In a report at Truthout, Andy Worthington described a new UN report on secret detention policies by governments around the world. The report, available in an advance, unedited version here (long PDF), concentrates on the situation over the last nine years, with "a detailed account of US policies… and also running through the practice of secret detention in 25 other countries, including Algeria, China, Egypt, India, Iraq, Iran, Israel, Libya, Pakistan, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Syria, Uganda and Zimbabwe."
A major new report on secret detention policies around the world, conducted by four independent UN human rights experts, concludes that, “On a global scale, secret detention in connection with counter-terrorist policies remains a serious problem,” and that, “If resorted to in a widespread and systematic manner, secret detention might reach the threshold of a crime against humanity"….
Of particular concern to the authors of the Joint Study — beyond the overall illegality of the entire project conceived and executed by the Bush administration — is the fate of dozens of men held in secret prisons run by the CIA, or transferred by the CIA to prisons in other countries. Based on figures disclosed in one of the Office of Legal Counsel’s notorious “torture memos” (PDF), written in May 2005 by Assistant Attorney General Stephen Bradbury, the CIA had, by May 2005, “taken custody of 94 prisoners [redacted] and ha[d] employed enhanced techniques to varying degrees in the interrogations of 28 of these detainees.”
The 28 men subjected to “enhanced techniques” are clearly the “high-value detainees” — including Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the 9/11 attacks, Abu Zubaydah and twelve others — who were transferred to Guantánamo in September 2006, but no official account has ever explained what happened to the other 14 “high-value detainees,” or, indeed, to the majority of the other 66 men.
Tracking the missing men has been difficult, and the report looks into the various black prison sites in Afghanistan, including Bagram. In addition, the report examines "the cases of 35 men rendered by the CIA to Jordan, Egypt, Syria and Morocco, between 2001 and 2004." For many of these "ghost prisoners", we have no idea of where they were ultimately sent, or even if they are even alive.
The Bagram Project
Andy Worthington has begun a project on Bagram prisoners not dissimilar to the research he conducted on the Guantanamo prisoners, which culminated in the excellent book, The Guantanamo Files. Ever since the Pentagon released a list of the names of 645 prisoners it was holding at Bagram as of September 22, 2009 (PDF).
Worthington has been examining this list, and trying to determine who many of these prisoners are, as well as who may be missing from the list.
However, although it is probable that a number of former “ghost prisoners” have been repatriated to face death or further detention, it is not inconceivable that some prisoners were not included in the list because they are being held elsewhere — perhaps in a corner of Bagram to which the list does not extend.
One indication that this is so is the apparent omission from the list of Amanatullah Ali, a Pakistani who was seized by British forces in Iraq in 2004 and rendered to Bagram. His detention in Bagram has been confirmed through letters to his family, and his story, which was told by David Rose in Britain’s Mail on Sunday on December 9, is significant not only because it sheds light on the British government’s complicity in the Bagram rendition program, but also because it reveals the extent to which depriving the prisoners of the right to challenge the basis of their detention perpetuates the same mistakes that were made at Guantánamo.
Andy is producing an annotated version of the Bagram prisoner list, and you can read the initial form of it here. He asks that if anyone has any further information about any of the names on this list to email him.
Obama OLC Supports Indefinite Detention Policies, or Marty Lederman Turns to the Dark Side
As I was reading the articles on the secret detentions, I was reminded that Obama’s Office of Legal Council (OLC) has been quite active in promoting indefinite detentions for some of the Guantanamo prisoners. According to Joe Palazzolo at Main Justice, OLC — which under Bush’s appointees Yoo and Bybee had authored the memos approving torture — has been quite active in advising Department of Justice attorneys who are fighting the habeas cases of Guantanamo prisoners in the federal courts. OLC also "worked closely with the [detention] task force that recently completed a yearlong review of the Guantanamo Bay detainees. The task force determined that of the 198 detainees at the military-run prison, about 50 are unprosecutable but thought to be too dangerous to transfer [i.e., they will be held indefinitely, without charges], underscoring the importance of the habeas corpus cases — the chief means for testing the Obama administration’s detention regime.
