans are in
captivity, they respect rank. ... I suspect it's no different down
there."
Buzby, the Guantanamo commander, said that he, too, suspected
that information flowed freely between militant leaders and their men at
Guantanamo's camps.
"It would be foolish to not believe that there is a
hierarchy of information being passed up and down the chain of command," Buzby
said.
Abdul Zuhoor, an Afghan detainee who spent time in Camp Four, said
that radical detainees used the system to their full advantage.
Zuhoor
said he remembered watching groups of senior Taliban and Arab detainees meet in
the exercise yard.
"They considered themselves the elders of Guantanamo,"
Zuhoor said in an interview in the Afghan town of Charikar. "They met as a shura
(religious) council."
The group, Zuhoor said, acted in concert with
others across Guantanamo to issue fatwas, which then were disseminated by
detainees who were being moved to other areas for medical checkups,
interrogations or transfers to higher-security blocks.
An attorney for
one Arab detainee, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he feared
implicating his client, said his client told him at one point that he couldn't
meet with his legal team anymore.
"He said there were five or six
detainees who had assumed positions of leadership in the camp, and that he had
to deal with them," the attorney said. "And they said that he would need a fatwa
to continue speaking with us, to continue speaking with Americans."
The
fatwa, the shura council told the attorney's client, couldn't come from just any
imam; it had to be from a senior cleric in Saudi Arabia, a hotbed of
fundamentalist Sunni Islam.
In June 2006, Zuhoor said, a Taliban member
at Guantanamo bragged to him that there soon would be three
"martyrs."
"The Arabs and some Taliban sat together and issued a
verdict," Zuhoor said. "Three of the men volunteered to kill themselves to get
more freedom for the other detainees."
The next morning, Zuhoor said, the
news spread across Guantanamo: Three Arabs had committed suicide.
The
Guantanamo commander at the time, Rear Adm. Harry Harris, called the suicides
acts of "asymmetric warfare." ++
More on
Boumediene
Dr. Steven Taylor, PoliBlog
6/17
http://www.poliblogger.com/?p=13800
Steve Chapman in the Chicago Tribune regarding Boumediene v. Bush
(Guantanamo and the limits of power) wrote:
The administration
asserted that in time of war, even an unconventional war against a shadowy foe,
the executive branch has the power to capture a foreigner abroad and hold him
for the rest of his life, without any independent review by the
courts
Short of claiming the right to do that to an American citizen
arrested on U.S. soil—a claim the administration had also made, only to see it
repudiated by the courts—that's about as vast and dangerous a power as you could
find. So it is not surprising that the Supreme Court balked.
This
is why claims (made by people like Scott Johnson at Powerline) that we "give al
Qaeda more rights than German POW's during World War II" are absurd. First, we
did not claim the right to hold German POW's for the the rest of their lives.
Second, and more to the point, not everyone in our custody is a member
of al Qaeda and therefore it is not unreasonable for detainees to have the right
to challenge their captivity. Too many in the administration and too many of
their defenders have bought into the poisonous notion that the United States
only capture the guilty, which is manifestly not the case.
I noted
yesterday the case of Nazar Chaman Gul, who was imprisoned both in Afghansitan
and at Guantanamo. There is also the case of Murat Kurnaz, who was rounded up
during a security check in Pakistan at the age of 19, and turned over to the US,
which held him as a prisoner for almost five years. Several other examples are
noted in a post today by Glenn Greenwald, including al Jazeera camerman Sami
al-Haj, who spent years in captivity. It is worth noting that neither man was
captured in combat. Gul was arrested in a private residence based on a tip (that
proved to be false) that he was a terriorist and al-Haj was detained as part of
a customs check. Yet both where treated to the "enemy combatant"
routine.
Indeed, the aforementioned Kurnaz was held despite any evidence
as to his guilt (source: a WaPo story at the time of his
release):
Declassified records in his case made public last year show
that he was kept behind bars and designated an enemy combatant even though U.S.
military intelligence and German law enforcement officials had largely concluded
that there was no information tying him to al-Qaeda or terrorist
activities.
Since it is clearly possible for US forces to have
arrested the wrong people, I cannot see how it is an abuse for SCOTUS to decide
that those in captivity should have the right to question their
detention.
It is incredibly selfish and myopic to take the attitude that
because foreigners are being detained that it somehow doesn't matter that
innocent people are being caught up in the dragnet.
To put it another
way, when the FARC kidnaps someone for political reasons and holds them without
chance of release simply because they believe they have the right to do so
within the context of a self-defined cause, we all find that to be an
abomination. Why is it is any different if the US government engages in the same
activity?
This is frightening power to give to any human being, and yet
it seems that some believe that that power ought to reside, unchallenged, in the
hands of the President of the United States. No wonder the GOP "brand" is so
tarnished at the moment.
