I know it seems like more of a noble sacrifice to cut spending on things people less fortunate than ourselves need, but can somebody explain to me why it wouldn’t be at least that noble to eliminate the budget of the CIA, which serves no one?
The Washington Post and the Obama administration have been busy telling us that it’s legal to kidnap people and send them to countries that torture. They may call it “renditioning” to nations that use “enhanced interrogation techniques,” but a new book details what this means in English.
A man was walking near his home in Milano, Italy, and was stopped and questioned by a policeman. When they had been engaged in conversation for some minutes, the side door of a van parked behind the man crashed open with a thunderous sound, two extremely large and strong men grabbed the civilian and hauled him inside, and the door slammed shut three seconds after it had opened, as the van accelerated and the two men hit and kicked their victim repeatedly in the dark of the van’s interior, pounding his head, chest, stomach, and legs. They stopped. They stuffed a gag in his mouth and put a hood over his head, as they cinched cords tight around his wrists and ankles. Hours later they threw him into another vehicle. An hour later they took him out, stood him up, cut his clothes off, shoved something hard up his anus, stuck a diaper and pajamas on him, wrapped his head almost entirely with duct tape, and tossed him in an airplane.
The torture he received when he got where he was going left him nearly dead, prematurely aged, and barely able to walk. It was US-sponsored and Egyptian administered. And it is described in all of its almost unbearable detail in Steve Hendricks’ “A Kidnapping in Milan: The CIA on Trial.”
Believe it or not, most of this book is enjoyable. Hendricks knows the United States and Italy and how to write about one for readers in the other. His remarks on Italian culture are outdone only by his background on Muslim terrorism, his account of who this kidnapping victim was, and the inclusion of dialogue picked up by Italian wiretaps of terrorism suspects’ private conversations. But just as terrific reading are Hendricks’ histories of the practice of rendition, of the use of torture, of U.S.-Italian relations, of domestic Italian terrorism, and of modern Egypt.
Not to ruin the punch line — and this has long been public knowledge — the kidnapping, transporting, imprisoning, and torturing of this man and many others is paid for with U.S. tax dollars. I’m sure it all sounds very important and rational given how demonically evil Muslims are supposed to be. But how do you justify the dozens of CIA agents living it up in Italy’s most luxurious hotels while plotting this operation? And how do you rationalize the damage done to U.S. relations with Italy? Of course, Italians quickly discovered that the CIA was behind this crime. It would have been harder to track them if they’d worn neon signs on their chests. They used cell phones and frequent flyer accounts that were easily identified, not to mention names and addresses similar to their real ones. Hendricks describes their methods as Keystone Kommandoism.
No doubt some of these CIA bunglers and butchers were outsourced and untrained, but they also believed they were above the law. They thought they had immunity. Italian law enforcement thought otherwise. For decades during the Cold War, the CIA kept an army and caches of weapons in Italy to be used if communists were ever able to gain significant political power. A long list of abuses has come to light and no one ever been held accountable. Magistrate Armando Spataro, like many Italians, adored the United States. When reporters asked him why he had indicted two dozen CIA agents, Spataro said he was opposing lawlessness, not his beloved United States. He warned of following the path of Mussolini. He pointed out that Italy had defeated domestic terrorists with the rule of law. He showed that the new U.S. lawlessness was just encouraging terror. His record of prosecuting leftist terrorists and his indictment for terrorism of the victim himself of the U.S. kidnapping made claims of bias difficult to pin on Spataro. The approach resorted to by the U.S. media was — to the extent possible — to ignore the whole thing, especially when Spataro won convictions of the agents tried in absentia.
The Italian legal system is one thing, its government in Rome quite another. The latter will never ask the United States to extradite the convicts unless the U.S. president requests it first, just as the United States would never kidnap a man in Italy without telling the Italian president and the Italian spy service first. So, none of the culprits are behind bars, but they are unable to live in or travel to Europe. And a strong signal has been sent about the likelihood of Italy tolerating more such crimes. This is the sort of message Nancy Pelosi would have sent by impeaching Bush even if the Senate had not convicted him.
Hendricks tracked down most of the scofflaws. They’re spread around the United States engaged in a variety of work, most of them completely unknown to the public. The man chiefly responsible, on the other hand, is undergoing a public rehabilitation and it about to open a presidential library, while the man responsible for the continued practice and for the freedom of his predecessor has two more years in the White House.
DAVID SWANSON is the author of the forthcoming book “War Is A Lie,” http://warisalie.org



28 Comments

Thanks for this David and agree. Of course, however, all the faux deficit hawks just can’t see how we can cut things that prop up the MIC.
Brilliant post, thanks.
Two more years! Two more years!
That was a subtle touch! Like it.
where did they take the guy after the kidnapping? Egypt? Maybe i missed that above. Sorry.
