Last June, in the District Court in Washington D.C., a ruling was delivered on the habeas corpus petition of a Syrian prisoner
in Guantánamo, Abdul Rahim al-Janko (also identified as Abdul Rahim al-Ginco), which exemplified all that was wrong with the
Bush administration’s detention policies in the “War on Terror,” and which also dealt a deadly blow to any
hopes that the Obama administration would deal robustly and skeptically with the disaster it had inherited.
From the beginning, there had been doubts about President Obama’s commitment to justice for the prisoners at Guantánamo.
Instead of respecting the habeas corpus litigation initiated by the Supreme Court in June 2004, and revived[1], after unconstitutional interference from Congress, in June 2008, the President established an interagency Task Force[2] to review all the Guantánamo cases, which, essentially, was a secretive, executive-led alternative to court review[3].
Even worse, however, was the hands-off approach that the President, and his Attorney General Eric Holder, brought to the
ongoing habeas litigation. When Obama came to power, 23 Guantánamo prisoners had won their habeas corpus petitions, and just three had lost[4]. This should have been a resounding indication that all was not right with the government’s
cases, but instead of ordering a shake-up of the department responsible for sending lawyers to the District Court to be humiliated
again and again in cases like those of the Uighurs[5] (innocent Muslims from China’s oppressed Xinjiang province) or Mohammed El-Gharani[6], a former child prisoner held on the basis of information provided by witnesses that
the government itself regarded as unreliable, Obama and Holder did absolutely nothing.
The same people who had worked on the cases for George W. Bush were allowed to keep manufacturing whatever argument they
thought might win, leading to further humiliations, as in the case of Alla Ali Bin Ali Ahmed, one of 15 men seized in a guest
house in Faisalabad, Pakistan in March 2002. In May, accepting Ali Ahmed’s contention that he was a student, Judge Gladys
Kessler, as I explained at the time[7], “demolished the government’s case against him, painting a disturbing picture
of unreliable allegations made by other prisoners who were tortured, coerced, bribed or suffering from mental health issues,
and a ‘mosaic’ of intelligence, purporting to rise to the level of evidence, which actually relied, to an intolerable
degree, on second- or third-hand hearsay, guilt by association and unsupportable suppositions.”
However, it was in June, when Judge Richard Leon (an appointee of George W. Bush) came to consider the case of Abdul Rahim
al-Janko, that new depths were plumbed in the Obama administration’s inability — or unwillingness — to conduct
even the vaguest objective analysis of the cases it inherited.
I explained al-Janko’s story in a detailed article at the time[8], which I recommend for those who want the full sordid tale, but to recap, he had traveled
to Afghanistan at the age of 23 after falling out with his father, had stayed in an al-Qaeda-affiliated guest house for five
days, and had then (perhaps unwillingly) attended an al-Qaeda-affiliated training camp for 18 days, after which he was tortured
as a spy for three months, until he confessed that he had been spying for the US and Israel. He was then held in a Taliban
prison in Kandahar for 18 months, which was where he and four other men imprisoned by the Taliban were found in January 2002.
Although all five men — a British citizen, a Tatar and two Saudis, as well as al-Janko — had been imprisoned
by the Taliban, they were sent to Guantánamo instead of being freed, and al-Janko was particularly unfortunate, as a search
of the house belonging to Mohammed Atef, the military chief of al-Qaeda, who had directed his torture and who was killed in
a US bombing raid in November 2001, unearthed a videotape containing his tortured confession, which was wrongly interpreted
as a declaration of jihad by Attorney General John Ashcroft.
The five men seized in the Taliban prison in Kandahar were eventually released, but al-Janko was the only one freed under
President Obama, and the only one whose unjust detention had to be exposed in a US court before his release was secured.
In ruling last June on al-Janko’s habeas petition, Judge Leon was so appalled that the case had come before him at
all that he openly mocked the government for “taking a position that defies common sense” by asking the court
to address whether a relationship with al-Qaeda or the Taliban “can be sufficiently vitiated by the passage of time,
intervening events, or both.” Concluding that “The answer, of course, is yes,” he then dismantled the government’s
case point by point, stating, “To say the least, five days at a guest house in Kabul combined with eighteen days at
a training camp does not add up to a longstanding bond of brotherhood,” and adding that al-Janko’s torture “evinces
a total evisceration of whatever relationship might have existed!”
Judge Leon also stated that his abandonment in the Taliban prison “is even more definitive proof that any preexisting
relationship had been utterly destroyed,” and concluded that an analysis of all these factors “overwhelmingly
leads this Court to conclude that the relationship that existed in 2000 — such as it was — no longer existed whatsoever
in 2002 when al-Janko was taken into custody.”
Last week, al-Janko, who was freed from Guantánamo and given a new home in a third country last October, sued 26 current
and former senior US military officials for damages. Alleging violations of his rights under the US Constitution and the Geneva
Conventions, his lawyers stated that he was “the victim of a decade-long Kafkaesque nightmare from which he is just
awakening,” adding, “Whether a country provides redress for the people it has wronged in violation of international
and US law is a true test of the character of a nation.”
As the Washington Post[9] described it, al-Janko “says that he was urinated on by his American captors,
slapped, threatened with loss of fingernails and exposed to sleep deprivation, extreme cold and stress positions.” He
also “says that US authorities broke his knee, used police dogs against him and caused kidney damage by failing to treat
him for kidney stones.”
Al-Janko undoubtedly has a case, but his chances of securing a meaningful response from the Obama administration —
let alone an apology or compensation — must be close to zero, given that the administration’s response to any
challenge involving Bush-era crimes, or its own novel developments, such as the proposed extrajudicial executions of US citizens[10], is to invoke the “state secrets” doctrine[11], or, in the case of a damning internal report[12] into the “torture memos”[13] of John Yoo and Jay S. Bybee, to secure the services of a compliant Justice Department
official (David Margolis), who is skilled in the dark arts of an official whitewash[14]. As Glenn Greenwald explained[15]:
[T]he Obama DOJ — which fought unsuccessfully to keep Janko imprisoned at Guantánamo — has been so consistent
in its standards that one need not wait to hear from them to know how they will respond. It’s the same way they’ve
responded in similar cases: whatever was done to this person is a State Secret that no court can review[16]; those who are responsible for the abuse do and should enjoy full legal immunity[17]; and, besides, we should all be Looking Forward, Not Backward at “unnecessary battles”[18] like this one.
If that sounds bleak, it’s because it is. With hindsight, shielding the Bush administration’s torturers from
accountability for their crimes has always been an important part of Barack Obama’s supposedly pragmatic Presidency,
but in recent months, as Obama’s own crimes have been highlighted in his relentless use of drone assassinations in Pakistan
(PDF[19]), and his defense of plans to assassinate Anwar al-Awlaki in Yemen[20], shielding administration officials, past and present, from accountability for wrongdoing
has openly become a key policy of the government.
Andy Worthington is a journalist and historian, based in London. He is the author of The Guantánamo Files[21], the first book to tell the stories of all the detainees in America's illegal
prison. For more information, visit his blog here[22].
A federal judge barred prosecutors on Wednesday from using a crucial witness in the first trial of a former Guantánamo
detainee, adding to the fierce debate over whether the government can successfully prosecute terrorist detainees in civilian
court.
The trial of Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, who faces charges in the 1998 bombings of two United States Embassies in East Africa, has been seen as a test of President Obama’s goal of moving many other detainees, like Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, into federal court and, ultimately, closing Guantánamo.
In the months since Mr. Ghailani was brought to New York from Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, Judge Lewis A. Kaplan of United States District Court in Manhattan has rejected defense requests to dismiss the case because of violations of Mr. Ghailani’s right to a speedy trial and because of accusations he was tortured.
But just as the trial was to begin on Wednesday, Judge Kaplan ruled that he would not allow the witness to testify. He
noted that the government had acknowledged that it had identified and located the witness through interrogation of Mr. Ghailani
when he was earlier held in a secret overseas jail run by the Central Intelligence Agency. His lawyers have said he was tortured there.
Judge Kaplan said he was “acutely aware of the perilous nature of the world in which we live.”
“But the Constitution is the rock upon which our nation rests,” he went on. “We must follow it not only
when it is convenient, but when fear and danger beckon in a different direction. To do less would diminish us and undermine
the foundation upon which we stand.”
The judge delayed the trial’s opening until Tuesday, allowing the government to adjust its strategy or appeal the
ruling. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. said the government would be examining the judge’s opinion and deciding how to react to it.
Speaking in Washington, Mr. Holder seemed to play down the ruling’s significance.
“We are talking about one ruling, in one case by one judge,” Mr. Holder said.
“I think the true test is, ultimately, how are these cases resolved? What happens?” he continued, adding, “Can
they be successfully resolved from the government’s perspective?”
Mr. Holder said history had shown that hundreds of terrorism and related cases had been resolved through pleas or convictions
in civilian court. “I think it’s too early to say that at this point the Ghailani matter is not going to be successful,”
he said.
Mr. Ghailani’s trial on charges he conspired in the embassy bombings in Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania,
was scheduled to begin on Wednesday. The attacks, orchestrated by Al Qaeda, killed 224 people.
After Mr. Ghailani was captured in 2004, he spent nearly five years in C.I.A. custody in so-called black sites and later
at the military prison at Guantánamo.
Mr. Ghailani’s lawyers — Peter E. Quijano, Steve Zissou and Michael K. Bachrach — had argued that their
client was tortured while in C.I.A. custody, and that any statements he made or evidence derived from those statements, including
testimony from the witness whose existence he disclosed, was tainted and inadmissible.
After the hearing on Wednesday, Mr. Quijano praised the ruling, saying, “This case will be tried upon lawful evidence,
not torture, not coercion.”
He said the Fifth Amendment had to apply to Mr. Ghailani as much as to any other defendant.
“It is the Constitution that won a great victory today,” Mr. Quijano said. “We applaud the court for
its courage and support for the law.”
Prosecutors say the disputed witness, Hussein Abebe, sold Mr. Ghailani the TNT used to blow up the embassy in Dar es Salaam.
They say that Mr. Abebe agreed voluntarily to testify against Mr. Ghailani, and that his decision to cooperate was linked
only remotely to the interrogation.
Mr. Abebe had been characterized by prosecutors as a “giant witness for the government.” On Friday, a prosecutor,
Michael Farbiarz, explained in court that without Mr. Abebe’s testimony about selling the TNT to Mr. Ghailani, “the
government has no way of putting such evidence in front of the jury at all.”
But in a three-page order, Judge Kaplan said that “the government has failed to prove that Abebe’s testimony
is sufficiently attenuated from Ghailani’s coerced statements to permit its receipt in evidence.”
The judge said he felt it was appropriate to emphasize that the trial was still proceeding, and that if Mr. Ghailani were
convicted he faced the possibility of life imprisonment.
He added that Mr. Ghailani’s status of “enemy combatant” probably would permit his detention as something
akin “to a prisoner of war until hostilities between the United States and Al Qaeda and the Taliban end, even if he were found not guilty.”
The judge said he would issue a fuller opinion later.
Karen J. Greenberg, executive director of the Center on Law and Security at New York University who observed the hearings on Mr. Abebe and is a strong advocate for trying detainees in civilian court, characterized the
order as a “step forward for the rule of law, and therefore it cannot be a setback for the government.”
“We now know that there are lines when it comes to torture, and this is one,” she added.
Judge Kaplan has not ruled on whether Mr. Ghailani was mistreated while in detention, but, in his decision, said he assumed
for the purpose of his analysis that Mr. Ghailani was coerced during interrogation. The ruling excluding Mr. Abebe’s
testimony will probably make the government’s case more complicated to prove and the trial longer.
During the 2008 presidential campaign, Mr. Obama opposed the Guantánamo detention complex, calling it a recruiting symbol
for terrorists. He initially ordered Guantánamo closed by January 2010, and later declared his intention to try terrorism
suspects in federal court whenever feasible, igniting a debate over whether the civilian or the military system was better
for such cases.
Critics of relying on the civilian system have said that defendants who have been held and interrogated as war criminals
could be successfully prosecuted only by military tribunals or courts, with their less restrictive rules of evidence.
The judge did not elaborate on his observation that Mr. Ghailani could be detained in the military system if he were acquitted,
but the comment spurred some debate among legal experts.
Ben Wizner, a senior lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union, said the conventional wisdom about the Ghailani case was that the justice system works if he is convicted and fails if he
is acquitted.
“But that’s not how we measure the effectiveness of a criminal justice system,” Mr. Wizner said. “The
question is whether the government can present its case and whether the defendant can get a fair trial.”
Attorney General Holder, asked if the government was considering returning Mr. Ghailani to the military system and holding
him indefinitely, replied, “We intend to proceed with this trial.”
Supporters of the tribunals at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, who insist military justice, not the federal courts,
is the best way to deal with terrorists, should pay close attention to Tuesday’s events in a United States District
Court in Manhattan. Faisal Shahzad was sentenced to life imprisonment, five months and four days after he tried to blow up his car in Times Square.
When Mr. Shahzad was arrested, and later given a Miranda warning, the “tough on terrorists”
crowd screamed about coddling and endangering the country’s security. They didn’t stop complaining, even after
Mr. Shahzad cooperated with investigators and entered a guilty plea with a mandatory life sentence. All of this happened without
the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the New York Police Department breaking laws or violating Constitutional protections.
Now let’s check in on Guantánamo Bay, where President George W. Bush opened an illegal detention
camp, authorized torture and abuse, and then set up military tribunals engineered to produce guilty verdicts no matter how
thin or tainted the evidence. When the courts declared the system illegal, Congress made it slightly better. President Obama
improved it a bit more. But it is still not up to American standards, or to its task.
There are more than 170 inmates left in Guantánamo. Only 36 have been referred for prosecution, some
very dangerous men. Forty-eight are in a long-term detention that is certainly illegal. Almost all the rest are in limbo while
the Obama team tries to figure out what to do. The chances are dimming every day that prisoners like Khalid Shaikh Mohammed,
mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, will ever be brought to justice.
The only inmate on trial in Guantánamo is Omar Khadr, a Canadian who was accused at age 15 of killing
an American soldier in Afghanistan. He has been held in extralegal detention for more than eight years, and the military has
been attempting to try him since 2005. The thin evidence against him is tainted by his credible allegations of abuse.
The Pentagon has further shamed American justice during the trial by imposing censorship that included
temporarily banning four reporters from the courtroom because they published the name of a witness who had been identified
in news reports and public documents.
This is the choice: Justice in long-established federal courts that Americans can be proud of and the
rest of the world can respect. Or illegal detentions and unending, legally dubious military tribunals. It is an easy one.
