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Official documents vindicate Red Cross report on US torture
By Richard Phillips
14 December 2004
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When a confidential International Committee of the Red Cross
(ICRC) report exposing the US military torture of prisoners at
Guantánamo Bay in Cuba was published by the New York
Times late last month Washington reacted with the usual combination
of crude denials and legalistic justifications of its violations
of the Geneva Conventions and international law.
At the same time, sections of the American media, including
the Wall Street Journal, Rupert Murdochs New York
Post and the Fox television network, attempted to smear the
ICRC. The 140-year-old human rights body was deemed to be anti-American
and its motives questionable. An editorial in the
Wall Street Journal declared that the Red Cross had become
an ideological organisation unable to distinguish between
good and bad, while the New York Post called for
a funding boycott of the ICRC and its American affiliates.
Within days of these attacks, however, further evidence surfaced,
this time from senior Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) officials
and the Pentagons own spy agency, the Defense Intelligence
Agency (DIA), vindicating the Red Cross investigation.
According to an Associated Press report published on December
6, FBI officers witnessed US soldiers torturing Guantánamo
Bay detainees in 2002, not long after prisoners captured in Afghanistan
and Pakistan began being transported to the American military
prison. Such was the level of abuse that a senior FBI counterterrorism
officer wrote to the US military, concerned that FBI officers
could be implicated in the illegal activity.
Three incidents were cited in a July 14 letter from Thomas
Harrington, deputy assistant director of the FBIs counter-terrorism
division, to the head of the US Armys Criminal Investigation
Command, Major General Donald J. Ryder. Harrington wrote that
one interrogator had abused prisoners so severely that they often
ended up curling into a fetal position on the floor and
crying in pain.
One of the episodes described in Harringtons letter recall
the sadism and sexual humiliation employed by the US military
on prisoners at Abu Ghraib prison near Baghdad. A female interrogator
whispered in the ear of a handcuffed and shackled detainee, caressed
him and then applied lotion to his arms. A Marine who witnessed
the interrogation told an FBI officer that the interrogator later
grabbed the detainees thumbs and bent them backwards and
also grabbed his genitals.
In September or October 2002, FBI agents witnessed a dog being
used in an aggressive manner to intimidate a detainee.
A month later, they saw the same detainee after he had been
subjected to intense isolation for over three months, totally
isolated in a cell that was always flooded by light.
By late November, the report continued, the
detainee was evidencing behavior consistent with extreme psychological
trauma... talking to nonexistent people, reported hearing voices
(and) crouching in a corner of the cell covered with a sheet.
Harringtons letter said another FBI agent was observing
an interrogation when a civilian contractor asked him to come
and see something else. The FBI officer was taken to an
unknown bearded, long-haired detainee... [who] had been gagged
with duct tape that covered much of his head. When the FBI
agent asked an Army soldier why the man was being punished, he
laughed and said the man was gagged because he had been chanting
the Koran and would not stop.
Harrington wrote that, although FBI officials had complained
to Department of Defense attorneys about these highly aggressive
interrogation methods in January 2003, the Army had taken
no action over the complaints.
Further evidence of torture in Iraq
It is clear that the torture of prisoners in Guantánamo
Bay, as well as Iraq, was not an aberration but an integral component
of the Bush administrations so-called war on terror. Further
evidence has emerged that the abuse referred to in Harringtons
letter was authorised and encouraged at the highest government
levels.
On December 7, a day after the Associated Press report, the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) released dozens of internal
government documents on the treatment of American-held POWs in
Iraq. The Bush administration waged a 12-month legal battle to
prevent the ACLU, the Center for Constitutional Rights, Physicians
for Human Rights and various military veterans groups obtaining
the material under Freedom of Information laws.
The letters and emails, although heavily-censored, confirm
that the US special operations task force TF 6-26, formerly known
as TF 121, was involved in torturing the prisoners and that this
continued after the exposure earlier this year that US forces
had abused Abu Ghraib detainees.