One wonders what apostasy former supposed civil liberties proponent Marty Lederman underwent once he joined Obama’s Justice Department. But Palazzolo quotes a recent study by Benjamin Wittes and Rabea Benhalim of the Brookings Institution and Robert Chesney of the University of Texas Law School, who expound upon the crucial importance of the Obama administration’s legal actions on this front (emphasis added):
They are more than a means to decide the fate of the individuals in question. They are also the vehicle for an unprecedented wartime law-making exercise with broad implications for the future. The law established in these cases will in all likelihood govern not merely the Guantánamo detentions themselves but any other detentions around the world over which American courts acquire habeas jurisdiction. What’s more, to the extent that these cases establish substantive and procedural rules governing the application of law-of-war detention powers in general, they could end up impacting detentions far beyond those immediately supervised by the federal courts. They might, in fact, impact superficially-unrelated military activities, such as the planning of operations, the selection of interrogation methods, or even the decision to target individuals with lethal force….
The other thing the detentions issue reminded me of was a quote from a document I was recently reading. The document has historical significance, and is of great importance in understanding how the dark and secretive forces that are now essentially running this country gained such power and influence.
A Look Back at the Doolittle Report
From the Report on the Covert Activities of the Central Intelligence Agency, commissioned by the President of the United States, Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1954 (otherwise known as the Doolittle Report – PDF, bold emphases added):
As long as it remains national policy, another important requirement is an aggressive covert psychological, political and paramilitary organization more effective, more unique, and, if necessary, more ruthless than that employed by the enemy. No one should be permitted to stand in the way of the prompt, efficient and secure accomplishment of this mission….
It is now clear that we are facing an implacable enemy whose avowed objective is world domination by whatever means and at whatever cost. There are no rules in such a game. Hitherto acceptable norms of human conduct do not apply. If the United States is to survive, long-standing American concepts of "fair play" must be reconsidered. We must develop effective espionage and counterespionage services and must learn to subvert, sabotage and destroy our enemies by more clever, more sophisticated and more effective methods than those used against us. It may become necessary that the American people be made acquainted with, understand and support this fundamentally repugnant philosophy.
Looks like it took them almost 50 years to fulfill the latter prediction, when Dick Cheney informed us the U.S. was going over to the “dark side”. Of course, they’d made their infernal choice decades ago, and the U.S. citizenry is still catching up with the ramifications of those hidden decisions and multiple crimes.
Also, now the enemy is not world communism, but the forces of Al Qaeda, who (supposed) wish to found a world-wide Islamic Caliphate. Of course, tomorrow the enemy may be world communism again, when the war drive against China is activated in earnest, or perhaps it will be the “Asian hordes” once again.
This is not a time for politics as usual. The "consensus building" of President Obama’s administration is a cruel joke upon the people of America and the world. What is needed is boldness in opposition, a readiness to speak the complete truth, and the preparation of the American people to accept this truth, and make the links between Wall Street’s stranglehold over any economic "reform", and the insane military drive for extension of U.S. power around the world. The latter has led this country into the darkest crevices of human historical actions: to the secret prison and dungeon, to the torture chamber, to the use of technological devices and sciences to watch, control, and murder countless human beings.
"Hitherto acceptable norms of human conduct do not apply." It is worth considering well the implications of this statement for all of us.
Also posted at Invictus



36 Comments




you are so right — this is NOT the time for politics as usual. thanks for writing this jeff
Recd
Thank you for exposing these crimes.
OT on my own thread, sort of, it appears that in the United States, only David Glenn Cox over at OpEd News is following up the Ghazi Khan massacre. You might remember this is where a number of young Afghan children and adolescents were killed by U.S. forces in late December 2009.
It seems the Afghan internal investigation is complete, and found:
Even in the world press, I see only The Hindu has covered the aftermath of this story, and the results of the investigation.
Just another atrocity in a world become inured to atrocity.
And just another cover-up by the United States, which refuses to answer or investigate.
NOTE: “No direct evidence” that the atrocity occurred is not a denial that it happened. The UN chose its words so carefully that we can get a pretty good idea that it happened.
The list of current Bagram detainees is important for a long list of reasons, but it may not provide the historical context necessary to find the disappeared prisoners from black sites. Hundreds of prisoners have been transferred just in the past couple of years to Pol-i-Charki prison where, as is widely reported, the U.S. has built a new wing (cellblock D). This has been going on for quite some time, and people from legal and human rights organizations have been monitoring these transfers, and the accompanying Afghan court proceedings for a while — shameless plug to find out about the work of the International Justice Network there (they are the ones bringing the habeas suit that was heard by the appeals court in early January). There are renewed investigations going on in Pakistan by the Supreme Court and by the Senate Standing Committee on the Interior there.
I’ve sent a link of this article to Andy Worthington, so hopefully he’ll check out your comment and have his own comment upon the prisoner transfers you mention. Since the U.S. government gets to operate under near total secrecy and with near total impunity, god knows what hell is being unleashed there.