Over the next month, in an attempt to focus attention more closely on Guantánamo, and on the remaining prisoners who
are held there, I’ll be publishing an eight-part series of articles (in conjunction with Cageprisoners, for whom I work as a Senior Researcher), telling, for the first time, the stories of the 176
men who are still held.
The articles to follow, covering the rest of the prisoners still held, deal with those seized in particular locations:
two cover prisoners seized in Afghanistan; two more tell the stories of prisoners seized crossing from Afghanistan to Pakistan
in December 2001; two deal with prisoners seized in Pakistan; and the final article covers the “high-value detainees”
transferred to Guantánamo from secret CIA prisons in September 2006, and other prisoners, seized in a variety of countries,
who were subjected to “extraordinary rendition” and imprisonment in secret CIA prisons.
In reading these articles, I hope that readers will be able to discover the stories of the men behind the statistics of
Guantánamo — and the still-repeated and thoroughly unfounded claims that the prison holds “the worst of the worst.”
In the accounts, readers will encounter a variety of different individuals. Many of these men traveled to Afghanistan before
the 9/11 attacks to fight with the Taliban against the Northern Alliance, and suddenly found themselves to be enemies of America
in a “War on Terror,” and others were not even involved in any kind of military conflict, and were, instead, students,
humanitarian aid workers, missionaries, or economic migrants, caught in the wrong place at the wrong time.
George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld covered up that hundreds of innocent men were sent to the Guantánamo Bay
prison camp because they feared that releasing them would harm the push for war in Iraq and the broader War on Terror, according
to a new document obtained by The Times.
The accusations were made by Lawrence Wilkerson, a top aide to Colin Powell, the former Republican Secretary of State,
in a signed declaration to support a lawsuit filed by a Guantánamo detainee. It is the first time that such allegations have
been made by a senior member of the Bush Administration.
Colonel Wilkerson, who was General Powell’s chief of staff when he ran the State Department, was most critical of
Mr Cheney and Mr Rumsfeld. He claimed that the former Vice-President and Defence Secretary knew that the majority of the initial
742 detainees sent to Guantánamo in 2002 were innocent but believed that it was “politically impossible to release them”.
General Powell, who left the Bush Administration in 2005, angry about the misinformation that he unwittingly gave the world
when he made the case for the invasion of Iraq at the UN, is understood to have backed Colonel Wilkerson’s declaration.
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
Colonel Wilkerson, a long-time critic of the Bush Administration’s approach to counter-terrorism and the war in Iraq,
claimed that the majority of detainees — children as young as 12 and men as old as 93, he said — never saw a US
soldier when they were captured. He said that many were turned over by Afghans and Pakistanis for up to $5,000. Little or
no evidence was produced as to why they had been taken.
He also claimed that one reason Mr Cheney and Mr Rumsfeld did not want the innocent detainees released was because “the
detention efforts would be revealed as the incredibly confused operation that they were”. This was “not acceptable
to the Administration and would have been severely detrimental to the leadership at DoD [Mr Rumsfeld at the Defence Department]”.
Referring to Mr Cheney, Colonel Wilkerson, who served 31 years in the US Army, asserted: “He had absolutely no concern
that the vast majority of Guantánamo detainees were innocent ... If hundreds of innocent individuals had to suffer in order
to detain a handful of hardcore terrorists, so be it.”
He alleged that for Mr Cheney and Mr Rumsfeld “innocent people languishing in Guantánamo for years was justified
by the broader War on Terror and the small number of terrorists who were responsible for the September 11 attacks”.
He added: “I discussed the issue of the Guantánamo detainees with Secretary Powell. I learnt that it was his view
that it was not just Vice-President Cheney and Secretary Rumsfeld, but also President Bush who was involved in all of the
Guantánamo decision making.”
Mr Cheney and Mr Rumsfeld, Colonel Wilkerson said, deemed the incarceration of innocent men acceptable if some genuine
militants were captured, leading to a better intelligence picture of Iraq at a time when the Bush Administration was desperate
to find a link between Saddam Hussein and 9/11, “thus justifying the Administration’s plans for war with that
country”.
He signed the declaration in support of Adel Hassan Hamad, a Sudanese man who was held at Guantánamo Bay from March 2003
until December 2007. Mr Hamad claims that he was tortured by US agents while in custody and yesterday filed a damages action
against a list of American officials.
Defenders of Guantánamo said that detainees began to be released as early as September 2002, nine months after the first
prisoners were sent to the jail at the US naval base in Cuba. By the time Mr Bush left office more than 530 detainees had
been freed.
A spokesman for Mr Bush said of Colonel Wilkerson’s allegations: “We are not going to have any comment on that.”
A former associate to Mr Rumsfeld said that Mr Wilkerson's assertions were completely untrue.
The associate said the former Defence Secretary had worked harder than anyone to get detainees released and worked assiduously
to keep the prison population as small as possible. Mr Cheney’s office did not respond.
There are currently about 180 detainees left in the facility
Late last night - on the eve of the
date President Obama promised to restore justice to a busted Guantanamo detention system - a Justice Department-led
task force released its outrageous recommendation to continue holding nearly 50 Guantanamo detainees indefinitely.1
We're stunned that the Department of Justice would act in such flagrant and direct violation of civil liberties, human rights,
and a Supreme Court ruling in 2008 that confirmed Guantanamo detainees' rights to habeas corpus.2
However
it's also the clearest proof we've seen yet that in order to truly resolve the heinous policies and practices taking place
at Guantanamo, we're going to need to look to outside sources to challenge the status quo. Holding people
without charge, trial or clear process for reviewing their case is unacceptable.
The White House and Congress must
intervene and establish a new kind of task force - a commission of independent, bipartisan experts to examine, report,
and come to their own informed conclusions about the policies and actions related to the detention, treatment, and
transfer of Guantanamo detainees.
We've got to fight fire with fire
- only an independent, bipartisan commission can help untangle the human rights mess created at Guantanamo.
Today, the United States Supreme Court refused to review a lower court's dismissal of a case brought by four British former
detainees against Donald Rumsfeld and senior military officers for ordering torture and religious abuse at Guantánamo. The
British detainees spent more than two years in Guantanamo and were repatriated to the U.K. in 2004.
The Obama administration
had asked the court not to hear the case. By refusing to hear the case, the Court let stand an earlier opinion by the D.C.
Circuit Court which found that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, a statute that applies by its terms to all "persons"
did not apply to detainees at Guantanamo, effectively ruling that the detainees are not persons at all for purposes of U.S.
law. The lower court also dismissed the detainees' claims under the Alien Tort Statute and the Geneva Conventions, finding
defendants immune on the basis that "torture is a foreseeable consequence of the military’s detention of suspected enemy
combatants." Finally, the circuit court found that, even if torture and religious abuse were illegal, defendants were immune
under the Constitution because they could not have reasonably known that detainees at Guantanamo had any Constitutional rights.
Eric
Lewis, a partner in Washington, D.C.’s Baach Robinson & Lewis, lead attorney for the detainees, said, "It
is an awful day for the rule of law and common decency when the Supreme Court lets stand such an inhuman decision. The final
word on whether these men had a right not to be tortured or a right to practice their religion free from abuse is that they
did not. Future prospective torturers can now draw comfort from this decision. The lower court found that torture is all in
a days' work for the Secretary of Defense and senior generals. That violates the President's stated policy, our treaty obligations
and universal legal norms. Yet the Obama administration, in its rush to protect executive power, lost its moral compass and
persuaded the Supreme Court to avoid a central moral challenge. Today our standing in the world has suffered a further great
loss."
The four former detainees -- Shafiq Rasul, Asif Iqbal, Rhuhel Ahmed, and Jamal Al-Harith --
were held from 2002 to 2004 at Guantánamo before being sent home to England without being charged with any offense. They filed
their case in 2004 seeking damages from former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and senior American military officers
for violations of their constitutional rights and of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which prohibits infringement of
religion by the U.S. government against any person. Their claims were dismissed in 2008 by the Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit when that court held that detainees have no rights under the Constitution and do not count as "persons"
for purposes of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
Last year, the Supreme Court granted the men’s first petition, vacated the Court of Appeals decision and ordered
the D.C. Circuit to reconsider its ruling in light of the Supreme Court’s historic decision in Boumediene v. Bush,
which held that Guantánamo is de facto U.S. territory and that detainees have a Constitutional right to habeas corpus.
On
remand, the D.C. Circuit reiterated its view that the Constitution does not prohibit torture of detainees at Guantánamo and
that detainees still are not “persons” protected from religious abuse. Finally, the Court of Appeals held that,
in any event, the government officials involved are immune from liability because the right not to be tortured was not clearly
established.
A second petition filed with the Court on August 24, 2009 pointed out that the Court of Appeals
decision stands in conflict with all of the Supreme Court’s recent precedent on Guantánamo and attacked the notion that
the prohibitions against torture and religious abuse were not clearly established in 2002 when the petitioners were imprisoned.
Center for Constitutional Rights Senior Attorney Shayana Kadidal, co-counsel on the case, said, "We
are disappointed that the Supreme Court has refused to hold Secretary Rumsfeld and the chain of civilian and military command
accountable for torture at Guantánamo, and that the Obama administration sought to block torture victims from having their
day in court. Where can these men seek justice now for the terrible things that were done to them? The entire world recognizes
that torture and religious humiliation are never permissible tools for a government, yet our highest court seems to think
otherwise."
CCR has led the legal battle over Guantanamo for the last seven years – sending the first ever habeas
attorney to the base and sending the first attorney to meet with a former CIA "ghost detainee" there. CCR has been responsible
for organizing and coordinating more than 500 pro bono lawyers across the country in order to represent the men at the base,
ensuring that nearly all have the option of legal representation, and is representing detainees at Guantánamo before the Supreme
Court for the third time this term. In addition, CCR has been working to resettle the approximately 60 men who remain
at Guantánamo because they cannot return to their country of origin for fear of persecution and torture.
Baach Robinson
& Lewis, a Washington, D.C. litigation firm has been in the forefront of detainee litigation, working on behalf of both
Guantanamo and Afghan detainees, since early 2004.
Murder
at Guantanamo?
The Mysterious, Unsolved Death of Mohammad Saleh al Hanashi
With recent news reports centering on Attorney
General Eric Holder's announcement that some Guantanamo detainees
would be prosecuted in federal court and revamped, albeit flawed military commissions, important stories from previous months related to the prison
facility continue to sink ever deeper into the swamp of our collective amnesia.
One example is the death that occurred at Guantanamo
last June of Yemeni prisoner Mohammad Ahmed Abdullah Saleh al Hanashi. Al Hanashi's death was reported as an "apparent suicide," and about four weeks later, Mike Melia
of The Associated Press reported that Yemeni officials claimed Al Hanashi died of "asphyxiation." The article vaguely
notes that self-strangulation may have been the cause of death.
While self-strangulation is rare, it is possible. However, news reports point out that the prisoner was kept under 24/7 observation (possibly
on video) in the Guantanamo prison psychiatric ward. Furthermore,
psychiatric patients on this ward are said to be sedated. How could this "suicide" happen? The death is being investigated
by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS), which doesn't inspire trust, as recent revelations have shown it to be capable of some extremely bad behavior on some of its investigations.
But the suicide story has about worn out, as a November 15 Huffington Post article by
journalist Naomi Wolf -- who has followed the al Hanashi story -- reports that Guantanamo spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Brook DeWalt has confirmed that "the status of
the investigation into Mr al-Hanashi's death ... is now a Naval criminal investigation -- meaning that he is no longer considered
a suicide but a victim of a murder or a negligent homicide."
On January 17, 2009, al Hanashi was summoned
to meet with top Guantanamo commander, Rear Adm. David Thomas,
and Army Col. Bruce Vargo, commander of the joint detention group. Afterwards, and with no explanation, al Hanashi never returned
to the general prison population and ended up in the prison's psychiatric ward, where he was found dead some months later.
No other details are known, though an AP story notes the following (emphasis added):
Attorney Elizabeth Gilson, who represents another detainee at the psychiatric ward,
said she heard details about the suicide from her client but cannot divulge them
because the information is classified. She described the force-feeding as "abusive and inhumane."
Several journalists, including Naomi Wolf, were on a tour of Guantanamo at the time of al Hanashi's death. They were not allowed to report on the death
until after they had left the base. Who was
Mohammad Saleh al Hanashi?
Al Hanashi was no ordinary prisoner. He was a spokesman for the other prisoners,
who had selected him last year to be their representative. Like the other four prisoners who have died of supposed suicide
at Guantanamo, al Hanashi was a long-term hunger striker.
While al Hanashi had been on hunger strike until at least last May, and his weight had fallen under 90 pounds, he was supposed
to finally be getting a chance to meet with an attorney.
Mohammad Ahmed Abdullah Saleh al Hanashi was a Taliban supporter, who -- according to Guantanamo expert Andy Worthington -- "was one of around 50 prisoners at Guantanamo who
had survived a massacre at Qala-i-Janghi, a fort in northern Afghanistan, at the end of November 2001, when, after the surrender of the city of Kunduz, several
hundred foreign fighters surrendered to General Rashid Dostum, one of the leaders of the Northern Alliance, in the mistaken
belief that they would be allowed to return home." This was the same prison revolt and subsequent massacre by U.S., British and Northern Alliance forces where John Walker Lind was also captured and later
tortured by U.S. operatives.
The Qala-i-Janghi uprising came only days before a mass prisoner exchange took place with
CIA-supported warlord Dostum, which, as New York Times writer James Risen noted recently, resulted in the killing of perhaps as many 2,000 Taliban
fighters, who had surrendered at Kunduz. Serious questions have been raised about U.S.
involvement or knowledge of the mass killings. Physicians for Human Rights has initiated a campaign to expose the truth about the massacre, having documented the existence of mass graves
at Dasht-e-Leili, as well as tampering with the grave sites. According to a U.S. State Department account, witnesses to the
killings have been murdered.
General Dostum is a supporter of the Karzai government, and was back in Kabul earlier this month to claim a post in the government's cabinet. According to a McClatchy report, he had to return to Turkey (where he
resides periodically in exile) when the U.S.
complained about his presence to the Karzai government. The U.S. has been trying to convince both domestic and international
critics of its Afghanistan policy that the Afghanistan government can clean up its act, even though President Karzai's claim
to legitimacy rests on a phony election that saw over one million fake ballots (about one-quarter of the total votes case,
according to a New York Times story). The other major candidate recently pulled out of a run-off election, claiming it
couldn't be fairly run.