While the Pentagon does not officially acknowledge TF 6-26,
which consists of soldiers from Army special mission units and
Navy SEALS under the command of a two-star general, the unit operates
in Iraq and Afghanistan and is referred to as a hunter-killer
group. It has been accused of using secret facilities to conduct
its interrogations, and two of its officers are currently under
criminal investigation over the death of two Iraqi prisoners.
The government documents reveal that TF 6-26 members not only
tortured war prisoners but also tried to silence DIA personnel
concerned about the clandestine military organisations methods.
One of the internal memosa June 25 report from the director
of Defense Intelligence Vice Admiral Lowell Jacoby to Stephen
A. Cambone, the Undersecretary of Defense Intelligencedescribes
how TF 6-26 officers punched an Iraqi prisoner in the face so
badly that he needed medical attention, failed to record the medical
treatment and then confiscated DIA photos of the mans injuries.
Jacoby is the highest-ranking officer within the US military known
to have raised concerns about torture.
DIA personnel who complained about these abuses were threatened,
banned from some interrogation sessions, had their car keys confiscated
and emails monitored. They were ordered not to talk to anyone
in the US or leave the base even to get a haircut.
Other documents released by the ACLU include emails indicating
some of the conflicts between the FBI and the Department of Defense
(DOD) over interrogation methods. A December 2003 email observed
that the FBIs Military Liaison and Detainee Unit (MLDU),
which had a long-standing and documented position against
the use of some of DODs interrogation practices, had
requested certain information be documented to protect the
FBI.
Another terse email notes that Major General Geoffrey Miller,
then commander of Guantánamo Bay, continued to support
interrogation strategies [that the FBI] not only advised against,
but questioned against in terms of effectiveness. One memo
reported that an FBI official was shocked after he read an interview
with Miller in Stars and Stripes, the US military paper,
in which Miller claimed that Guantánamo Bay interrogations
were designed to establish a rapport with prisoners.
Miller ran Guantánamo Bay from October 2002 until March
2004, before his appointment to Abu Ghraib. Miller first visited
Abu Ghraib in 2003 and told Army commanders there to Gitmotise
the Iraqi prison in order to extract more information from detainees.
This meant the introduction of stress and duress techniques
widely employed at Guantánamo, such as sleep deprivation,
beatings, stripping detainees naked, shackling prisoners in painful
positions to the floor, and subjecting them to extremes of temperature
and prolonged loud music,
Correspondence from DIA agents to their superiors reported
that they saw many Iraqi prisoners stripped naked and placed in
solitary confinement at Abu Ghraib. One officer said he saw a
prisoner, who was handcuffed to a railing with a sack over his
head and a shower curtain draped around him, being slapped by
a soldier to keep him awake.
Last week, the Pentagon announced that four TF 6-26 officers
had been punished for unauthorised use of high-powered
Taser stun guns during the interrogation of Iraqi detainees. The
prisoners had burn marks on their backs and complained
of kidney pain after being grilled by the Special Forces unit.
According to Amnesty International, the stun guns, which are used
extensively by US forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, have killed
more than 74 people in North America since their introduction
in 2001.
While these revelations are no surprisethe Bush administration
made clear from the outset that the Geneva Conventions would not
apply to prisoners captured in its war on terrorthey
demonstrate that the torture of prisoners and other war crimes
were so brutal that key members of the military and police apparatus
felt compelled to voice concerns.
But as the latest documents reveal, this disquiet, even from
high-level FBI and DIA officials, who have no fundamental differences
with the illegal detention of prisoners in Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo
Bay, was simply brushed aside by the Pentagon and its shadowy
Special Forces.
See Also:
International Red Cross charges systematic
abuse
Bushs Torture Inc. at Guantanamo
[2 December 2004]
Prisoner releases expose illegal
nature of Guantanamo Bay detentions
[1 October 2004]
US torture in Iraq, Afghanistan:
authorized at the highest levels
[15 June 2004]
What the record shows: hypocrisy
and lies over US torture of Iraqis
[12 May 2004]
US war crimes: torture of
Iraqi prisoners exposed
[30 April 2004]
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