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the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
Torture Question Hovers Over Chertoff
by Jason Leopold John Yoo and some other Bush administration lawyers who built the legal framework for torture are now out of the U.S. government, but one still holds a Cabinet-level rank Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.
In the summer of 2002, Chertoff, then head of the Justice Departments Criminal Division, offered assurances to the CIA that its interrogators would not face prosecution under anti-torture laws if they followed guidelines on aggressive techniques approved by the Departments Office of Legal Counsel, where Yoo worked.
Those guidelines stretched the rules on permissible treatment of
detainees by narrowly defining torture as intense pain equivalent to
organ failure or death. Specific interrogation techniques were gleaned
from a list of methods that the U.S. military feared might be used
against American soldiers if they were captured by a ruthless enemy.
Three
years ago, when Chertoff was facing confirmation hearings to be
Homeland Security chief, the New York Times cited three senior-level
government sources as describing Chertoffs Criminal Division as
fielding questions from the CIA about whether its officers risked
prosecution if they employed certain harsh techniques.
One
technique the CIA officers could use under circumstances without fear
of prosecution was strapping a subject down and making him experience a
feeling of drowning, the Times reported.
In other words,
Chertoff appears to have green-lighted the technique known as
waterboarding, which has been regarded as torture since the days of
the Spanish Inquisition.
Chertoff reportedly did object to some
other procedures, such as death threats against family members and
mind-altering drugs that would change a detainees personality, the
Times reported. [NYT, Jan. 29, 2005]
During his Senate
confirmation hearings in February 2005, Chertoff denied providing the
CIA with legal guidance on the use of specific interrogation methods,
such as waterboarding. Rather, he said he gave the agency broad
guidance in response to questions about interrogation methods.
"You
are dealing in an area where there is potential criminality," Chertoff
said in describing his advice to the CIA. "You better be very careful
to make sure that whatever you decide to do falls well within what is
required by law."
Nevertheless, the evidence continues to build
that Chertoffs assurances gave CIA interrogators confidence they would
avoid prosecution as long as they stayed within the permissive
guidelines devised by deputy assistant attorney general John Yoo and
his boss at the Office of Legal Counsel, Jay Bybee.
The Abu Zubaydah Case
Chertoffs
reported assurances to CIA agents appear to have led directly to the
use of waterboarding against alleged al-Qaeda operative Abu Zubaydah in
August 2002.
"The CIA was seeking to determine the legal limits
of interrogation practices for use in cases like that of Abu Zubaydah,
the Qaeda lieutenant who was captured in March 2002," according to the
New York Times article.
The Abu Zubaydah case was the first time
that waterboarding was used against a prisoner in the war on terror,
according to Pentagon and Justice Department documents, news reports
and several books written about the Bush administrations interrogation
methods.
In The One Percent Doctrine, author Ron Suskind
reported that President George W. Bush had become obsessed with
Zubaydah and the information he might have about pending terrorist
plots against the United States.
"Bush was fixated on how to get
Zubaydah to tell us the truth," Suskind wrote. Bush questioned one CIA
briefer, "Do some of these harsh methods really work?"
The
waterboarding of Abu Zubaydah was videotaped, but that record was
destroyed in November 2005 after the Washington Post published a story
that exposed the CIA's use of so-called "black site" prisons overseas
to interrogate terror suspects.
John Durham, an assistant
attorney general in Connecticut, was appointed special counsel earlier
this year to investigate the destruction of that videotape as well as
destroyed film on other interrogations.
The CIA officials who
pressed Chertoff to give assurances protecting CIA interrogators
included former CIA General Counsel Scott Muller and his deputy, John
Rizzo, according to the New York Times. Muller and Rizzo, who is now
the CIAs general counsel, are at the center of Durhams probe.
The
Times also reported that Chertoff participated in the drafting of a
second still-secret memo in August 2002, which allegedly described
specific interrogation methods that CIA interrogators could use against
detainees.
Those interrogation techniques were derived from the
Army and Air Forces Survival, Evasion, Rescue, and Escape (SERE)
training program. But those techniques were meant to prepare U.S.
soldiers for abuse they might suffer if captured by a brutal regime,
not as methods for U.S. interrogations.
New ACLU Document Release
This
past week, the American Civil Liberties Union released more than 300
pages of documents showing that in 2003 military interrogators used
methods they learned during SERE training against eight Afghanistan
detainees held at the Gardez Detention Facility in southeastern
Afghanistan.
Those methods included forcing a detainee to kneel
outside in wet clothing, spraying the person with cold water, and
punching and kicking a detainee over the course of three weeks.