Btw, if I had more time, I’d love to demonstrate that McChrystal’s vaunted counterinsurgency program is nothing more than warmed over standard special ops “hearts and minds” stuff from Vietnam and even before. It was favored by the Kennedy crowd. The aid is poisoned by middle of the night roundups, kidnappings, assassinations, extrajudicial incarceration, and torture. I think Jim White had a recent article here making just these points.
Good write up Jeff. Sadly, Americans don’t care. The reactions on the “evidence” of torture and imprisonment declarations, has been disgusting. Americans don’t really care, as long as it doesn’t affect them personally. That is the saddest part.
Great report, Jeff. One other possibility for those missing fourteen prisoners, and perhaps for others we haven’t learned of: they were killed. Either accidentally, which is what seems to have happened in the case of the three Guantanamo suicides Scott Horton reported about in Harper’s; or deliberately, because the government believed it couldn’t try or release them and decided it could just erase them, instead.
In other words, the “Caspers” in Inside Out are real.
Yes, I think that’s a distinct possibility. I remember reading some documents of the MKULTRA/Artichoke variety, and noting they there were portions of memos where they discussed what they called their “disposal” problem, i.e., what to do with experiment subjects who were either too injured by the experiment or who knew too much as a result of being in the experiment. I need to find those references, so I can refer distinctly to them.
I am working on a piece about one of those earlier “disposal” problems, along with recent Book Salon author, HP Albarelli. I think everyone will find the CIA’s solution enlightening, in reference to recent rendition news, torture, etc.
I think the direct logic of what has been going on leads to “disappearances” that are really extrajudicial killings and covert disposal of the bodies, though I can’t say they used the technique discussed in Inside Out, a fairly sinisterly creative method, which I leave the readers of your excellent book to discover. (Couldn’t your publisher move up the date of release, given the book’s “buzz”?)
Yes, in my most recent diary, I was talking about how the US is moving the publicly known prisons under control of the Afghan government while still keeping the secret prisons. I had meant to quote this passage you and Andy Worthington cite from the UN report:
Since we know McChyrstal’s plan includes what will come close to “widespread and systematic” detention, that is why US control of the detention sites must be denied before the fact.
Great job of bringing together more of the story, Jeff.
Edit: Forgot to put in the link for my diary:
http://seminal.firedoglake.com/diary/28261
Maybe the best way to deal with it is to mount a campaign to sign and ratify the Convention on the Protection of all People from Enforced Disappearance. (and maybe they can send a few other treaties to the Senate for advice and consent while they’re at it). It will mark a big change, seeing the United States brought to the table to sign a human rights treaty without the benefit of being perceived as the universally accepted model anymore.
There’s no “before the fact” about it, unless you mean the work on changing the rendition policies, the interrogation policies, and the reasons for detention, the lex specialis arguments, the end runs around Article 49 and the like, the withdrawal of the signature from the Rome Statute that all occurred in 2001-2002 with followups into 2005-2008. The prison situation in Afghanistan was documented fairly thoroughly in Barbara Olshansky’s 2006 book Democracy Detained, and more details came out in Locked Up Alone and in Broken Laws, Broken Lives. IJN was stating in public fora that the U.S. military had sacked the Afghan Supreme Court over the transfers and due process in 2008. By April 2008, even the New York Times was covering it. What is coming out now is continuation, not anything new, and it’s all based on the AUMF, and now on recent court holdings that support the Yoo/Bybee/Goldsmith/Levin/Bradbury doctrine. The new part is only that it continues in the face of the supposed end to torture and access to the ICRC. Enforced disappearance and incommunicado detention were pronounced to be forms of torture if they occurred for extended periods by the Committee Against Torture several years ago. That automatically means that systematic or widespread application is a crime against humanity.
In very many ways, the UN report is something of a very thorough followup. McChrystal may have played a part in setting up the network, but this thing is much deeper, much more embedded in Bush administration thinking, and much, much more metastasized and insidious within the new administration and in the whole anti-terror consciousness of the American people than either the people in this administration who are trying to uproot it, or the people observing it from the outside frequently can see. Afghanistan is literally America’s prison planet on this, if you’ll forgive the Frank Herbert analogy.
Thanks for this.
Also, I wish there was more coverage of the Obama administration continuing the Bush policy of assassinating Americans if the Executive believes the American to be a terrorist. The last bastion of the Constitution is being strangled in its sleep, by a Constitutional law “scholar,” no less. Enough to make one cry.