This is by far the best spending-cut suggestion I’ve ever seen!
hate to say it (and embarrrassses and ashamed, really), but in the aftermath of 9/11 i actually supported this kind of stuff. i believed we knew who to torture and why. yay torture!!! shit. it became apparent that we didn’t and even if we did, it was not in the least effective and “it helped prevent attacks and saved lives” was utter horseshit. and, indeed, counterproductive (at least in my view and that of some others) oh yeah. and wrong.
What cuts would Jesus make?
This has got to be way up there on the list.
* embarrassed
kudos to you for admitting this and most importantly, for keeping your eyes open and learning. If only
our elected officials displayed your level of competence as a human being.
good one! i’m jewish but i think this would make for a
fine public debate.
Nancy Pelosi, George Bush, Barack Obama all pro torture that went out with the Spanish Inquisition. Human rights? Rule off what laws? Habeous Corpus? Reduce funding and they will go to Iran Contra techniques for funding. They are a shadow government that is unbridled. Yes reduce funding. The committee in US Congress that they report to is cowed.
An interesting take from Le Monde on Tea Party and other well written criticisms of the underlying philosophy of neoliberalism here http://mondediplo.com/2010/11/06teaparties
Bravo!
It was a milestone in infamy when Obama stood up at his 1st SOTU and basically said that we were going to keep thieving, murdering and torturing but spending on everything else just had to go.
‘It has always amazed me that politicians keep writing international conventions. But then when the time comes to apply one of those laws that have been ratified, they say “the problem is, economic stability, or political stability, could be threatened by the application of this rule.” So what’s the point? Do we ratify the laws in order to apply them or not? What is amazing is that there are no inconveniences when we’re talking about violating human rights. Yet, there are many inconveniences when we talk about judges, or taking people to trial who have committed human rights violations. We must respect the law and the autonomy of judges and politicians who complain that judicial action will affect the stability of a country, but who do not respect the rule of the law. If those in political power would support transparency, then democracy, political systems, and also the economy would be fortified. But they are fearful of being called into court, so they do not want an international judiciary with real power. That’s why the United States, for example, will not ratify the International Criminal Court. World leaders should have no fear of accepting jurisdiction for a court which will only prosecute crimes against humanity or other international crimes. They have no problem accepting economic globalization, or the free circulation of people among European states. Europe has no problem in accepting a common law restriction to immigration. They acknowledge some crimes are transnational and that they affect humanity in general. So what is the problem with judging these crimes? We laud ourselves for setting up norms and structures and then we claim these laws do not apply to us. Since Nuremberg we have gone out of our way not to apply the laws. In Cambodia they were not applied because of China. In South America they were not applied because of the United States, and in South Africa they were not applied because of the United Kingdom. Now, finally, a new consciousness is being created in the wake of awful atrocities in Bosnia and Rwanda. The denunciations and activities of nongovernmental organizations like Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch have contributed to this consciousness. So when cases dealing with these issues have come before people like me, we have thought we have the means, why not use them? An independent judiciary can take advantage of the legal instruments, and develop them, and thereby help society.’
- except of an interview of Judge Baltasar Garzón of Spain by Kerry Kennedy (link: http://www.speaktruth.org/defend/profiles/profile_26.asp).
Read everything– especially the section about the preparation for judgeship. It’s marvelous and illustrates the fabric from which any real American leader (e.g. of what stuff should the person be made of who primaries Obama?), judge or attorney should be cut (hattip masaccio with respect to his post, “Defaulted Credit Card Scams And Judicial Wimpiness,” Nov. 6, 2010; link: http://my.firedoglake.com/masaccio/2010/11/05/defaulted-credit-card-scams-and-judicial-wimpiness). The contrast to what we have tolerated is as stark as day is to night.
Is there some reason Jews can’t listen to the wisdom of Jesus? Is that some kind of Jewish religious prohibition you all have?
Because I’m a Native American, so don’t think he has any big religious sway on me. But even I felt Jesus had a message, just for me …
my personal Jesus message? “Don’t keep your light under a basket.”
That takes guts to admit. Good for you!
Basically fascist governments do not want to respect our civil rights or the rule of law.
Glenn Greenwald just gave a good lecture on this very subject. I recommend it to anyone who has the time to listen to it,
Terrorism and civil liberties speech
http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/11/04/speech/index.html
I was advocating consulting Jesus’s teachings – especially his compassion for the so-called ‘small people’ – in such a debate. Sorry if I didn’t convey that clearly.
Prior to 911 I had no idea about US involvement in the Mideast. I knew about “Ayatollah Assahola” and Israel was just a Christmas reference to me. I was busy being young, being a musician and getting laid and getting high. I assumed everyone was peaceful at heart. And this is an easy mindset to fall into. Just getting away from the news and blogs does wonders for my attitude.