I will also reiterate a point I made yesterday:
this type of behavior is allegedly about making us safe, but the arrest and
detention of innocents will not make people love us, it will make them hate us.
How that makes us "safe" is beyond me. ++
Contempt Of
Courts
McCain's Posturing On Guantanamo
George F. Will,
WaPo
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/06/16/AR2008061602041_pf.html
The day after the Supreme Court ruled that detainees imprisoned at
Guantanamo are entitled to seek habeas corpus hearings, John McCain called it
"one of the worst decisions in the history of this country." Well.
Does
it rank with Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857), which concocted a constitutional
right, unmentioned in the document, to own slaves and held that black people
have no rights that white people are bound to respect? With Plessy v. Ferguson
(1896), which affirmed the constitutionality of legally enforced racial
segregation?
With Korematsu v. United States (1944), which affirmed the
wartime right to sweep American citizens of Japanese ancestry into concentration
camps?
Did McCain's extravagant condemnation of the court's habeas ruling
result from his reading the 126 pages of opinions and dissents? More likely,
some clever ignoramus convinced him that this decision could make the Supreme
Court -- meaning, which candidate would select the best judicial nominees -- a
campaign issue.
The decision, however, was 5 to 4. The nine justices are
of varying quality, but there are not five fools or knaves. The question of the
detainees' -- and the government's -- rights is a matter about which intelligent
people of good will can differ.
The purpose of a writ of habeas corpus is
to cause a government to release a prisoner or show through due process why the
prisoner should be held. Of Guantanamo's approximately 270 detainees, many
certainly are dangerous "enemy combatants." Some probably are not. None will be
released by the court's decision, which does not even guarantee a right to a
hearing. Rather, it guarantees only a right to request a hearing. Courts retain
considerable discretion regarding such requests.
As such, the Supreme
Court's ruling only begins marking a boundary against government's otherwise
boundless power to detain people indefinitely, treating Guantanamo as (in Barack
Obama's characterization) "a legal black hole." And public habeas hearings might
benefit the Bush administration by reminding Americans how bad its worst enemies
are.
Critics, including Chief Justice John Roberts in dissent, are
correct that the court's decision clouds more things than it clarifies. Is the
"complete and total" U.S. control of Guantanamo a solid-enough criterion to
prevent the habeas right from being extended to other U.S. facilities around the
world where enemy combatants are or might be held? Are habeas rights the only
constitutional protections that prevail at Guantanamo? If there are others, how
many? All of them? If so, can there be trials by military commissions, which
permit hearsay evidence and evidence produced by coercion?
Roberts's
impatience is understandable: "The majority merely replaces a review system
designed by the people's representatives with a set of shapeless procedures to
be defined by federal courts at some future date." Ideally, however, the
defining will be by Congress, which will be graded by courts.
McCain,
co-author of the McCain-Feingold law that abridges the right of free political
speech, has referred disparagingly to, as he puts it, "quote 'First Amendment
rights.' " Now he dismissively speaks of "so-called, quote 'habeas corpus
suits.' " He who wants to reassure constitutionalist conservatives that he
understands the importance of limited government should be reminded why the
habeas right has long been known as "the great writ of liberty."
No state
power is more fearsome than the power to imprison. Hence the habeas right has
been at the heart of the centuries-long struggle to constrain governments, a
struggle in which the greatest event was the writing of America's Constitution,
which limits Congress's power to revoke habeas corpus to periods of rebellion or
invasion. Is it, as McCain suggests, indefensible to conclude that Congress
exceeded its authority when, with the Military Commissions Act (2006), it
withdrew any federal court jurisdiction over the detainees' habeas
claims?
As the conservative and libertarian Cato Institute argued in its
amicus brief in support of the petitioning detainees, habeas, in the context of
U.S. constitutional law, "is a separation of powers principle" involving the
judicial and executive branches. The latter cannot be the only judge of its own
judgment.
In Marbury v. Madison (1803), which launched and validated
judicial supervision of America's democratic government, Chief Justice John
Marshall asked: "To what purpose are powers limited, and to what purpose is that
limitation committed to writing, if these limits may, at any time, be passed by
those intended to be restrained?" Those are pertinent questions for McCain, who
aspires to take the presidential oath to defend the Constitution.
++
http://www.politicalwaves.net
"So keep fightin' for freedom and justice, beloveds, but don't you
forget to have fun doin' it. Lord, let your laughter ring forth. Be outrageous,
ridicule the fraidy-cats, rejoice in all the oddities that freedom can produce.
And when you get through kickin' ass and celebratin' the sheer joy of a good
fight, be sure to tell those who come after how much fun it was."
~
Molly Ivins, 1944 - 2007
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