All excellent points, ondelette. Yes, ratify the CPPED. Why is no one in Congress holding hearings on why the WH continues to violate the CAT? All I’d add is that the policies involved go back to the Cold War, and b/c the perpetrators were never held to account (the biggest failure of the Church Committee), we remain a nation en thrall to the Nazi virus we picked up while fighting fascism 60+ years ago, cf. Operation Paperclip, The Edgewood experiments, etc.
Thanks Jim for the link.
Some of them were innovated over time more recently. The invention of the Low Intensity Conflict as a clandestine method was Reagan administration, principally William Casey and Casper Weinberger, with help from Abraham Sofaer, Douglas Feith, and Richard Perle. To my knowledge, the first implementation of an LIC directly against the U.S. by involving the U.S. in its own LIC for the purposes of another goal was pure Bush/Cheney. The decision to create places beyond the law for crushing people to a pulp and rendering the drippings as “intelligence” was also Bush/Cheney.
Creating nastiness has a deep history, and does include the experiments you bring up like MKULTRA down through SERE. Inculcating people to nastiness has a history with the Nazis in the Republican Ethnic Outreach Committee and before. But really the popular support was built with the Law and Order Movement and the Victim’s Rights Movement. Those were popular movements that didn’t require clandestine or White House political support, initially. They are the principal impediments to eradicating the torture mentality now, too.
But the idea of creating a nation where the U.S. could operate prisons beyond the law by involving U.S. troops in a LIC, is all 21st century innovation. Just the LIC part would suffice for a treason conviction in a sane society.
I really think there must be some action in the next very short while.
Considering the roots of the modern corporate GOP and in the Nazi experience it could have been been predicted under Bush. It is astounding and really without obvious explanation that the Obama administration continues it. Is he that much a proselyte of corporatism? I almost wonder if he feels the presidency is threatened by the CIA and military complexes.
That all aside these crimes against humanity must soon be exposed, condemned and outlawed by world entities. I am not a scholar but I have seen no evidence of our own political and legal systems acting. The longer it continues unchallenged the greater the chance it will endure for decades if not centuries.
The truly frightening aspect of these policies is that in this age of “contract security” forces and in the spirit of the always plausible deniability mentality, legalized kidnapping by “non-official” entities for whatever purposes ascribed for “national security” leaves one wondering if whatever we say or do that happens to offend someone in authority, we can be swept away and never know why or wherefore. Kind of makes you want to become a 2nd amendment gun nut and advocate of shoot first and ask questions later! Alas, poor Miranda, we barely knew thee!
It is really because the problem is deeper and bigger than the Obama administration can deal with. The fact that it does badly is partly due to coming to office with a mixture of problem solving philosophies and political strategies that really can’t solve big whopping problems, only implement very popular incremental change. And part of it is that the problem of torture, enforced disappearance and American society is much, much bigger than people are admitting. The civil liberties people thought it was enough to ensure trials — then the quality of the trials became questionable. The human rights activists thought it would be sufficient to bring the problems to the light of day and expose the perpetrators to public shame, and then the public didn’t move the way they did in the civil rights 1960s. The international law activists thought that we could convince the Justice Department or the Congress to indict based on the CAT and the ICCPR, and then the Congress passed laws shielding people from prosecution and validating practices. The legal eagles thought they could win Supreme Court verdicts that would end the legacy of the torture memoes, and then the Supreme Court validated the whole CIDT framework of them.
At some point it has to be admitted that we need to use an oblique strategy because the monster is too big to be dealt with straightforwardly. That’s why building a movement to sign the CPPED might work: It looks like an innocuous and so clearly virtuous human rights treaty that the public might not be able to be persuaded its the wrong thing to do, but it would tie the current practices in knots.
I suppose our illustrious Congress will simply “condemn” this report as they did the Goldstone report (regarding Israel’s incursion into Gaza). The Republicans will start bellowing about withdrawing from the UN again, etc. Even so, these are important findings which most of the rest of the world will take very seriously. I hope Obama will begin to understand that his indefinite detention policies are badly misguided and will be a detriment to our international relations if they are not drastically altered (and I don’t mean “more effectively concealed”).
Thanks for your efforts on this, Jeff.
More American exceptionalism. The U.S. can do disappearances and indefinite detentions globally.
Zimbabwe?
If anyone hasn’t seen it yet, I would recommend watching The Power of Nightmares
2:27 introduction http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qk1WkmioQvA
PS I’m ever increasingly despising politicians – no matter what their marketing brand (D or R) is
Book Salon up at the Mothership with Jessica Clark and Tracy Van Slyke’s Beyond the Echo Chamber: How a Networked Progressive Media Can Reshape American Politics hosted by Matthew Kerbel
What’s your reference to Zim?