Al Hanashi's Combatant Status Review Tribunal (CSRT) record documents the fact of his November 2001 surrender, his imprisonment and wounding at Qala-i-Janghi,
and the fact he was shipped off to Shabraghan Prison, where he spent the next four weeks or so recuperating in the prison
hospital. Also in the hospital were survivors of the Northern Alliance transfer from Kunduz, victims of a war crime as thousands
were "stuffed into closed metal shipping containers and given no food or water; many suffocated while being trucked to the
prison. Other prisoners were killed when guards shot into the containers" (New York Times story). Some of the survivors ended up in Shabraghan Prison, the wounded in its meager hospital
facilities.
Did al Hanashi talk with survivors of the Dostum mass killings? Did he hear tales
of U.S. Special Operations soldiers or officers involved? Was he killed to keep his silence? We don't know, but there are
plenty of other reasons that U.S. authorities
may have wanted al Hanashi silenced.
Former Guantanamo inmate,
Binyam Mohamed, who knew al Hanashi, believes the 31-year-old Yemeni force-fed hunger striker didn't commit
suicide. He told Naomi Wolf recently that reports that al Hanashi was "an upbeat person with no mental problems and would
never have considered suicide." As Wolf noted in an article last September:
As their designated representative, al-Hanashi knew which prisoners had claimed
to have been tortured or abused, and by whom.
Hence, another theory of possible homicide would be that al Hanashi knew too much
about U.S. torture and abuse. A person
with some knowledge of the situation at Guantanamo has told me that it's possible that al Hanashi was removed, or allowed
to die, simply because he had been too independent, too rebellious and a potential leader inside the prison. Naomi Wolf explained
in an article last September how a hunger striker might die from force-feeding.
It is worth considering how easy it would be to do away with a troublesome prisoner
being force-fed by merely adjusting the calorie level. If it is too low, the prisoner will starve, but too high a level can
also kill, since deliberate, liquid, overfeeding by tube, to which Guantanamo
prisoners have reported being subjected, causes vomiting, diarrhea and deadly dehydration that can stop one's heart.
However, at the time of his death, al Hanashi was said to have already terminated
his hunger strike.
Another odd coincidence surrounding his death concerns the transfer of Ahmed Khalfan Ghailani, a "high-value" detainee, who has been at Guantanamo
since September 2006, to a New York federal court, only a week after al Hanashi was found
not breathing in Guantanamo's psych ward. Ghailani was facing
charges concerning his alleged role in the 1998 bombings of U.S. embassies
in Tanzania and Kenya.
The link between Ghailani and al Hanashi is significant for one reason only: According to Andy Worthington, Ghailani, who was tortured in the CIA's black prisons, fingered al Hanashi in 2005
as having been at "'the al-Farouq camp [the main training camp for Arabs, associated in the years before 9/11 with Osama bin
Laden] in 1998-99 prior to moving on to the front lines in Kabul."
But according to al Hanashi and all other sources, al Hanashi came to Afghanistan only in early 2001. Hence, his possible testimony
at a trial in New York City, establishing that Ghailani's
admissions were false, and likely coerced by torture, may have been a hindrance to a government bent on convicting the supposed
bomber. Interestingly, as Worthington points out, the other four embassy bombers were not kept
in CIA black prisons or tortured, but convicted in a U.S.
court for the bombings in May 2001. (Ghailani sits in MetropolitanCorrectionalCenter, still awaiting
trial.)
Al Hanashi's death, coming only weeks before he was, after seven long years imprisonment,
to meet finally with an attorney, brings to mind the untimely death of Ibn al-Sheikh al-Libi, also at first reported as a suicide, in a prison cell in Libya
last May. Al-Libi, too, was supposed to meet soon with people from the outside, according to a report from Newsweek. As is the case with Al-Libi, the al Hanashi death has a strange feel to it. The ACLU has called for an independent investigation into detainee deaths at Guantanamo, including that of Mohammad Saleh al Hanashi.
Perhaps the most telling fact concerning al Hanashi's death is how silent and disinterested
the mainstream media, and even some in the blogosphere, seems to be. A leader of the prisoners is reported as having strangled
himself. Not long after becoming a spokesperson for the prisoners, al Hanashi is called to see the top officers at the prison,
and is never seen again (outside of the psych ward) until he is found dead. By all accounts, he is kept in a part of the prison
where there is constant surveillance. Other witnesses have tales to tell, but their stories are kept classified. His death
is a possible convenience for any number of state actors, including prison officials, federal prosecutors and those portions
of the Obama administration and military concerned with pressing the war in Afghanistan.
Many would like to look away from the crimes done in the name of U.S.
"security" at Guantanamo and other "war on terror" prisons
in the Bush/Cheney years, and believe that these things are of the past. But increasingly, Americans are waking up to the
fact that something very wrong and bad is still occurring regularly at Guantanamo and perhaps other U.S. facilities. The U.S. administration
will not even let members of Congress go and interview prisoners in Guantanamo. What do they have to fear?
What will the NCIS investigation reveal about the death of Mohammad Saleh al Hanashi?
It's been six months since his death. We deserve some answers now.
A big battle is brewing
over the U.S.
military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
and the Chinese Muslim inmates held there.
The Supreme Court announced Tuesday it would decide whether federal judges have the power to order the release of the ethnic Uighur
prisoners into the United States.
The White House and Congress
argue the inmates have never been admitted into the United States under
U.S. immigration laws, and judges should
not be making those sorts of decisions.
To underscore the point,
the U.S. Congress Tuesday approved a spending bill that includes a measure effectively prohibiting Guantanamo
prisoners from being released into the United States.
The measure would admit them only to face trial.
President Barack Obama
has pledged to close Guantanamo by Jan. 22, 2010, but meeting
that goal has become increasingly difficult.
Few countries are willing
to accept any of the approximately 220 inmates, and the United States
continues to debate what to do with them.
The 13 Uighurs — a Turkic Muslim ethnic group from Xinjiang in western China
— have been cleared of being suspected terrorists by U.S.
authorities.
Many of them had traveled
to Afghanistan for weapons training in order to fight the Chinese government
before Sept. 11, 2001, and fled to Pakistan
after the outbreak of hostilities.
They were captured and
handed over to U.S. custody and have been held at GuantanamoBay for nearly eight years.
Five of the original group
of 22 Uighurs were transferred to Albania
two years ago. Four more were sent to Bermuda in June.
Solicitor General Elena
Kagan told the Supreme Court in a letter Sept. 23 that the south Pacific island
of Palau had agreed to accept 12 of the remaining 13 Uighurs.
But only six of the 12
have agreed to resettle there.
Meanwhile, pressure is
increasing on the White House to close Guantanamo.
Tom Andrews, a former Democratic
congressman from Maine, announced the launch Tuesday of
the National Campaign to Close Guantanamo.
He was joined by retired
Lieutenant General Robert Gard and retired Brigadier General John Johns.
Attacks on closing the
prison are “pure politics at its worst,” Andrews said.
The campaign unveiled a
new advertisement to air on cable television and the Internet.
In four years of researching and writing about Guantánamo, I have become used to uncovering shocking information, but for
sheer cynicism, I am struggling to think of anything that compares to the revelations contained in the unclassified ruling
in the habeas corpus petition of Fouad al-Rabiah, a Kuwaiti prisoner whose release was ordered last week by Judge Colleen
Kollar-Kotelly (PDF). In the ruling, to put it bluntly, it was revealed that the US government tortured an innocent man to extract false confessions
and then threatened him until he obligingly repeated those lies as though they were the truth.
The background: lies hidden in plain sight for five years
To establish the background to this story, it is necessary for me to return to my initial response to the ruling a week last Friday, before these revelations had been made public, when, based on what I knew of the case from the publicly
available documents, I explained that I was disappointed that the Obama administration had pursued a case against al-Rabiah,
alleging that he was a fundraiser for Osama bin Laden and had run a supply depot for al-Qaeda in Afghanistan’s Tora
Bora mountains, for two particular reasons.
The first was because a CIA analyst had interviewed al-Rabiah at Guantánamo in the summer of 2002 and had concluded that
he was an innocent man caught at the wrong time and in the wrong place; and the second was because, although al-Rabiah had
said that he had met bin Laden and had been present in the Tora Bora mountains, he had provided an innocent explanation for
both occurrences. He had, he said, been introduced to bin Laden on a trip to Afghanistan to investigate proposals for a humanitarian
aid mission, and he had been at Tora Bora — and compelled to man a supply depot — because he was one of numerous
civilians caught up with soldiers of al-Qaeda and the Taliban as he tried to flee the chaos of Afghanistan for Pakistan, and
had been compelled to run the depot by a senior figure in al-Qaeda.
These appeared to be valid explanations, especially as al-Rabiah, a 42-year old father of four children, had no history
of any involvement with militancy or terrorism, and had, instead, spent 20 years at a management desk job at Kuwait Airways,
and had an ownership interest in some health clubs. Moreover, he had a history of legitimate refugee relief work, having taken
a six-month approved leave of absence from work in 1994-95 to do relief work in Bosnia, having visited Kosovo with the Kuwaiti
Red Crescent in 1998, and having made a trip to Bangladesh in 2000 to delivery kidney dialysis fluid to a hospital in the
capital, Dhaka.
As a result, it appeared to me a week last Friday that Judge Kollar-Kotelly granted al-Rabiah’s habeas petition because
neither his meeting with bin Laden nor his presence in Tora Bora indicated that he was either a member of, or had supported
al-Qaeda or the Taliban.
However, now that Judge Kollar-Kotelly’s ruling has been issued, I realize that the account given by al-Rabiah during
his Combatant Status Review Tribunal at Guantánamo in 2004 — on which I based my account of his activities — was
a tissue of lies, and that the truth, hidden for over six years, is that, like torture victims groomed for show trials throughout
the centuries, he made up false stories under torture, and repeated them obediently, fearing further punishment and having
been convinced that he would never leave Guantánamo by any other means.
An introduction to the torture revelations, and an endorsement of al-Rabiah’s explanations about his time
in Afghanistan
In her ruling, Judge Kollar-Kotelly methodically dissected the government’s case to reveal the chilling truth. After
noting, initially, that the “evidentiary record” was “surprisingly bare,” because the government “has
withdrawn its reliance on most of the evidence and allegations that were once asserted against al-Rabiah, and now relies almost
exclusively on al-Rabiah’s ‘confessions’ to certain conduct,” she added, with a palpable sense of
disbelief:
Not only did al-Rabiah’s interrogators repeatedly conclude that these same confessions were not believable —
which al-Rabiah’s counsel attributes to abuse and coercion, some of which is supported by the record — but it
is also undisputed that al-Rabiah confessed to information that his interrogators obtained from either alleged eyewitnesses
who are not credible and as to whom the Government has now largely withdrawn any reliance, or from sources that never even
existed … If there exists a basis for al-Rabiah’s indefinite detention, it most certainly has not been presented
to this Court.
In dealing with al-Rabiah’s background, and his reasons for traveling to Afghanistan, Judge Kollar-Kotelly was required
to consider his own assertion that, after a preliminary ten-day visit in July 2001 to identify areas where humanitarian aid
might be delivered, he returned in October 2001 “to complete a fact-finding mission related to Afghanistan’s refugee
problems and the country’s non-existent medical infrastructure,” against the government’s claim that he
was “‘not an aspiring aid worker caught up in the front lines of the United States war against al-Qaeda’
but instead was someone who traveled to Afghanistan in October 2001 as a ‘devotee of Osama bin Laden who ran to bin
Laden’s side after September 11th.’”
Concluding that “The evidence in the record strongly supports al-Rabiah’s explanation,” Judge Kollar-Kotelly
noted that he had officially requested leave prior to his departure, and quoted from two letters sent to his family. In the
first, on October 18, 2001, he explained that “for ten days he assisted with the delivery of supplies to refugees and
that he was able to take video ‘reflecting the tragedy of the refugees,’ but that he was unable to leave Afghanistan
through Iran (the route he took to enter the country) because the borders had been closed.” As a result, he “wrote
in his letter that he and an unspecified number of other persons decided ‘to drive four trucks to Pakistan making our
way to Peshawar,’” and he also asked his brother to notify his boss at Kuwait Airlines that he was having difficulties
returning to Kuwait on time.
After noting that “The evidence in the record establishes that al-Rabiah did, in fact, travel across Afghanistan
towards Peshawar, ultimately getting captured (unarmed) by villagers outside of Jalalabad … on approximately December
25, 2001” (with Maher al-Quwari, a Palestinian who also ended up in Guantánamo), Judge Kollar-Kotelly quoted from a
second letter sent to his family, in which — ironically, in light of what was to come — he wrote that he was “detained
by the American troops and thanks to God they are good example[s] of humanitarian behavior.” He added that he was “detained
pending verification of [his] identity and personality,” and that the “investigation and verification procedures
may last for a long time due to the great number of detained Arabs and other persons” who had been fleeing the situation
in Afghanistan, which “turned upside down between one day and night and every Arab citizen has become a suspect.”
Discrediting the government’s unreliable witnesses
Moving on to the government’s key allegations — about Osama bin Laden and Tora Bora — Judge Kollar-Kotelly
dismissed the allegations regarding al-Rabiah’s supposed activities in Tora Bora, which were made by another prisoner
who claimed that he “was told that al-Rabiah was in charge of supplies at Tora Bora,” by noting that, “Although
his allegations are filled with inconsistencies and implausibilities, the Government continues to rely on him as an eyewitness.”
She also noted that, although the witness had identified al-Rabiah as the man under discussion, from his kunya (nickname),
Abu Abdullah al-Kuwaiti, the government had conceded that another Abu Abdullah al-Kuwaiti, an actual al-Qaeda operative named
Hadi El-Enazi, was present in Tora Bora, and also noted that an interrogator had expressed doubt about the supposed eyewitness
at the time (much of the ruling is redacted, but this seemed to involve a claim that al-Rabiah’s oldest son was with
him in Afghanistan, when this was demonstrably not the case).
Judge Kollar-Kotelly also dismissed two other sets of allegations by the supposed eyewitness. Noting further “inconsistencies
and impossibilities” in his accounts, she stated that “the Court has little difficulty concluding that [his] allegations
are not credible,” and explained that, to reach this conclusion, she had also drawn on statements provided by al-Rabiah’s
lawyers, which further undermined his reliability, “based on, among other things, undisputed inconsistencies associated
with his allegations against other detainees,” and his medical records, which obviously indicated mental health problems
(although the description was redacted). “At a minimum,” she added, “the Government would have had to corroborate
[his] allegations with credible and reliable evidence, which it has not done.”
Osama bin Laden, it then transpired, appeared in allegations made by a second prisoner, who “alleged that al-Rabiah
attended a feast hosted by Osama bin Laden,” where he “presented bin Laden with a suitcase full of money.”
This source also alleged that al-Rabiah “served in various fighting capacities in the Tora Bora mountains,” and
that he “funneled money to mujahadeen in Bosnia in 1995.”