One
of the prisoners, an 18-year-old Afghan militia fighter named Jamal
Naseer, later died. The documents released to the ACLU say his body was
so severely beaten by his interrogators that it appeared to be a black
and green color at the time of his death.
Amrit Singh, an ACLU
attorney, said the SERE tactics that were approved by the Justice
Department were never intended to be used by the U.S. government
against its detainees.
The latest disclosures further erode
claims by President Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney and then-Defense
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld that prisoner abuses at Gardez or the
torture of prisoners at Abu Ghraib were isolated acts by a few bad
apples.
To the contrary, it appears that the policies approved
by Bush and the assurances provided by Chertoff and others led to the
atrocities at the CIA detention centers as well as the prisoner abuse
at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Bay
An action memorandum, dated
Feb. 7, 2002, and signed by President Bush, stated that the Geneva
Convention did not apply to members of al-Qaeda or the Taliban.
That,
in turn, led Lt. Gen. Ricardo S. Sanchez, the top commander in Iraq to
institute a dozen interrogation methods beyond the Armys standard
practice under the convention, according to a 2004 report on the
prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib prepared by a panel headed by James
Schlesinger.
Sanchez said he based his decision on the
President's Memorandum, which he said had justified "additional,
tougher measures" against detainees, the Schlesinger report said.
Other
prisoner abuses resulted from Rumsfelds verbal and written
authorization in December 2002 allowing interrogators to use stress
positions, isolation for up to 30 days, removal of clothing and the use
of detainees' phobias (such as the use of dogs), according to a
separate report issued by Army Maj. Gen. George R. Fay.
From
December 2002, interrogators in Afghanistan were removing clothing,
isolating people for long periods of time, using stress positions,
exploiting fear of dogs and implementing sleep and light deprivation,
the Fay report said.
Moras Complaint
Rumsfelds approval
of certain interrogation methods outlined in a December 2002 action
memorandum was criticized by Alberto Mora, the former general counsel
of the Navy.
The interrogation techniques approved by the
Secretary [of Defense] should not have been authorized because some
(but not all) of them, whether applied singly or in combination, could
produce effects reaching the level of torture, a degree of mistreatment
not otherwise proscribed by the memo because it did not articulate any
bright-line standard for prohibited detainee treatment, a necessary
element in any such document, Mora wrote in a 14-page letter to the
Navys inspector general.
Additionally, a Dec. 20, 2005, Army
Inspector General Report relating to the capture and interrogation of
Mohammad al-Qahtani included a sworn statement by Lt. Gen. Randall M.
Schmidt. It said Secretary Rumsfeld was personally involved in the
interrogation of al-Qahtani and spoke weekly with Maj. Gen. Geoffrey
Miller, the commander at Guantanamo, about the status of the
interrogations between late 2002 and early 2003.
Gitanjali S.
Gutierrez, an attorney with the Center for Constitutional Rights who
represents al-Qahtani, said in a sworn declaration that his client,
imprisoned at Guantanamo, was subjected to months of torture based on
verbal and written authorizations from Rumsfeld.
At Guantánamo,
Mr. al-Qahtani was subjected to a regime of aggressive interrogation
techniques, known as the First Special Interrogation Plan, that were
authorized by U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, Gutierrez
said.
Those techniques were implemented under the supervision
and guidance of Secretary Rumsfeld and the commander of Guantánamo,
Major General Geoffrey Miller. These methods included, but were not
limited to, 48 days of severe sleep deprivation and 20-hour
interrogations, forced nudity, sexual humiliation, religious
humiliation, physical force, prolonged stress positions and prolonged
sensory over-stimulation, and threats with military dogs.
Gutierrezs
claims about the type of interrogation al-Qahtani endured have since
been borne out with the release of hundreds of pages of internal
Pentagon documents describing interrogation methods at Guantanamo and
at least two independent reports about prisoner abuse.
According
to the Schlesinger report, orders signed by Bush and Rumsfeld in 2002
and 2003 authorizing brutal interrogations became policy at
Guantanamo and Abu Ghraib.
In February, the Justice Department's
Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) confirmed that it launched
a formal investigation to determine, among other issues, whether agency
attorneys, including Chertoff, provided the White House and the CIA
with poor legal advice when it said CIA interrogators could use harsh
interrogation methods against detainees.
Yoo is currently a law professor at the University of California at Berkeley.
Investigative reporter Jason Leopold is the author of News Junkie, a memoir Visit www.newsjunkiebook.com for a preview.
[Britiain's Guardian newspaper has an interesting report regarding General Richard Myers' claim he was 'hoodwinked' on the torture issue.- lex]