But I must say after 911 I was bloodthirsty and did not give a damn about torturing terrorists. Like so many other people. But as I became educated, that sinister mentality wore off. But sadly for many Americans, and most of the conservatives I know, torturing terrorists is acceptable because the Biblical rules of turning the other cheek don’t apply because it’s a religious war. And on top of that they fully believe torturing keeps us safe. I blame FOX for this.
USA is still into Judge Bean ‘Law West of the Pecos’ where they can hang em high without trials of peers.
Obama is Looking forward, really? Where is he on MLK? Indonesia is the 3rd largest Democracy in the world it is Muslim…hey we are making a statement they are the enemy. Foreign policy in the tank? The macho society of male hero worship “Saturday’s Hero” and the Galdiators in those arenas are given free pass on sexual harrassment often. Kind GSL is part of a large group that report rapes only to be accused of encouraging, teasing or it is your fault for not being cautious. The Looking back policy is encouraging crime of the ugliest sort.
TortureMurderTreason inseparably linked.
bush and cheney should be the torture scapegoats to clear our national conscientiousness.
Did the CIA get get up in John F. Kennedy’s face to all our determent ?
Book Salon up with Gwynne Dyer’s Climate Wars: The Fight for Survival as the World Overheats hosted by Brendan DeMelle
” I blame FOX for this.”
You might put Cheney at the top of the list!! He is like tinman, he has nor heart… Just a mechanical pump to keep his venom flowing through his system…
And he needs plenty of oil to keep him from getting too rusty…
Whatever I might say would be inadequate. But, no, I don’t feel personally responsible.
yes egypt
amazingly you almost never see this kind of admission although it has to exist in silence in the minds of millions
Aaaah, the Italian-CIA Connection.
Just think, the outing of covert CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson began with some forged Niger documents, detailing supposed attempts by Saddam Hussein to get his hands on even more yellow-cake uranium, fake Niger documents that were dumped on the doorstep of the CIA section chief in Rome, Italy.
The “information” contained in these forged documents then was passed along to Washington, ending up in the hands of Dick Cheney, who asked the CIA if there was any truth to this “information.” Covert CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson’s husband, Joe Wilson, was then asked if he’d go over to Africa to check it out, since he had been a U.S. ambassador over there and because he had knowledge of uranium mines and yellow-cake uranium. Upon returning from his mission and being debriefed, he reported that there was no substance to the claims made in the Niger documents (which were not known at the time to be forgeries).
A couple of years passed. Bush and Cheney started a war based on lies, based partially on the bogus claims made in the Niger documents, which were only disclosed as forgeries just weeks before the start of Bush and Cheney’s Iraq War in March 2003, because expert U.N. officials had not seen them until then.
Former U.S. ambassador Joe Wilson wrote his NY Times op-ed in July 2003, laying out how the Bush/Cheney administration deceived American citizens and the world, following almost a year (pre-war and post-war) in which the massive WMD stockpiles Saddam Hussein supposedly had weren’t found. Sure, there were spent munitions from the 1980s and barrels of low-grade yellow-cake uranium south of Baghdad, but nothing new, nothing current, nothing at all supporting the bogus claims in the Niger document forgeries.
Bush and Cheney then retaliated against Joe Wilson by trying to attack him and his credibility, through his wife, a 20-year-veteran as a covert agent for the CIA. Bush and Cheney selectively leaked her top-secret identity to the press. She was exposed. Her CIA front company, Brewster-Jennings, was exposed. Other covert CIA agents were exposed. All the CIA contacts overseas who had dealings with covert CIA agent Valerie Plame Wilson and other covert CIA agents were exposed.
And all this happened after someone planted some forged Niger documents with the CIA in Italy, shortly after Bush and Cheney entered the White House, forged documents meant to establish that Saddam Hussein was trying to get around U.N. sanctions and purchase even more low-grade yellow-cake uranium than he already had, bogus claims meant to seed the path to war in Iraq by the nutty, treasonous neo-con Republicans, years before they started their murderous misadventure in Mesopotamia.
As a former English major and published author, I’d like to
suggest a replacement term for “extraordinary rendition”:
“transport across an international boundary for the purpose of torture.”
I’m the author of “A Kidnapping in Milan” and wanted to add a footnote to David’s excellent and very kind review. One reason I wrote the book was because there are so few heroes in the war on terror, but the Italian prosecutor, Armando Spataro is just that. While much of my book is a half-delicious, half-infuriating tale of CIA foulness and foolishness, it was a pleasure to cover (and, I hope, for others to read about) someone who struck back so effectively against American brutality. Spataro has also badly scared the CIA officers who carry out these kind of jobs. Many of them have taken out private insurance in case they’re prosecuted or sued for their crimes, others apparently have refused to do such missions, and the people he convicted are frightened to travel abroad. His prosecution hasn’t stopped extraordinary renditions, but I’m nearly certain it has made them far less common.