After noting that the government had dropped “almost all” of these allegations, except for the one relating
to Bosnia, Judge Kollar-Kotelly stated, witheringly, “the only consistency with respect to [these] allegations is that
they repeatedly change over time.” For particular condemnation, she singled out one claim that the feast had taken place
in August 2001 (when al-Rabiah was in Kuwait, before his return to Afghanistan in October 2001), amongst other more outlandish
claims, including an absurd allegation that al-Rabiah had trained the 9/11 hijackers.
As with the first supposed eyewitness, Judge Kollar-Kotelly noted that there were “multiple exhibits in the record
demonstrating [his] unreliability as a witness” (although, sadly, the exact number of prisoners against whom he had
made verifiably false allegations was redacted), and concluded that, although the many “inconsistencies and impossibilities”
in his statements “raise, at a minimum, a serious question about [his] mental capacity to accurately make allegations
against al-Rabiah,” the government “did not address them at the Merits Hearing” in August.
After dismissing a third supposed eyewitness, because he had withdrawn his allegation (which was redacted) several months
after making it, Judge Kollar-Kotelly dismissed a fourth, even though it was “undisputed” that al-Rabiah actually
had contact with him in Afghanistan. Despite redactions, it seems that this man was Maher al-Quwari, and that his statement
involved second-hand hearsay about al-Rabiah being seen with a gun. While this was sufficiently weak for the judge not to
accept it without further corroboration, she also made a point of discounting it because the supposed witness only “made
this allegation while he was undergoing a cell relocation program at Guantánamo called the ‘frequent flier program,’
which prevented a detainee such as [redacted] from resting due to frequent cell movements.”
While the description of a “cell relocation program” sounds relatively benign, Judge Kollar-Kotelly made a
point of noting that it was, in fact, a program of sleep deprivation, adding that, “According to a report published
by the Senate Armed Services Committee concerning the treatment of detainees in United States custody, sleep deprivation was
not a technique that was authorized by the Army Field Manual.” Although she also noted that “sleep deprivation
became authorized at Guantánamo by the Secretary of Defense on April 16, 2003, the guidance issued by the Commander of USSOUTHCOM
on June 2, 2003 prohibited the use of sleep deprivation for more than ‘four days in succession,’” whereas
the supposed witness’s “allegation against al-Rabiah was made after one week of sleep deprivation in the program,
and he did not repeat this allegation either before or after the program.”
False confessions obtained through torture
Despite ruling out all of the government’s supposed eyewitnesses, and noting that the government had withdrawn “most
of its reliance on these witnesses” by the time of the Merits Hearing, Judge Kollar-Kotelly added that “it is
very significant that al-Rabiah’s interrogators apparently believed these allegations at the time they were made, and
therefore sought to have al-Rabiah confess to them” — despite the well-chronicled unreliability of the first two
supposed witnesses, the withdrawing of the statement made by the third, and the fact, easily perceived by the judge, that
the fourth made his statement only after being subjected to sleep deprivation that exceeded established guidelines and that
was, therefore, not only unreliable, but also abusive.
The judge also noted the significance of the evidence in the record indicating that al-Rabiah “subsequently confided
in interrogators [redacted] that he was being pressured to falsely confess to the allegations discussed above,” and
also the significance of the fact that, although “al-Rabiah’s interrogators ultimately extracted confessions from
him,” they “never believed his confessions based on the comments they included in their interrogation reports.”
After noting — again with a palpable sense of incredulity — that “These are the confessions that the
Government now asks the Court to accept as evidence in this case,” Judge Kollar-Kotelly proceeded to demolish them all,
breaking them down into three periods: the first, when “there were no allegations directed toward al-Rabiah and al-Rabiah
provided no confessions”; the second, when the supposed eyewitnesses “made their now-discredited allegations and
al-Rabiah was told of the allegations against him, but al-Rabiah nevertheless made no confessions”; and the third (which,
shockingly, continued “until the present”), when “al-Rabiah confessed to the now-discredited allegations
against him, as well as to other ‘evidence’ that interrogators told him they possessed, when, in fact, such evidence
did not exist.”
In the first phase, Judge Kollar-Kotelly noted that there was no indication “that interrogators believed al-Rabiah
had engaged in any conduct that made him lawfully detainable,” and explained that, “To the contrary, the evidence
in the record during this period consists mainly of an assessment made by an intelligence analyst that al-Rabiah should not
have been detained.” As discussed in my previous article, this analyst was “a senior CIA intelligence analyst,
who, almost uniquely, was also an Arabic expert,” but although I wrote that “it amaze[d] me that no one in the
Justice Department, under President Obama, investigated the CIA analyst’s report,” the truth, as revealed in the
unclassified ruling, is even bleaker.
It transpires that Justice Department officials had read the report, but tried to discredit the analyst’s
verdict, “arguing that it represented the opinion of only one analyst,” ignoring his well-chronicled expertise,
and obliging the judge to point out that, “according to the Government’s own evidence, ‘[i]ntelligence analysts
undergo rigorous tradecraft training [and] employ specific analytical tools to assist them in sorting and organizing various
pieces of information,” and are also “trained to recognize and mitigate biases, not only in the information presented
to them, but their own cognitive biases as well.”
In the second phase, despite extensive redactions to the ruling, it is clear that al-Rabiah was repeatedly interrogated,
although he “express[ed] frustration to FBI agents that he was repeatedly asked, among other questions, whether he had
ever seen Osama bin Laden, and remark[ed] that his answer was ‘no’ and would continue to remain ‘no.’”
What happened next, in a “new three-pronged approach,” is unknown, as the details are severely redacted, but it
“did not result in any confessions. Al-Rabiah repeatedly denied the allegations against him.”
After this, apparently following some kind of advice given to the lead interrogator (by an unknown party whose identity
and suggestions were redacted), the interrogators “began using more aggressive interrogation tactics.” Again,
the details are redacted, but enough information is available from passages that were not redacted earlier in the ruling to
indicate that these “tactics” included sleep deprivation (the “frequent flier program”), which, as
I explained in my previous article, led three British men released in March 2004 — the so-called “Tipton Three,”
whose story was dramatized in the film “The Road To Guantánamo” — to explain that al-Rabiah was moved every two hours, over an unspecified period of time (but one that clearly
exceeded the four-day recommendation by a substantial margin), leaving him “suffering from serious depression, losing
weight in a substantial way, and very stressed because of the constant moves, deprived of sleep and seriously worried about
the consequences for his children.”
Possibly in reference to the use of sleep deprivation (although it could also have been another “enhanced interrogation
technique”), Judge Kollar-Kotelly explained that, “Once it became authorized, it could not be used on a detainee
until ‘the SOUTHCOM Commander ma[de] a determination of “military necessity” and notif[ied] the Secretary
[of Defense] in advance’ of its use,” and also made a point of noting that “the Government was unable to
produce any evidence that [the interrogator] obtained authorization to use the [redacted] technique with al-Rabiah despite
requests by the Court at the Merits Hearing for such evidence.”
Although the other techniques are not described, they undoubtedly included some or all of the following — prolonged
isolation, the use of extreme heat and cold, short-shackling in painful stress positions, forced nudity, forced grooming,
religious and sexual humiliation, and the use of loud music and noise — because this whole package of techniques, including
sleep deprivation, was approved for use at the highest levels of the Bush administration, as a Senate Committee explained
in the detailed report in April this year that was cited by the judge (PDF). The program was based on reverse engineering techniques taught in US military schools (the SERE program — Survival,
Evasion, Resistance, Escape) to train recruits to resist interrogation if captured by enemy forces.
These techniques were acknowledged to be illegal and, moreover, were intended to produce false confessions, but this did
not prevent senior Bush officials from pushing for their implementation, and, in al-Rabiah’s case, they duly led to
his conversion from an innocent man who refused to falsely confess to allegations produced by unreliable witnesses into a
modern-day version of the victims of the Spanish Inquisition, the seventeenth century “witches” of Salem and elsewhere,
the victims of Stalin’s show trials, or the captured US pilots on whom the North Koreans had practiced the techniques
adopted by the SERE schools: a broken man prepared not only to falsely confess to any lies put before him, but also prepared
to learn these confessions and repeat them as his masters saw fit.
As the ruling makes clear, between redactions, “The following day marked a turning point in al-Rabiah’s interrogations,”
and “From that point forward, al-Rabiah confessed to the allegations that interrogators described to him.” Despite
the extensive redactions, the following passage from the ruling makes clear the full horror of his confessions:
Al-Rabiah’s confessions all follow the same pattern: Interrogators first explain to al-Rabiah the “evidence”
they have in their possession (and that, at the time, they likely believed to be true). Al-Rabiah then requests time to pray
(or to think more about the evidence) before making a “full” confession. Finally, after a period of time, al-Rabiah
provides a fill confession to the evidence through elaborate and incredible explanations that the interrogators themselves
do not believe. This pattern began with his confession that he met with Osama bin Laden, continued with his confession that
he undertook a leadership role in Tora Bora, and repeated itself multiple other times with respect to “evidence”
that the Government has not even attempted to rely on as reliable or credible.
In the following pages of the ruling, which are again fill of redactions, it is nevertheless possible to glimpse the progress
of this game that was not only grim and cynical, but also potentially deadly (because, as a prisoner put forward for a trial by Military Commission, it was always possible that the government would have pressed for the death sentence had al-Rabiah been convicted).
For page after page the distressing truth peeks out: al-Rabiah “did not know what to admit” when his interrogators
explained that his “full confession did not incorporate a description concerning a suitcase full of money that he allegedly
gave bin Laden”; they “began to question the truthfulness of his confessions almost immediately”; they “began
‘grilling’ al-Rabiah concerning [redacted]”; al-Rabiah “was interrogated [redacted] during which he
made a full confession regarding his activities at Tora Bora”; interrogators “pressed for additional details concerning
Tora Bora”; they “became increasingly convinced that his confessions [redacted]”; they “concluded
in one interrogation report [redacted]”; “One week later, his interrogator concluded [redacted]”; “After
several additional interrogation sessions, al-Rabiah’s interrogators concluded simply [redacted].”
Readers can fill in the gaps through the judge’s response to the redacted passages. “Incredibly,” she
wrote, “these are the confessions that the Government has asked the Court to accept as truthful in this case.”
Al-Rabiah explains his cooperation with the interrogators; threats and punishment described
Judge Kollar-Kotelly then dismissed further allegations, which again, were mostly redacted but included the following ironic
gem: “The Government has not even attempted to explain how someone with no known connection to al-Wafa [a Saudi charity
regarded, during Guantánamo’s “witch-hunt” phase, with particular suspicion] and who had never even been to Afghanistan longer than a few weeks could ascend to such an honored position, and no credible
explanation is contained in the record.”
She then moved on to al-Rabiah’s own explanations of how he came to make false confessions, noting that he had stated
that, shortly after his arrival at Guantánamo, “a senior [redacted] interrogator came to me and said, ‘There is
nothing against you. But there is no innocent person here. So, you should confess to something so you can be charged and sentenced
and serve your sentence and then go back to your family and country, because you will not leave this place innocent.”
This is deeply disturbing, of course, as it indicates that at least one senior interrogator recognized that the Bush administration’s
refusal to recognize that there were innocent men at Guantánamo — and it has been clear for many years that hundreds of innocent men were held, who had no connection whatsoever to any form of militancy, let alone terrorism — had set in motion a system in which,
whether voluntarily or not, all the innocent men at Guantánamo were expected to make false confessions, either so that they
could continue to be labeled as “enemy combatants” on release, to maintain the illusion that Guantánamo was full
of “the worst of the worst,” or, as in al-Rabiah’s case, so that they could be tricked and transformed into
terrorist sympathizers and facilitators.
For some (and it has been confirmed by a former interrogator that at least 100 prisoners in Guantánamo were subjected to SERE-derived “enhanced interrogation”), confessions clearly came easily, and without the use
of abuse or torture, but for others, including al-Rabiah, “pressure” was involved. Judge Kollar-Kotelly drew on
a declaration from March this year, in which he explained that his confessions arose out of “scenarios offered …
by [his] interrogators … which [he] believed to be the story they wanted [him] to tell and which [he] felt pressured
to adopt” (emphasis added). As he also explained:
[M]y interrogators told me they knew I had met with Osama bin Laden, that other detainees had said I met with Osama bin
Laden, that there was nothing wrong with simply meeting Osama bin Laden, and that I should admit meeting him so I could be
sent home … In about August 2004, shortly before my CSRT hearing [the tribunal at which al-Rabiah repeated his approved
confessions in detail], my interrogators told me the CSRT was just a show that would allow the United States to “save
face.” My interrogators told me no one leaves Guantánamo innocent, and told me I would be sent home to Kuwait if I “admitted”
some of the false things I had said in my interrogations. The interrogators also told me that I would never go home again
if I denied these things, because the United States government would never admit I had been wrongly held.
In a key passage, he spelled out what being “pressured” meant. As the judge explained, he stated that “he
made his confessions to reduce the abuse meted out by his interrogators ‘to obtain confessions that suited what [they]
thought they knew or what they wanted [him] to say.’ He maintained his confessions over time because ‘the interrogators
would continue to abuse me anytime I attempted to repudiate any of these false allegations.’” As she also noted:
There is substantial evidence in the record supporting al-Rabiah’s claims. The record is replete with examples of
al-Rabiah’s interrogators emphasizing a stark dichotomy — if he confessed to the allegations against him, his
case would be turned over to [redacted] so that he could return to Kuwait; if he did not confess, he would not return to Kuwait,
and his life would become increasingly miserable.
Through the veil of redactions, it is clear that al-Rabiah attempted, on more than one occasion, to withdraw his confessions,
but that his interrogators threatened to withdraw something (food? comfort items?) as a result, and Judge Kollar-Kotelly also
noted that punishment, as well as the threat of punishment, was meted out to him. “The record,” she wrote, “also
supports al-Rabiah’s claims that he was punished for recanting.” Examples provided by the judge were redacted,
but the following passage, in which she discussed further abuse as a result of the interrogators’ frustrations regarding
al-Rabiah’s inability to invent a coherent false narrative, was not. She wrote:
The record contains evidence that al-Rabiah’s interrogators became increasingly frustrated because his confessions
contained numerous inconsistencies or implausibilities. As a result, al-Rabiah’s interrogators began using abusive techniques
that violated the Army Field Manual and the 1949 Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War. The first
of these techniques included threats of rendition to places where al-Rabiah would either be tortured and/or would never be
found.
These threats were made on at least four occasions, and, as the judge explained, “were also reinforced by placing
al-Rabiah into the frequent flier program,” discussed above. It is also apparent that the threats continued throughout
this period, as the judge also noted that “al-Rabiah’s interrogators continued to threaten him [redacted].”
