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Red Cross confirms Bush administration, CIA used torture in
interrogations
By Patrick Martin
7 August 2007
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A confidential report by the International Committee of the
Red Cross (ICRC) suggests that Bush administration officials may
have committed war crimes in the operation of CIA secret
prisons overseas, according to a lengthy analysis published
on the web site of the New Yorker magazine Sunday.
The Red Cross report concluded that the methods used in the
CIA interrogation of alleged 9/11 terrorist Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
and other Al Qaeda prisoners were tantamount to torture
and that Bush administration officials had likely committed grave
breaches of the Geneva Conventions.
The article by Jane Mayer, entitled The
Black Sites, is the product of a series of interviews
with former CIA officers involved in operating the agencys
secret prisons overseas, agents who directly participated in torture
sessions and apparently concluded that the methods they were employing
were either immoral or counterproductive, or both.
The New Yorker has become one of the principal conduits
for dissent within the military/intelligence apparatus directed
against the policies of the Bush White House. Mayers colleague,
Seymour Hersh, wrote the first extensive report on the abuse of
prisoners at the US military prison at Abu Ghraib, near Baghdad,
as well as a series of exposés about US preparations for
a military strike against Iran.
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed was captured by Pakistani authorities
in early 2003, just before the US invasion of Iraq, and held at
secret CIA locations for nearly four years before his transfer
to Guantánamo Bay. Last March, the Pentagon made public
his confession to carrying out or planning no less
than 31 separate terrorist atrocities, a statement widely hailed
in official circles as proof that tortureor, in Washington-speak,
enhanced interrogation techniqueswas an effective
and legitimate practice in the war on terror.
At the time, the World Socialist Web Site noted the
dubious character of Mohammeds self-incriminating statements,
in which he claimed responsibility for an improbable number of
spectacular plots, including purported plans to destroy the Sears
Tower, the Empire State Building and Londons Big Ben, and
to assassinate former US President Jimmy Carter and Pope John
Paul II. (See: Washington
exploits Guantánamo confession to justify its
crimes)
No politically literate observer doubted that Mohammed had
been severely tortured, and many said so, among them journalist
Nat Hentoff (Was
Khalid Sheikh Mohammed tortured?) and Professor Anthony
DAmato of Northwestern University School of Law (True
Confessions: The Amazing Tale of Khalid Shaikh Mohammed),
who compared the 26-page confession to the self-indictments
by prisoners in the Stalinist purge trials of the 1930s. Mayers
article confirms, in fact, that the CIA actually employed torture
techniques first developed by the Soviet KGB and copied by US
intelligence agencies during the Cold War.
The International Committee of the Red Cross was given access
to Mohammed late last year, after his transfer to Guantánamo
Bay. The policy of the ICRC is to discuss its findings only with
the government holding prisoners in custody, not with the press,
in order to insure its continued access to prisoners. But, according
to Mayer, the ICRC report on the 15 detainees held in the CIAs
secret prisons was circulated through the very highest levels
of the White House, State Department and National Security Council,
and to some congressmen on the House and Senate committees that
oversee the intelligence agencies.
Mayer cited congressional and other Washington sources
familiar with the report, writing that one of the
sources said that the Red Cross described the agencys detention
and interrogation methods as tantamount to torture, and declared
that American officials responsible for the abusive treatment
could have committed serious crimes. The source said the report
warned that these officials may have committed grave breaches
of the Geneva Conventions, and may have violated the US Torture
Act. Mayer adds, The conclusions of the Red Cross,
which is known for its credibility and caution, could have potentially
devastating legal ramifications.
In other words, those US government officials who authorized
and carried out the torture of CIA prisoners could face war crimes
charges before either an American or international tribunal, as
could those who subsequently became aware of what was taking place
in the secret prisons and covered it up.
According to Mayers article, the CIA use of torture was
not a rogue operation, but a massive bureaucratic
enterprise involving systematic research and development to find
the best methods for breaking down prisoners. CIA
officials reviewed the techniques employed by the Phoenix Program
during the Vietnam War as a model for the war on terror.
The Phoenix Program involved the systematic assassination of an
estimated 20,000 cadres, supporters and sympathizers of the National
Liberation Front, as well as the widespread torture of prisoners.
The agency also sought interrogation advice from the secret
police of Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia, all of which practice
barbaric methods of torture against political prisoners. And one
former military interrogator described the techniques of exerting
total control over a prisoners environment as the
KGB model, developed during the purges against political
dissidents in the former Soviet Union, and subsequently mimicked
by the CIA.
Among the techniques used on Khalid Sheikh Mohammed were prolonged
sensory deprivation, continuous shackling while naked, use of
a dog leash and female interrogators, forcible slamming into the
walls of his cell, suspension from the ceiling of the interrogation
room by his arms, and the now-notorious practice of waterboarding,
the simulated drowning technique employed as torture since medieval
times (when it became known as the Chinese water torture.)
One interrogation expert told Mayer, referring to the victims
of the torture sessions: People were utterly dehumanized.
People fell apart. It was the intentional and systematic infliction
of great suffering masquerading as a legal process. It is just
chilling.
The torture was so severe and systematic that it had a profound
psychological effect on some of the torturers themselves, according
to Mayer, who interviewed one of those who interrogated Mohammed.
This interrogator described a fellow torturer who now has
horrible nightmares ... It really haunts him. You are inflicting
something really evil and horrible on somebody.
CIA officials repeatedly voiced concerns that the orders they
were receiving from the White House, and particularly from Vice
President Dick Cheney, might leave them vulnerable to criminal
prosecution, particularly since they were instructed to keep prisoners
like Mohammed alive and thereby preserve them as witnesses to
their own abuse. As one official told Mayer, in a particularly
chilling passage, It would have been better if we had executed
them.
A former CIA official told Mayer that many agents had taken
out liability insurance to help cover the anticipated legal bills
when they face prosecution for prisoner abuse. There is a high
level of anxiety about political retribution, he said, and
several guys expect to be thrown under the bus, serving
as fall guys for the decision-makers at the highest levels, including
Bush, Cheney, former CIA Director George Tenet and Attorney General
Alberto Gonzales, who, as White House counsel, supervised the
process of giving a legal stamp of approval to torture.
Several leading congressional Democrats are well aware of the
ICRC report, which was circulated to leaders of the Senate and
House Intelligence committees, chaired by Senator Jay Rockefeller
of West Virginia and Congressman Sylvestre Reyes of Texas. Speaker
of the House Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
were likely in the loop as well.
This fact underscores the complicity of the congressional Democratic
leadership, who only two days ago pushed through legislation that
greatly expanded the domestic spying powers of an administration
which they knew had been branded by the International Committee
of the Red Cross as a serial perpetrator of war crimes.
Despite the sensational character of Mayers revelations,
there has been relatively little comment on the subject in the
American media. The Washington Post, in an article
Sunday previewing the New Yorker account, confirmed the
existence of the Red Cross report and its circulation at the highest
levels in the US capital.
It cited sources familiar with the document as
confirming that the detainees interviewed by the ICRC gave similar
accounts of their torture even though they were held in isolation
from each other and could not coordinate their stories. This reinforces
the credibility of their testimonyas does the exporting
of these methods from the CIA secret prisons and the Guantánamo
Bay concentration camp to the US military prison in Abu Ghraib,
Iraq, where digital photographs made public in 2004 caused worldwide
revulsion at US torture methods.
See Also:
Congress authorizes vast expansion of
domestic spying
[6 August 2007]
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