After making a point that, as explained in the Army Field Manual, “prohibited techniques [are] not necessary to gain
the cooperation of interrogation sources,” and, in fact, that the use of these methods is likely to “yield unreliable
results, may damage subsequent collection efforts, and can induce the source to say what he thinks the interrogator wants
to hear,” Judge Kollar-Kotelly added that, “Underscoring the impropriety of these techniques is the fact
that [redacted], al-Rabiah’s lead interrogator, was disciplined for making similar threats during the same period toward
a Guantánamo detainee who was also one of the alleged eyewitnesses against al-Rabiah … for which he was disciplined”
(the details, predictably, were redacted).
Judge Kollar-Kotelly’s devastating conclusions
Judge Kollar-Kotelly added, pointedly, “These abusive techniques did not result in any additional confessions from
al-Rabiah, although he continued to parrot his previous confessions with varying degrees of consistency,” and then reached
her devastating conclusion:
The Court agrees with the assessment of al-Rabiah’s interrogators, as well as al-Rabiah’s counsel in this case,
that al-Rabiah’s confessions are not credible. Even beyond the countless inconsistencies associated with his confessions
that interrogators identified throughout his years of detention, the confessions are also entirely incredible. The evidence
in the record reflects that, in 2001, al-Rabiah was a 43 year old who was overweight, suffered from health problems, and had
no known history of terrorist activities or links to terrorist activities. He had no military experience except for two weeks
of compulsory basic training in Kuwait, after which he received a medical exemption. He had never traveled to Afghanistan
prior to 2001. Given these facts, it defied logic that in October 2001, after completing a two-week leave form at Kuwait Airlines
where he had worked for twenty years, al-Rabiah traveled to Tora Bora and began telling senior al-Qaeda leaders how they should
organize their supplies in a six square mile mountain complex that he had never previously seen and that was occupied by people
whom he had never met, while at the same time acting as a supply logistician and mediator of disputes that arose among various
fighting factions.
It remained only for Judge Kollar-Kotelly to replay some of the more obvious discrepancies in al-Rabiah’s “confessions”
to demolish the government’s claims that they should be accepted as “reliable and credible,” and to refute
the government’s argument that, “even if al-Rabiah’s confessions in 2003 were the product of abuse or coercion
… the taint … would have dissipated” by the time of his CSRT in 2004, when he provided the painstakingly
detailed and superficially plausible false confession that was the only publicly available account of his activities until
Judge Kollar-Kotelly’s ruling was released.
Taking exception to the government’s argument “for both factual and legal reasons,” the judge took particular
note of the role played by al-Rabiah’s lead interrogator, “who extracted al-Rabiah’s confessions and punished
his recantations,” noting that he “continued to make ‘appearances’ at al-Rabiah’s interrogations
at least as late as [redacted] — after al-Rabiah’s testimony in his CSRT proceedings.” She also explained,
“Such ‘appearances’ appear to have been terrifying events for al-Rabiah given the description included in
a [redacted] interrogation report” (the details of which were, again, redacted).
On a legal basis, she dismissed the government’s argument by explaining that, although “it is certainly true
in the criminal context that coerced confessions do not necessarily render subsequent confessions inadmissible because the
coercion can be found to have dissipated,” there needs to be evidence of “a ‘clean break’ between
the coercion and the later confessions,” which is simply not available in al-Rabiah’s case. “If anything,”
she concluded, “the evidence suggests that there was not a ‘clean break’ between the coercion and his later
statements because there is evidence that [redacted] continued to appear at al-Rabiah’s interrogation sessions through
at least September 2004” (the date redacted in the paragraph above).
As a final stab at the government, she mentioned a statement made by al-Rabiah in May 2005, and submitted to his first
annual Administrative Review Board (the military panels that reviewed the bases for prisoners’ ongoing detention), which
had not surfaced until the Merits Hearing, in which al-Rabiah attempted to set the record straight, “recant[ing] all
of his previous confessions with the sole exception of one admission that he saw [but did not meet] Osama bin Laden
during his July 2001 trip to Afghanistan.”
After dealing with a few more ingenious but flawed claims by the government, it remained only for Judge Kollar-Kotelly
to recap the whole sorry saga, and to deliver the final words to restore Fouad al-Rabiah’s liberty:
During the merits Hearing, the Government expressly relied on “Occam’s Razor,” a scientific and philosophic
rule suggesting that the simplest of competing explanations is preferred to the more complex … The Government’s
simple explanation for the evidence in this case is that al-Rabiah made confessions that the Court should accept as true.
The simple response is that the Court does not accept confessions that even the Government’s own interrogators did not
believe. The writ of habeas corpus shall issue.
Final words
Judge Kollar-Kotelly’s ruling will, hopefully, be recalled in years to come as one of the most significant examples
of a judge attempting to redress some of the most egregious injustices perpetrated in Guantánamo’s long, dark history.
The shocking sub-text to this story is that al-Rabiah is not the only prisoner to have been brutalized into making false confessions,
and then being required to repeat them. Ahmed al-Darbi, a Saudi put forward for a trial by Military Commission, made similar claims in a statement posted here, and, as I mentioned above, it is also clear that SERE-derived “enhanced interrogation techniques” were applied
to at least 100 prisoners in Guantánamo between 2002 and 2004, above and beyond those like Mohammed al-Qahtani and Mohamedou Ould Slahi, whose stories are well-known. Many of these men — all the Europeans, other Arabs who had the misfortune to speak good
English or to have visited the United States — have been released, their false confessions (like those made by the “Tipton
Three” after months of abuse, before their lawyers proved one of them was working in a shop in England when he was supposedly
videotaped at a training camp) filed away, used to justify their lifelong label as “enemy combatants,” but not
leading, as with Fouad al-Rabiah, to a court appearance where the supposed evidence will ever be tested.
Al-Rabiah was fortunate to meet a judge with an inquiring and diligent mind, and an acute awareness of the many problems
with the gathering and interpretation of information at Guantánamo, but others have not yet had an opportunity to do the same,
and although further habeas petitions are forthcoming, and others are scheduled to face either trials by Military Commission
or federal court trials, where similar patterns of false allegations followed by torture and false confessions may be detected,
it troubles me that the 50 or so prisoners identified by officials last week as being candidates for indefinite detention — described by the New York Times as those who “are a continuing danger to national security but who cannot be brought to trial for various reasons,
like evidence tainted by harsh interrogations” — may also have been caught up in a cynical cycle of false allegations,
torture and false confessions.
As David Cynamon, one of Fouad al-Rabiah’s attorneys, explained to me in an email exchange:
To date, the debate about torture in the US has been skewed by the fact that the admitted victims of torture are also admitted
al-Qaeda leaders, like Khalid Sheikh Mohammed. This gives the Cheneys and Wall Street Journal types the argument that torture was justified to get valuable information
from these hardened terrorists. I know this argument is wrong, but it’s being made, with some effect. But what happens
when you declare the Geneva Conventions “quaint,” and lift all limits, is that pretty quickly the abusive interrogation techniques are not being limited to the KSMs but are
being applied to innocent prisoners like Fouad al-Rabiah, who have no valuable intelligence because they have no connection
with al-Qaeda or the Taliban. Instead, they are tortured in support of a cynical and misguided dictum that there can be no
innocent men in Guantánamo.
It is hard to believe that the US could ever have sunk so low. And that the new Administration is keeping us down there.
The Obama Department of Justice, with Attorney General Holder piously proclaiming that this Administration repudiates torture,
and follows the rule of law, in fact is following the Bush playbook to the letter. In this case, the DoJ defended the abusive
and coercive interrogation techniques used against Fouad. Thank God, though, that we have an independent judiciary. The importance
of the writ of habeas corpus and independent judges has never been more clear.
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico -
A Yemeni detainee at Guantanamo Bay has died of an "apparent suicide," U.S. military officials said.
The Joint Task Force that
runs the U.S. prison in Cuba said guards found 31-year-old Muhammad Ahmad Abdallah Salih unresponsive and not breathing in
his cell Monday night.
In a Tuesday statement,
the military said the detainee was pronounced dead by a doctor after "extensive lifesaving measures had been exhausted."
The Yemeni prisoner, known as Al-Hanashi has been held without
charge at Guantanamo since February 2002. Military records show he was about 31. His is the fourth apparent suicide at Guantanamo.
The U.S. military says the
remains will be autopsied by a pathologist from the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology.
5.25.09
Global Insight: Obama’s Guantánamo dilemma
By Edward Luce
Published: May 25 2009 18:04 | Last updated: May 25 2009 18:04
By giving his most detailed speech so far on terrorist detainees on Thursday, Barack Obama was hoping
to persuade others to drop the subject.
Unfortunately for Mr Obama, who wants to direct the conversation to more forward-looking topics, such
as healthcare reform and a possible Arab-Israeli peace process, the turmoil surrounding treatment of alleged terrorists is
likely to persist.
That is partly because he has adopted a messy position himself. On the one hand Mr Obama has said he
will close the Guantánamo detention centre by next January. On the other, his administration continues to use George W. Bush’s
definition of the “war on terror” to detain the most dangerous ones indefinitely – just not on Cuban soil,
or American, if Congress continues to get its way.
Mr Obama is unlikely to get much help from his Democratic colleagues. From the left, he faces a growing
cry of betrayal. His decision to “look forward, not back” means that the Bush lawyers who drafted the memos reclassifying
torture as legal are unlikely to be prosecuted.
Nor does Mr Obama want to set up a “truth commission” to investigate post 9/11 torture.
Such a move might put the politics on ice for a few months. Then it would return squared. Mr Obama would be faced with a dilemma:
choose again to “look forward” and be branded a traitor to the high ideals on which he campaigned; or prosecute
those found culpable and risk igniting a real backlash against his presidency.
It is worth remembering that half the American people believe “waterboarding” is justified,
according to polls – a far higher number than those who do not. A small majority also believe it is wrong to close Guantánamo.
These are not diehard conservatives. Many are Democrats.
Unsurprisingly, therefore, Mr Obama is getting little help from centrist colleagues. Last week, almost
all Democrats joined their Republican counterparts in the Senate to vote down an $80m (€57m, £50m) appropriation to
pay for the closure of Gitmo. They argued that it was wrong to close the facility before a policy had been devised to rehouse
its 240 detainees.
This is understandable. Mr Obama made an error in announcing the closure before he had devised a new
policy. But their real motive was more prosaic. Democrats don’t want alleged terrorists to set foot on American soil.
And they will not permit reason to get in the way of a good argument.
No prisoner has ever escaped a federal “supermax” prison. Even if it were a possibility,
it would surely be less frightening to have a terrorist suspect escape into your community than a convicted paedophile or
psychopath. The latter two would know how to blend in. More importantly, America will have little chance of persuading other
countries to take some of the Gitmo detainees if it refuses to take any itself.
All of which makes Dick Cheney’s increasingly bitter interventions fairly useful for Mr Obama.
Leaving aside the suspicion that his real target is Mr Bush, who put an end to most “enhanced interrogation techniques”
in 2004, Mr Cheney’s stridency has served to blunt much of the disillusion felt by Mr Obama’s liberal friends.
It also focuses attention on the fact that the shrinking Republican party is letting Mr Cheney stand
in as its leader. Since Mr Cheney has had much to do with why it is shrinking, this can hardly be a bad thing for Mr Obama.
Mr Cheney has asked for information about the results of the interrogations to be declassified. Mr Obama should comply.
That way we could establish the accuracy of allegations, by two intelligence officers, that Mr Cheney
and others pushed for the waterboarding of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed and Abu Zubaydah in the forlorn hope of turning up evidence
linking al-Qaeda to Saddam Hussein.
The timing fits the build-up to the Iraq war. The first was waterboarded 183 times in March 2003. The
second 83 times in August 2002.
“They were legal, justified, essential and entirely the right thing to do,” Mr Cheney said.
Mr Obama should let the facts speak for themselves. Did these two waterboardees tell interrogators
what they wanted to hear? And what was that precisely? If Mr Obama cannot change the conversation, then he should send it
back to where it belongs.
Obama Pushes To
Close
Guantanamo
Bay Prison
And Ending Bush
"Season Of Fear"
May
22 2009 Obama / GITMO
Calling
the last 8 years a "season of fear", President Obama continued to push ahead with his plans to shut down GuantanamoBay prison which has been holding hundreds of terror suspects without
trial for many years.
The
President made his speech in a building that houses copies of the constitution and the bill of rights. The President referenced
those documents in his speech saying "We can not keep this country safe unless we enlist our most fundamental values"
Here is a recap of our (THEUPTAKE.org) twitter feed on the speech:
"Our
values have been our best national security asset". Enemies surrender to us in battles because they know they will treated
well
"We
have been the nation that shuts down torture chambers" Our govt. made some hasty decisions based on fear rather than foresight.
Trimmed facts- set aside principles as "luxuries"
Obama: "Ad hoc" ways to fight terrorism was neither
legal or effective. Obama: I banned the use of "enhanced techniques" of interrogation. - Not effective! (HUGE APPLAUSE)
Obama: Waterboarding undermines the rule of law and
increases the will of our enemies to fight us, risks the lives of our troops.
Obama: Waterboarding did not advance our war against
terrorism, it undermined it.
Obama: on closing Gitmo: we had a total of 3 convictions
of terrorist in 7 years. Meanwhile 500+ detainees were released by Bush.
Obama: Gitmo forced us to defend positions that undermined
the rule of law.
Obama: Gitmo likely created more terrorists than
it every contained. Cost of keeping it open are more than closing it.
Obama: Gitmo is a "misguided experiment" , a "mess"
the Obama admin has to clean up.
Obama: we are not going to release anyone from Gitmo
if it endangers our security.
Obama: whenever possible we will try terrorists in
our federal courts. Obama: Terrorists have been tried and convicted in our federal courts. Detainees from Gitmo will face
the same.
Obama: Detainees that violate the rules of war will
be tried by military commissions. This is the appropriate venue
Obama: This is not a reversal on my part. I've said
I support military commissions with reforms. those are the reforms we are now making.
Obama: 21 Gitmo detainees ordered released by the
courts. We will abide by those rulings.
Obama: We have approved transfer of 50 Gitmo detainees
to their native country for detention.
Obama: Those remaining Gitmo detainees who are dangerous
to our country and can't be prosecuted, they will not be released.
Obama: However, any prolong detention of Gitmo prisoners
must be justified and legal. Should not be decision of any one man.
Obama: "You can imagine the direct mail pieces" from
a cong. vote on closing Gitmo. Doing what is right more important than posturing
Obama: Democracy depends on transparency. Some information
must be shielded to protect our troops and National Security.
Obama: We seek the to do what's right over the long
term, not what's politically expedient.
Obama: Not going to refight the last 8 years. Let's
focus on the future. Media enables the finger pointing blame game.
Obama: "if we can not stand with our core values,
then we are not keeping faith with the documents (constitution) enshrined in this hall"
WASHINGTON, April 19 2009 (Reuters) - CIA interrogators used the waterboarding technique on Khalid Sheik Mohammed,
the admitted planner of the Sept. 11 attacks, 183 times and 83 times on another al Qaeda suspect, The New York Times said
on Sunday.
The Times said a 2005 Justice Department memorandum showed that Abu Zubaydah, the first prisoner questioned
in the CIA's overseas detention program in August 2002, was waterboarded 83 times, although a former CIA officer had told
news media he had been subjected to only 35 seconds underwater before talking.
President Barack Obama has banned the
use of waterboarding, overturning a Bush administration policy that it did not constitute torture.
The Justice Department
memo said the simulated drowning technique was used on Mohammed 183 times in March 2003. The Times said some copies of the
memos appeared to have the number of waterboardings redacted while others did not.
The Senate Intelligence Committee
is investigating the CIA interrogation program, which under President George W. Bush also included slamming prisoners into
walls, shackling them in uncomfortable positions and depriving them of sleep.
Bush administration officials had claimed
such methods were needed to get information but the repeated use of the waterboard on Zubaydah and Mohammed were sure to raise
questions about its effectiveness. (Writing by Bill Trott; editing by Chris Wilson)
This copy is for your personal, noncommercial use only. You can order presentation-ready copies for distribution
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LONDON — A high-level Spanish court has taken the first steps toward opening a criminal investigation against six
former Bush administration officials, including former Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, on whether they violated international law by providing a legalistic framework to justify the use of torture of prisoners at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, an official close to the case said.
The case was sent to the prosecutor’s office for review by Baltasar Garzón, the crusading investigative judge who ordered the arrest of the former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet. The official said that it was “highly probable” that the case would go forward and that it could lead to arrest
warrants.
The move represents a step toward ascertaining the legal accountability of top Bush administration officials for allegations
of torture and mistreatment of prisoners in the campaign against terrorism. But some American experts said that even if warrants
were issued their significance could be more symbolic than practical, and that it was a near certainty that the warrants would
not lead to arrests if the officials did not leave the United States.
The complaint under review also names John C. Yoo, the former Justice Department lawyer who wrote secret legal opinions saying the president had the authority to circumvent
the Geneva Conventions, and Douglas J. Feith, the former under secretary of defense for policy.
The move was not entirely unexpected, as several human rights groups have been asking judges in different countries to
indict Bush administration officials. One group, the Center for Constitutional Rights, had asked a German prosecutor for such
an indictment, but the prosecutor declined.
Judge Garzón, however, has built an international reputation by bringing high-profile cases against human rights violators
as well as international terrorist networks like Al Qaeda. The arrest warrant for General Pinochet led to his detention in Britain, although he never faced a trial. The judge has
also been outspoken about the treatment of detainees at Guantánamo Bay.
Spain can claim jurisdiction in the case because five citizens or residents of Spain who were prisoners at Guantánamo Bay
have said they were tortured there. The five had been indicted in Spain but their cases were dismissed after the Spanish Supreme
Court ruled that evidence obtained under torture was not admissible.
The 98-page complaint, a copy of which was obtained by The New York Times, is based on the Geneva Conventions and the 1984
Convention Against Torture, which is binding on 145 countries, including Spain and the United States. Countries that are party
to the torture convention have the authority to investigate torture cases, especially when a citizen has been abused.
The complaint was prepared by Spanish lawyers, who also relied on legal experts in the United States and Europe, and filed
by a Spanish human rights group, the Association for the Dignity of Prisoners.
The National Court in Madrid, which specializes in international crimes, assigned the case to Judge Garzón. His acceptance
of the case and referral of it to the prosecutor made it likely that a criminal investigation would follow, the official said.
Even so, arrest warrants, if they are issued, could still be months away.
Gonzalo Boye, the Madrid lawyer who filed the complaint, said that the six Americans cited had had well-documented roles
in approving illegal interrogation techniques, redefining torture and abandoning the definition set by the 1984 Torture Convention.
Secret memorandums by Mr. Yoo and other top administration lawyers helped clear the way for aggressive policies like waterboarding and other harsh interrogation techniques, which the C.I.A. director, the attorney general and other American officials have said amount to torture.
The other Americans named in the complaint were William J. Haynes II, former general counsel for the Department of Defense;
Jay S. Bybee, Mr. Yoo’s former boss at the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel; and David S. Addington, who was the chief of staff and legal adviser to Vice President Dick Cheney.
Mr. Yoo declined to comment on Saturday, saying that he had not seen or heard of the petition.
Mr. Feith, who was the top policy official at the Pentagon when the prison at Guantánamo was established, said he did not
make the decision on interrogation methods and was baffled by the allegations. “I didn’t even argue for the thing
I understand they’re objecting to,” he said.
The other former officials either could not be reached Saturday or did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Their defenders have said their legal analyses and policy-making on interrogation practices, conducted under great pressure
after the 2001 terrorist attacks, are now being unfairly second-guessed after many years without a terrorist attack on the
United States.
But Mr. Boye said that lawyers should be held accountable for the effects of their work. Noting that the association he
represents includes many lawyers, he said: “This is a case from lawyers against lawyers. Our profession does not allow
us to misuse our legal knowledge to create a pseudo-legal frame to justify, stimulate and cover up torture.”
He said that Spanish citizens were tortured and that Spain, as a signatory of the Torture Convention, was obliged to pursue
such a case.
Prosecutions and convictions under the Torture Convention have been rare.
Reed Brody, a lawyer at Human Rights Watch who has specialized in this issue, said that even though torture was widely practiced, there were numerous obstacles, including
“a lack of political will, the problem of gathering evidence in a foreign country and the failure of countries to pass
the necessary laws.”
This year for the first time, the United States used a law that allows for the prosecution in the United States of torture
in other countries. On Jan. 10, a Miami court sentenced Chuckie Taylor, the son of the former Liberian president, to 97 years
in a federal prison for torture, even though the crimes were committed in Liberia.
Last October, when the Miami court handed down the conviction, Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey applauded the ruling and said: “This is the first case in the United States to charge an individual with criminal torture.
I hope this case will serve as a model to future prosecutions of this type.”
The United States, however, would be expected to ignore an extradition request for former officials, although other investigations
within the United States have been proposed. Calls for the Justice Department to open a criminal investigation have so far
been resisted by the Obama administration, but for more than four years, the Justice Department ethics office has been conducting
its own investigation into the work of Mr. Yoo and some of his colleagues.
While the officials named in the complaint have not addressed these specific accusations, Mr. Yoo defended his work in
an opinion column in The Wall Street Journal on March 7, warning that the Obama administration risked harming national security
if it punished lawyers like himself.
“If the administration chooses to seriously pursue those officials who were charged with preparing for the unthinkable,
today’s intelligence and military officials will no doubt hesitate to fully prepare for those contingencies in the future,”
Mr. Yoo wrote.
Scott Shane and Eric Schmitt contributed reporting from Washington.
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration said Friday that it is abandoning one of President George W. Bush's key
phrases in the war on terrorism: enemy combatant The Justice Department said in legal filings that it will no longer use the term to
justify holding prisoners at Guantanamo Bay.
But
that's won't change much for the detainees at the U.S. naval base in Cuba
_ Obama still asserts the military's authority to hold them. But his Justice Department says that authority comes from Congress
and the international laws of war, not from the president's own wartime power as Bush had argued.
In
another court filing Thursday, the Obama administration tried to protect top Bush administration military officials from lawsuits
brought by prisoners who say they were tortured while being held at GuantanamoBay.
The
Obama administration's position on use of the phrase "enemy combatants" came in response to a deadline by U.S. District Judge
John Bates, who is overseeing lawsuits of detainees challenging their detention. Bates asked the administration to give its
definition of whom the United States may
hold as an "enemy combatant."
The
filing back's Bush's stance on the authority to hold detainees, even if they were not captured on the battlefield in the course
of hostilities. In their lawsuits, detainees have argued that only those who directly participated in hostilities should be
held.
"The
argument should be rejected," the Justice Department said in its filing. "Law-of-war principles do not limit the United States' detention authority to this limited category
of individuals. A contrary conclusion would improperly reward an enemy that violates the laws of war by operating as a loose
network and camouflaging its forces as civilians."
Retired
Army Lt. Col. Stephen Abraham, a former Guantanamo official
who has since become critical of the legal process, said it's a change in nothing but semantics.
"There's
absolutely no change in the definition," Abraham said in a telephone interview. "To say this is a kinder more benevolent sense
of justice is absolutely false. ... I think the only thing they've done is try to separate themselves from the energy of the
debate" by eliminating Bush's phrasing.
Attorney General Eric
Holder also submitted a declaration to the court outlining President
Barack Obama's efforts to close the GuantanamoBay detention facility within a year and determine where to place the 240 people held
there. He said there could be "further refinements" to the administration's position as that process goes on.
"Promptly
determining the appropriate disposition of those detained at GuantanamoBay is a high priority for the president," Holder wrote.
The
Justice Department says prisoners can only be detained if their support for al-Qaida, the Taliban or "associated forces" was
"substantial." But it does not define the terms.
"The
particular facts and circumstances justifying detention will vary from case to case, and may require the identification and
analysis of various analogues from traditional international armed conflicts," the government lawyers wrote. "Accordingly,
the contours of the `substantial support' and `associated forces' bases of detention will need to be further developed in
their application to concrete facts in individual cases."
On
the topic of former administration officials, the Justice Department argued in a filing with the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia that holding military officials
liable for their treatment of prisoners could cause them to make future decisions based on fear of litigation rather than
appropriate military policy.
The
suit before the appeals court was brought by four British citizens _ Shafiq Rasul, Asif Iqbal, Rhuhel Ahmed and Jamal Al-Harith
_ who were sent back to Great Britain
in 2004. The defendants in the case include former Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and retired Gen. Richard Myers, former
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
The
men say they were beaten, shackled in painful stress positions and threatened by dogs during their time at the U.S. naval base in Cuba.
They also say they were harassed while practicing their religion, including forced shaving of their beards, banning or interrupting
their prayers, denying them copies of the Koran and prayer mats and throwing a copy of the Koran in a toilet.
They
contend in their lawsuit that the treatment violated the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which provides that the "government
shall not substantially burden a person's exercise of religion."
The
appeals court ruled against them early last year, saying because the men were foreigners held outside the United States, they do not fall within the definition of a
"person" protected by the act.
But
later in the year, the Supreme Court ruled that Guantanamo
detainees have some rights under the Constitution. So the Supreme Court instructed the appeals court to reconsider the lawsuit
in light of their decision.
Eric
Lewis, attorney for the four, said Friday that military officials should be subject to liability when they order torture.
"The
upshot of the Justice Department's position is that there is no right of detainees not to be tortured and that officials who
order torture should be protected," Lewis said.
Last
month in another court filing, the Justice Department sided with the Bush White House by arguing that detainees at Bagram
Airfield in Afghanistan have no constitutional
rights.
Federal authorities confirmed on 2 March that 92 videotapes showing the interrogation of detainees at secret prisons
were destroyed in 2005 by the CIA. Reporters Without Borders asks that the new Obama administration lead an investigation
into this infringement of the American people’s constitutional rights and punish those who are responsible.
“The sheer number of videotapes destroyed by the CIA confirms that the agency systematically tried to hide from the
public the illegal interrogation techniques used by the previous administration. The public has the right to know what the
government is doing and be confident that those in power are upholding the democratic values upon which this country is based,”
the worldwide press freedom organization said.
“We hope that the secrecy and lack of transparency that prevailed during the beginning of this decade will be replaced
with freer access to information and clear visibility of current governmental practices. The government must thoroughly investigate
this breach of access to information and hold accountable those responsible. American society cannot hold back as it investigates
these grave violations committed under the presidency of George W. Bush in the name of the ’war on terror.’ This
investigation into the former administration’s actions will be debated by the Senate Judiciary Committee on 4 March.
The credibility of the United States’ stance on human rights hangs in the balance over this,” added the organization.
A Pentagon report requested by President Obama on the conditions at the Guantánamo Bay detention center concludes that the prison complies with the humanitarian requirements of the Geneva
conventions, but it makes many recommendations for increasing human contact among the prisoners, according to two government
officials who have read portions of it.
The review, requested by President Obama on the second day of his administration, is due to be delivered
to the White House this weekend.
The request, made as part of a plan to close the center within a year, was widely seen as an effort
by the new administration to defuse the power of allegations during the Bush administration that there were widespread abuses
at Guantánamo, and that many detainees were suffering severe psychological effects after years of isolation.
The review, conducted by Adm. Patrick M. Walsh, the vice chief of naval operations, describes a series
of steps that could be taken to allow detainees to speak to one another more often and to engage in group activities, the
government officials said. For years, critics of the prison have said that many detainees spend as many as 23 hours a day
within the confines of cement cells and were only permitted recreation alone in fenced-off outdoor pens.
The report, which Admiral Walsh is scheduled to discuss publicly at the Pentagon next week, is being
presented to a White House that some government officials have described as caught off guard by the extreme emotions and political
cross-currents provoked by Guantánamo. Some critics said that the report’s conclusions are likely to intensify the debate
about the prison, and put the Obama White House for the first time in the position of defending it.
Included in the report are recommendations to increase social contact among the 16 prisoners described
by the Bush administration as “high value detainees,” the men once held in secret overseas prisons by the Central Intelligence Agency. Among them are the accused architects of many major terrorist attacks, including those of Sept. 11,
2001.
According to one official, the report notes that some detainees have great difficulty communicating
from cell to cell, a contention that many detainees’ lawyers have also made. Though many detainees at Guantánamo are
held in their cells alone, the Pentagon has long insisted that none of the men are held in solitary confinement. Military
officials instead have said the prisoners are held in “single-occupancy cells.”
A Pentagon official who has seen the report said that a military team with Admiral Walsh conducted
a detailed review of many specific allegations of abuse that critics have made about the prison, and that the team concluded
that the Pentagon was in compliance with the requirements of the Geneva conventions. The review included some of the most
contentious issues, including the forced feeding of hunger-striking detainees and claims that a large number of the prisoners
are suffering from psychosis as a result of conditions in the detention center.
The White House did not immediately respond on Friday to a request for comment.
It has been clear that some Pentagon officials have continued to press the case that the Bush administration’s
approach to handling detainee issues — and the Guantánamo Bay prison itself — should not be abandoned. The report
is likely to continue that behind-the-scenes struggle.
One Pentagon official, speaking anonymously because no one had been authorized to discuss the report
publicly, said it showed that the Bush administration created a humane detention camp that has been unfairly characterized
by critics. Speaking of the remaining 245 detainees there, this official said the report underscored that if the men are moved,
they may “go from a humane environment to a less humane environment.”
Critics of the Guantánamo Bay detention center, which is located on the grounds of an American naval
base at the eastern end of Cuba, have been preparing for Admiral Walsh’s report. They said they were concerned that
the new administration would use it to avoid major alterations to Guantánamo during the year President Obama has said it may
take to close the prison.
Gitanjali Gutierrez, a lawyer for Guantánamo detainees at the Center for Constitutional Rights, said
that she and other lawyers found that conditions have remained bleak there even after the start of the new administration.
Ms. Gutierrez said that a report by the rights center, to be released next week, concludes that two
major prison buildings at the detention camp, known as Camp 5 and Camp 6, should be closed immediately. She said prisoners
there continue to be held in what she called isolation for as long as 24 hours a day, that psychological difficulties are
treated as disciplinary infractions, and that many cells in the two concrete buildings are windowless.
Although reporters have been permitted on Pentagon-led tours of many part of the prison, the Pentagon
has barred interviews with detainees.
Ms. Gutierrez said detention camp officials have recently increased detainees’ opportunities
for recreation and social interaction. She said detainees’ lawyers have been concerned that some of those moves were
in anticipation of visits now being made by senior members of the new administration. The attorney general, Eric H. Holder Jr., is due to visit on Monday.
“This is really running the risk that the review is just a big whitewash,” Ms. Gutierrez
added, “and we expect more of the new administration.”
Pursuant to its mission, the UC Davis Center for the Study of Human Rights in the Americas (CSHRA)
launched, in Fall 2005, a long term research project to assess the effects of the U.S. war on terror on human rights in the
Americas.
Whether invoked as the rationale for the "extraordinary rendition" of Canadian citizen Maher Arar to Syria or as the basis for the suppression of indigenous movements in South America, the war on terror has had significant effects on human
rights in the Americas. But nowhere have these effects been greater than at the detention facilities of the U.S. naval base at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. Consequently, it seemed appropriate to begin our project by looking into the human rights situation
at these facilities.
We begin our endeavor with The Guantánamo Testimonials Project. The goals of this project are to gather testimonies
of prisoner abuse in Guantánamo, to organize them in meaningful ways, to make them widely available online, and to preserve
them there in perpetuity.
The strength of these testimonies is considerable.
Based on them, a number of distinguished individuals and organizations have called for the closure of Guantánamo.
Former Guantánamo prisoners including Moazzam Begg and Chris Arendt, a former guard, are completing a UK speaking tour to “mark seven years of unlawful detention, abuse and torture”. The tour, organised by Cage Prisoners started in London on 11th January 2009, exactly seven years after the first transfers to the prison torture camp at Guantánamo Bay at date which was marked in London by a weekend of actions and in the US by a National Day of Protest: Close Guantanamo and End U.S. Torture Policies Everywhere. Sami al-Haj, a former Guantánamo prisoner and Al Jazeera journalist was due to be one of the speakers on the UK tour
but instead he joined a Free Gaza boat which was fired on and didn’t make it. By the Sheffield meeting, held on the date of Obama’s inauguration, he had been replaced by Omar Deghayes another former Guantánamo prisoner. In Liverpool the meeting “was held on the same day as the US president signed an order to close Guantanamo. Moazzam Begg was not impressed, and commented that Barack Obama spoke about ‘outlawing torture’ as though he
himself had just decided to make it illegal: “It has ALWAYS been illegal, at least in any civilised country”"
Further reports can be found on the tour blog.
Hafizullah Shahbaz Khiel's son Attiqullah, age 10,
shows documents proclaiming his father's innocence
February 7 2009
_______________
_______________
_______________
Guantanamo prisoner
freed, arrested again
His story shows difficulties of
fighting terrorists, closing detention
center
Hafizullah Shahbaz Khiel's son Attiqullah, 10, shows
documents proclaiming his father's innocence at his uncle's house on the outskirts of Kabul, Afghanistan.
KABUL, Afghanistan - It was 2 a.m. when a rocket launcher sent a grenade slamming into the front gate of Hafizullah
Shahbaz Khiel's walled compound. Screeching children and women ran into a small underground room. American and Afghan soldiers
shouted: "Get over here, get over here. On the floor, heads down."
Hafizullah, a former Guantanamo prisoner, knew
not to resist. And so, his family says, he was wrongly taken into custody by the United States — for the second time.
Hafizullah's story shows just how difficult it is for the U.S.
to determine who is guilty and who is not in Afghanistan,
where corruption rules and grudges are held for years, if not decades. It is a conundrum that the U.S.
faces as it prepares to close Guantanamo and empty it of the
245 prisoners still there.
The
first time Hafizullah was seized, in 2002, he spent five years at Guantanamo.
In legal documents, the U.S. cites a source
saying he helped al-Qaida and planned to kill a government official. But Hafizullah says he was turned in by a corrupt police
chief as revenge, and the Afghan government cleared him of all charges in December 2007.
Less than a year later, in September, the U.S.
raided his home. This time he was accused of treating sick Taliban as a pharmacist. Afghan officials have signed documents
attesting to his innocence, but he is still in custody at Bagram Air Base, along with about 600 other prisoners.
Some Afghans claim the U.S.
is far too quick to arrest people without understanding the complexities of the culture.
"We are fed up," says Ishaq Gailani, a member of President Hamid Karzai's government. "Bagram is full of these
people who are wrongly accused. They arrest everyone — a 15-year-old boy and a 61-year-old man. They arrest them because
they run away from their helicopters...I would run away too if I saw them. They don't know who is the terrorist and who is
not."
The Associated Press has pieced together Hafizullah's story from legal documents and interviews with a former
governor of Paktia province, family members, neighbors, a former mujahedeen leader and former cellmates at Guantanamo.
He
had been held by Taliban as well Hafizullah
was a village elder and a father of seven, from a family that goes back to generals and brigadiers in the army of Afghanistan's King Amanullah Khan at the turn of the 20th
century.
In 1998 he languished in a Taliban jail for several months, beaten and accused of
opposing the Taliban. Fearful of the religious militia, he relocated his pharmacy to his home. People in his rural district
of Zormat called him doctor and came to him for treatment.
In the heady days that followed the Taliban's collapse in December 2001, Hafizullah was appointed a sub-governor.
He was named to a provincewide shura, or council, designed to unite government supporters and neutralize the Taliban and hostile
warlords.
"I know Hafizullah very well. I appointed him to the shura," says Raz Mohammed Dilili, governor of eastern Paktia
province at the time. "He was respected by the people of his district of Zormat."
The council decided that anyone found opposing the government would have their homes burned down and would be
fined about $50,000. It also invited those who had been with the Taliban to come to the government or pay a fine of about
$20,000.
Hafizullah was tasked with keeping law and order in Zormat. That's where he ran afoul of Police Chief Abdullah
Mujahed.
Dilili, the governor, describes Abdullah as a scoundrel who would have his men fire rockets at U.S. forces, then blame his enemies and turn them over to
the Americans. Abdullah and Hafizullah already had a history of enmity after serving in different mujahedeen or warrior groups
in the 1980s.
In 2002, Hafizullah traced a robbery of nearly $3,000 to the police chief, Abdullah, and his men, according
to Dilili as well as family members. The cars involved in the robbery were parked in the police chief's compound, he found.
He confronted Abdullah.
The next day, U.S.
forces picked him up as a suspected Taliban.
Legal documents obtained by The Associated Press from the Department of Defense cite several accusations against
Hafizullah from an unnamed source — among others, that he led 12 Taliban and al-Qaida men and planned to attack the
Afghan government, and that he doubled the salary of anyone who killed an American. The documents further state that Hafizullah's
telephone number and name were associated with a Taliban cell, and that his brother had a car dealership in Zormat where he
kept weapons.
However, the same documents note that Hafizullah said he was a victim of revenge and did not know why he had
been arrested. Hafizullah also said he was not an al-Qaida member and in fact had helped the Americans in the past by giving
them information about al-Qaida.
For the next five years, he was known by his identification number: 1001.
At Guantanamo, in Block 4,
Hafizullah shared a cell with Hajji Ghalib for two years. The Associated Press found Ghalib, now released, to talk about Hafizullah.
He lives in Afghanistan's eastern Nangarhar
province.
"He never said anything bad about Karzai's government, but he was disappointed in them that they had supported
corrupt people," says Ghalib.
Ghalib says his experience with Afghanistan's
deeply corrupt police force is firsthand. After returning from Guantanamo,
he went to the interior ministry with a letter of introduction from his former mujahedeen leader. Ghalib says they were ready
to give him a job — for $600.
He didn't have the money, and is now unemployed.
Another former neighbor at Guantanamo with Hafizullah
was Mullah Abdul Salam Zaeef, the defiant Taliban ambassador after the attacks of Sept. 11.
"I didn't know him before Guantanamo. He was
never a member of the Taliban," Zaeef says of Hafizullah from his Kabul
home, at the end of a potholed street ankle-deep in mud and snow. "His beard was white, he was a very old man, he was very
disappointed from the government and from the Americans too. He said, 'I don't know why I am here. I have no reason to be
here. Someone was against me.'"
In a strange twist, Zaeef says he later saw Hafizullah's enemy — police chief Abdullah — in Guantanamo also. Abdullah was a member of the Northern
Alliance, a ragtag army of mujahedeen turned warlords who were installed in power after the Taliban fell. The
AP found him in Zormat, reluctant to talk.
Abdullah denied firing rockets on U.S.
bases, but refused to discuss Hafizullah's case. An ethnic Tajik from the predominantly Pashtun province
of Paktia, Abdullah told the AP he was a victim of tribal rivalries, turned over
to the U.S. forces by rivals. He spent
five years in Guantanamo.
Most detainees
turned over to U.S. It's typical for detainees to be turned in by
others rather than caught by police, according to a 2006 report from New Jersey's
Seton Hall University School of Law. The report found that only 5 percent of Guantanamo detainees
were captured by U.S. forces, while 86 percent were arrested by either
Pakistan or the Northern Alliance and handed to the U.S.
The U.S. military in Afghanistan refused to comment on either the first or the second detention.
"It has been a giant failure of intelligence. Most of the people the U.S.
had were turned in for bounties and personal grudges," said Tina Foster, a U.S.
lawyer representing several detainees both at Guantanamo and
at Bagram. "The U.S. doesn't know who to trust and who to believe in Afghanistan, how to get good information."
Like hundreds of other prisoners, Hafizullah was caught in a four-year legal quagmire over whether they had
the right to challenge the accusations that landed them in Guantanamo.
He was released in 2008, just six months before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of prisoners' rights. So his lawyers
never had the chance to take his case to court and clear his name.
Lawyer Peter Ryan with the Philadelphia law
firm Dechert LLP suspects that is why Hafizullah is now in Bagram.
"Hafizullah's was a ridiculously weak case," Ryan says. "But the taint of that initial detention at Guantanamo has never been resolved. And when they arrested him this
time, they must have found all his files and said, 'He must be a bad guy.'"
Upon Hafizullah's release in 2007, the Afghan government held him for three months and then
cleared him of all charges. But in the September raid, Hafizullah and 13 others were arrested, including his brothers
and three sons. The others were later released.
Hafizullah's U.S. lawyers
are now challenging his detention at Bagram. Family members fear a decades-old feud involving a distant cousin, Fazle Rabi,
may have been behind the nighttime raid on Hafizullah's home.
Zormat elders, leading clerics, the provincial governor, the National Reconciliation Bureau and two members
of Parliament have signed documents attesting to Hafizullah's innocence. Armed with the documents, Hafizullah's brothers and
young nephews are trying to get him released.
So far, they have had no luck, says Rafiullah Khiel, an English-speaking nephew who works in the finance ministry.
Defense Dept. Claims of Gitmo Prisoners Returning to Battlefield Debunked
By William Fisher
A prominent law professor is charging that the Defense Department is issuing questionable data
on the number of Guantanamo detainees who have been released "and then returned to the battlefield" because the government
"is now in a position where they have to find some bad guys -- even if they have to invent them by naming people who were
never there."
Their ultimate aim, Professor Mark Denbeaux of the Seton Hall University law school told us, "is
to foment fear among American voters and limit the freedom of the Obama Administration to release any of the detainees still
imprisoned."
Denbeaux heads the law school’s Center for Policy and Research. The Center has issued a report
which it says "rebuts and debunks" the most recent claim by the Department of Defense (DOD) that 61 "former Guantánamo detainees
are confirmed or suspected of returning to the fight."
The report is one of a series produced by the Center’s faculty and law students. Professor
Denbeaux says the Center has determined that "DOD has issued 'recidivism' numbers 43 times, and each time they have been wrong
--this last time the most egregiously so."
He told us, "Once again, they’ve failed to identify names, numbers,
dates, times, places, or acts upon which their report relies. Every time they have been required to identify the parties,
the DOD has been forced to retract their false IDs and their numbers. They have included people who have never even set foot
in Guantánamo—much less were they released from there."
He added, "They have counted people as 'returning
to the fight' for their having written an Op-ed piece in the New York Times and for their having appeared in a documentary
exhibited at the Cannes Film Festival. The DOD has revised and retracted their internally conflicting definitions, criteria,
and their numbers so often that they have ceased to have any meaning -- except as an effort to sway public opinion by painting
a false portrait of the supposed dangers of these men."
Denbeaux charged that the Defense Department has issued numbers
43 times, and said these numbers conflict with each other. He noted that the government’s numbers are "seriously undercut
by the DOD statement that 'they do not track' former detainees."
"Time and time again, the Department of Defense,
the Executive Branch, and other government officials have claimed publicly that Guantánamo Bay detainees who have been released
have "returned to the battlefield" where
they have then been re-captured or killed," Denbeaux declared.
The Seton Hall report attempts to correct what it characterizes as errors in the latest DOD
report, which was issued in mid-January. That report alleged that 61 detainees have returned to the battlefield. The
Seton Hall report notes that in each of its 43 attempts to provide the numbers of the recidivist detainees, the Department
of Defense has given different sets of numbers that are contradictory and internally inconsistent with the Department's own
data.
It says that DOD’s most recent press statement identifies no names, dates, places nor any conduct
by released detainees. "The raw numbers that are cited are unsupported, inconsistent with all other statements and appear
to be presented to support the internal Department of Defense purposes," the report says.
Previous DOD reports have said the numbers of recidivist detainees have been "one, several, some, a couple, a few,
5, 7, 10, 12, 15, 12-24, 25, 29, and 30," the Seton Hall group contends.
But it adds that 82% of DOD’s
publicly made claims "contain qualifying language," including terms such as: "at least"; "somewhere on the order of"; "approximately";
"around"; "just short of"; "we believe"; "estimated"; "roughly"; "more than"; "a couple"; "a few"; "some"; "several"; and
"about."
Department of Defense statements about the number of recidivist detainees which do not identify the
detainee, the act of recidivism, the place, or the time, are especially unreliable, Seton Hall’s report declares. It
claims that in the two instances in which DOD provided written support –July 12 2007 and May 20 2008, their previous
oral assertions were repudiated. For instance, the report says, in DOD’s July 12, 2007 press release, "the 30 recidivists
reported by DOD in April 2007 is reduced to five."
DOD’s report of July 2007 identified seven prisoners
by name, but the Seton Hall group says that "as many as two of those seven named were never in Guantanamo, and two of the
remaining five were never killed or captured anywhere. Of the three remaining, one was killed in his apartment in Russia by
Russian authorities. None of them is alleged to have left their homeland or attacked Americans on a battlefield or otherwise."
Meanwhile,
Newsweek magazine is reporting that The Pentagon "is preparing to declassify portions of a secret report on Guantanamo detainees
that could further complicate President Obama's plans to shut down the detention facility."
The publication says
that the report "will provide fresh details about 62 detainees who have been released from Guantanamo and are believed by
U.S. intelligence officials to have returned to terrorist activities."
One such example, involving a Saudi detainee
named Said Ali Al-Shihri, who was released in 2007, has already received widespread media attention when Pentagon officials
publicly asserted that he has recently reemerged as a deputy commander of Al Qaeda in Yemen, Newsweek reports.. Previously
known publicly as Guantanamo detainee No. 372, Al-Shihri is alleged to have been involved in an
unsuccessful attack on the U.S. embassy in Yemen last September.
Newsweek says,
"The decision to release additional case studies from the report is in effect a warning shot to the new president from officials
at the Pentagon and U.S. intelligence agencies who are skeptical about some of his plans. Some Pentagon officials, including
ones sympathetic to Obama's goals, note the political outcry would be deafening should another example like Al-Shihri become
public six months from now—and it turns out to be a Guantanamo detainee released under Obama's watch rather than by
the Bush administration."
It adds, "The last thing Obama wants is for one of these guys [at Guantanamo] to get
released and return to killing Americans."
According to Newsweek, some counter-terrorism experts have raised
questions about the significance of the Pentagon's figures, noting that the number of so-called "recidivist" detainees represents
only a small portion, about 12 per cent, of the approximately 520 detainees who have been released from Guantanamo since the
detention facility was opened in January 2002. This compares with recidivism rates of as high as 67 percent in state prisons
in the United States, according to Justice Department figures.
"There have also been concerns that Bush administration
holdovers were deliberately playing up the cases in recent weeks in an effort to undercut Obama. One former senior U.S. counter-terrorism
official noted to Newsweek that the Pentagon waited until the day after Obama signed his executive order mandating the
closure of Guantanamo to confirm Al-Shihri's renewed Al Qaeda ties," Newsweek reports.
Approximately 240
detainees remain at Guantanamo. Human rights groups and defense lawyers contend there is little or no evidence of terrorist
involvement against scores of them. This is also the opinion of some federal judges who in recent weeks have ordered the Pentagon
to release some of them.
The Obama administration has given itself a year to shut down the facility, and is
hoping that European countries including Portugal, Spain and Germany, will agree to take some of these detainees. The Bush
Administration was able to identify only two countries willing to take released detainees – Albania and Sweden.
William Fisher has managed economic development programs in the Middle East and elsewhere for
the US State Department and the US Agency for International Development. He served in the international affairs area in the
Kennedy Administration and now writes on a wide-range of issues, from human rights to foreign affairs, for numerous newspapers
and online journals. He blogs at
Obama Administration Threatened Britain To Suppress Torture Evidence
Paul Joseph Watson Prison Planet.com
Wednesday, February 4, 2009 http://portland.indymedia.org/en/2009/02/386039.shtml The Obama administration has been caught in a fresh torture controversy after it emerged that America threatened to cease
all intelligence ties with Britain if it revealed that a British suspect held at Guantanamo Bay had been tortured into confessing
to being part of a dirty bomb plot.
"Two senior British judges have expressed their anger and surprise that President
Barack Obama's Government has put pressure on Britain to suppress evidence of torture in US custody," reports the London Times. "Lord Justice Thomas and Mr Justice
Lloyd Jones said they had been told that America had threatened to stop co-operating with Britain on intelligence matters
if evidence were published suggesting that Binyam Mohammed, a British resident held at the US prison camp at Guantánamo Bay,
had been tortured into confessing crimes."
In their ruling, the judges, acting on behalf of the Foreign Office &
Commonwealth Office, scorned the hypocrisy behind the Obama administration's actions.
"We did not consider that a
democracy governed by the rule of law would expect a court in another democracy to suppress a summary of the evidence contained
in reports by its own officials . . . relevant to allegations of torture and cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment, politically
embarrassing though it might be," they stated.
"We had no reason . . . to anticipate there would be made a threat
of the gravity of the kind made by the United States Government that it would reconsider its intelligence-sharing relationship,
when all the considerations in relation to open justice pointed to us providing a limited but important summary of the reports."
Binyam Mohammed has been held at GuantanamoBay
since September 2004 after being kidnapped at the behest of U.S. authorities
in Pakistan in 2002. He claims he was
tortured and mistreated into confessing to being part of a dirty bomb plot. Reports written by U.S. intelligence officials apparently confirm Mohammed's claims.
The British
judges declined to publish the reports after America's threat, but lambasted
America for bullying Britain
to conceal information that posed no threat to America's
national security. "Championing the rule of law, not suppressing it, is the cornerstone of a democracy," said the ruling.
"The suppression of reports of wrongdoing by officials (in circumstances which cannot in any way affect national security)
would be inimical to the rule of law and the proper functioning of a democracy."
The controversy follows the revelation
that Obama, despite his superficial moves against torture which have been given much attention by the establishment media,
has in fact signed an executive order that will ensure a continuance of the practice of "rendition," the secret capture, transportation,
and imprisonment of so called "enemy combatants" in countries renowned for carrying out torture.
Secret rendition
"black sites" hit the headlines in late 2005 when U.S. and foreign intelligence
officials blew the whistle on the CIA's practice of hiding and interrogating "al Qaeda" captives at a Soviet-era compound
in Eastern Europe.
The secret facility was revealed to be part of a covert CIA prison
system, set up after 9/11, that at various times included sites in eight countries, including Thailand, Afghanistan and several
democracies in Eastern Europe, as well as a small center at the Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba. The Washington Post refused
to name the European countries involved after pressure from senior U.S.
officials.
Horror stories of brutality and psychological torture of detainees at the secret prisons emerged soon after.
Many on the political left were fast and loose with their praise for Obama after he made moves to shut down GuantanamoBay, but
the real torture black sites and the process by which suspects are kidnapped and taken to them will remain in place thanks
to Obama's executive order.
WASHINGTON – President Barack Obama's pledge of bipartisan
cooperation with Congress will be tested as he tries to fulfill a campaign promise to close Guantanamo
Bay and establish a new system for prosecuting suspected terrorists.
The undertaking is an ambitious one. Fraught with legal complexities, it gives Republicans ample opportunity to
score political points if he doesn't get it right. There's also the liklihood of a run-in with his former rival, Sen. John McCain, a former prisoner of war who
before running for president staked his career on overhauling the nation's detainee policies.
"We look forward to working with the president and his administration on these issues, keeping in mind that the
first priority of the U.S. government is to guarantee the security of the American
people," McCain, R-Ariz., said in a joint statement with Sen. Lindsey Graham,
R-S.C.
The statement seemed aimed at putting Obama on notice that he
must deal with Congress on the matter.
In his first week in office, Obama ordered Guantanamo Bay prison in Cuba
to be closed within a year, CIA secret prisons shuttered and abusive interrogations ended.
So far, Obama's team has given every indication it will engage lawmakers, including Republicans, on the issue.
Graham and McCain were among several Republicans briefed last week by White House
counsel Greg Craig and handed drafts of the executive orders.
But once the two sides begin delving into details, there will be ample room for dispute.
Among the unknowns is how many of the 245 detainees now at Guantanamo Bay will be prosecuted.
Administration officials said that, pending an internal review, federal and military courts may be used. But,
the officials added, a version of the secretive military tribunals, as established
under President George W. Bush with the help of McCain, remains an option, too.
Officials say the tribunals may be needed to prosecute suspected terrorists who are too dangerous to release but
whose cases would otherwise fail, either because evidence was coerced or trying them in a less secretive court would expose
classified information.
Obama could take a page from the Bush administration and try
to revamp the system on his own, through executive order. But that approach
failed for Bush, who angered members of his own party and wound up seeking congressional approval anyway after the Supreme Court in June 2006 ruled his tribunal system was unconstitutional.
Obama's other option is to seek legislation on the issue, potentially exposing his administration to a bruising
fight with Republicans on how to handle the most dangerous of terrorism suspects.
A narrow majority of Americans supports shutting down Guantanamo Bay on a priority basis. But people are likely
to become much less sympathetic to detainee rights if there is another terrorism attack inside the United States or if the
new system is portrayed as too lenient on suspected al-Qaida members.
Republicans already are trying to portray Obama's review of detainee rights as soft on terrorism. House Republicans
on Friday mobilized a "rapid response team" of lawmakers to speak out against the president's plans.
"The Guantanamo Bay prison is filled with the worst of the worst — terrorists and killers bent on murdering
Americans and other friends of freedom around the world," said House GOP leader
John Boehner of Ohio. "If it is closed, where will they go, will
they be brought to the United States and how will they be secured?"
Democrats have suggested they expect to be important players in the debate.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., who heads the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, said the panel planned to hold back on legislation "for
a time" to allow the administration to complete its own assessment. Sen. Carl Levin,
D-Mich., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he would
like "to at least have an advisory role" on the final plan.
In 2006, the question of detainee trials and interrogations enveloped Congress and exposed Republican infighting.
McCain, Graham and now retired Sen. John Warner, R-Va., sharply challenged
Bush's handling of detainees. In the end, the two sides emerged with complex legislation that outlined the inner workings
of military tribunals and defined what constitutes a war crime, effectively
banning specific interrogation techniques seen as too harsh.
Human rights groups and Democrats said the system still gave
too much power to the president. But now, Republicans are worried Obama
will swing too far in the other direction.
Graham, a colonel in the Air Force Reserves assigned to the
service's Judge Advocate General School, said he is concerned that Obama
will wind up giving civilian courts too heavy a hand in dealing with terrorists handled by the military and CIA.
"Federal judges in my opinion should not be making battlefield
decisions. ... I don't want to lose sight of the fact that we are at war," he said.
One of the great legacies of the Bush era is that his administration's routine politicization
of national security stripped any lingering credibility that might have adhered to our intelligence agencies' habitually leaked
reports and unsourced statements.
The latest night-sweats being hawked by the typical fear-mongers is that closing Gitmo
will lead to a horde of frightening -- and dusky -- Islamototalitarians blowing themselves up in your local 7-11. That's a
talking-point based on some information that is decidedly dodgy. CNN:
Security experts are questioning information released by the Pentagon last week,
saying 61 former detainees from its detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba,
may have returned to terrorist activities.
The report, released days before President Obama took office, says 18 former detainees
are confirmed to have participated in attacks, and 43 are suspected to have been involved in attacks.
On Friday, a Pentagon spokesman defended the integrity of the report but would not
directly answer questions about where the figures come from.
"We don't make these figures up. They're not done willy-nilly," spokesman Geoff
Morrell said.
Who said they don't have a sense of humor at the DoD?
Pentagon officials have said they would not discuss how the statistics were derived because
of security concerns that such information could give clues to how U.S.
intelligence officers collect their data.
"Collect their data" sounding much better than "making shit up." Buried deep in
the article, however, we get some insight into those dedicated public servants' "methodology":
[National security expert Peter] Bergen said some of
those "suspected" to have returned to terrorism are so categorized because they
publicly made anti-American statements, "something that's not surprising if you've been locked up in a U.S. prison camp for several years."
So, to recap: we went into Afghanistan with very few troops, and elevated a rag-tag
army run by various Afghan war-lords to the status of "freedom fighters," then we offered them up to $5,000 a head for any
members of "Al Qaeda" they turned over to American forces -- five large in one of the poorest countries in the world. Then
we ignored our Afghani translators and allies when they told us who the die-hard Islamist fighters were and who were the poor
shlumps -- the students, aid workers, tourists, traders, cab-drivers and others who were sold off for the cash bounties --
and just sent all the foreigners to Gitmo, where we denied them legal council for several years and kept them in isolation
on a military base where our brave interrogators subjected them to various tortures.
And now, if those released make any "anti-American statements" in public -- the
nerve, after all our hospitality! -- we characterize them as "returning to terrorism."
Of course, while we know from several independent studies that most of those in
Gitmo were not, in fact, "hardened terrorists" captured "on the battlefield", I think it's safe to say that if you to me what
my government has done to them, I might well be looking for some payback.
Which is why this is also worth highlighting:
Bergen ... notes
that of the 18 people the Pentagon says are confirmed to have engaged in terrorism, only a handful of names have been released.
If one accepts that all 18 on the "confirmed" list have returned to the battlefield,
that would be 4 percent of the detainees who have been released, Bergen
said.
Bergen also noted Federal Bureau of Justice Statistics
data that show the recidivism rate for U.S.
state prisoners who have been released is more than 65 percent.
I'm sure some right-wing lunatic will use that little stat to argue that Gitmo is
a model of rehabilitation, but in relaity it suggests that even if you subject an innocent goatherd to all sorts of heinous
abuses, it's anything but a given that he'll end up being "radicalized" and bent on revenge.
For more detail on how prisoners were selected
for Gitmo, see my interview with Andy here.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Obama's
move to close the Guantanamo prison within a
year reopens the issue of how to try the accused September 11 plotters and other pending terrorism cases.
The Guantanamo
war crimes commissions, put on hold by Obama's order, were established by Congress in 2006 and have been condemned as unjust
by defense lawyers, some prosecutors, and many other countries.
Two men have been convicted in commission trials and one pleaded guilty. Two of these
have already returned to their home countries.
The Pentagon has announced it’s preparing for an anticipated order to shut down the Guantanamo
Bay prison after Obama takes office next month. Officials have begun drawing up contingency plans, should Obama uphold his
campaign promise to close the prison. Anthony Romero of the American Civil Liberties Union said, “This is an important
first step toward turning the page on eight years of shameful policies that allowed torture and violations of domestic and
international law.”