Jesus Mary and Joseph…how low will we go?
Slogging through hell and beyond. Thanks for this post. Hope it stays in that box for a while.
“This is not a time for politics as usual. The “consensus building” of President Obama’s administration is a cruel joke upon the people of America and the world. What is needed is boldness in opposition, a readiness to speak the complete truth, and the preparation of the American people to accept this truth, and make the links between Wall Street’s stranglehold over any economic “reform”, and the insane military drive for extension of U.S. power around the world. The latter has led this country into the darkest crevices of human historical actions: to the secret prison and dungeon, to the torture chamber, to the use of technological devices and sciences to watch, control, and murder countless human beings.
“Hitherto acceptable norms of human conduct do not apply.” It is worth considering well the implications of this statement for all of us.”
WTF can we really do? We write, we call, we march in the streets, we make appointments with our Reps in our districts, we go to their offices in D.C.
WTF can we really do?
Do as we say not as we do…Theme songs for the U.S. and Israel
I guess we should refer to it as the ICPPED. I just checked on resources and such, and it seems most people (including the UN) are using that acronym. One can never tell whether the ‘I’ will be there or not (sigh).
Do you mean only enthralled? And enthralled to a “virus?”
Seems like the virus might be inside and replicating about now.
I am wondering if anyone has begun to add up that these rampaging aberrations to so many of… “our hitherto acceptable norms of human conduct,” let’s include the general free fall of standards maintaining constitutional law etc. suggests an unprecedented evil nexus, that will be all the more horrific, for its slow thorough and methodical development.
Has there been any thought to how the current preocupations with (defacto… ) denial of health care and the administration of aid and comfort to disease and pain, works right in with the torture ethic? A world run by and for Psychopaths. What would that be like?
A world run by and for Psychopaths.
We know. We live in one.
Would you say this “Spanish Inquisition style” is something percolating for decades, not that bad? Just a fetish that kind of goes on in them places. or something that just recently took off at tremendous acceleration.
And I read Thomas’s “Journey into Madness” of 1940s era shenanigans. But it seems like a huge coming together of the nasties, or a “Quickening,” sort of, that is extra disturbing. “Demonic, even.
Yes, it is all connected. And it is so shameful. And morally bankrupt. So it is *even* connected to the state of our economics. We “win” by torture. We *sell* health. Free speech is unlimited: anyone can tell any lie they wish, especially to allow torture and death.
Of course, such a force from the dark side is not solely targeting al Qaeda. The question is who else captures their interest, why and why they feel free to act on their mandate.
Wouldn’t one of the missing 14 almost have to be the 20ish yo who was stripped and frozen to death in Afghanistan?
KSM’s wife and children – were they a part of the totals?
There was also the teenager captured with Zubaydah who didn’t give the “right” narrative about Zubaydah’s status
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/28/AR2009032802066.html
It looks like al-Deen was then “rendered” over to Syria and is one of the prisoners mentioned (although then not named) in Gray’s Ghost Plane from the Arar et al descriptions.
It’s a bit hard bc of the issue of what the CIA is saying it did to whom – what it is calling “enhanced techniques” may only be the things specifically mentioned in one of the released memos, and yet things like even longer term detention and isolation, kidapping under threats from family, threats against family members, anal assaults, drugging, etc. are things that were known to be done and yet are not spelled out in the memos as part of the enhanced techniques, so looking for 14 with respect to “enhanced” techniques is kind of a float number – no one who was disappeared into a black site prison was subject to “unenhanced” techniques – the use of a kidnap to a blacksite is pretty much an enhanced technique in and of itself – it’s a constant and persistent death threat.
Edited to add: Almost forgot to mention thank you for this piece and you and Andy for plugging away.
Thank you for your very thoughtful reply. You are helpful in giving me more insight into the complexities. Perhaps my astonishment is better placed at how accepting the people are of our government committing these egregious crimes. I can see that it would take an exceptionally equipped Obama administration to go against the mindset of such a number of the people.
It in my view just emphasizes the importance of written law and the immensity of the tragic results when it is flouted without a political price being paid. .
Iran Contra and the revelation of the CIA assuming the role of shadow government that would lie to Congress. first stirred my attention. Sad to say, it was like the beast at the bottom of the lagoon who reared his head only for a glimpse then permitted to resume a bottom crawler existence.
Thanks, Jeff. Not impossible Ballantine would move up Inside Out’s June 29 pub date, but not likely, either — moving a pub date creates a Rubic’s Cube effect that publisher’s typically prefer to avoid. On the other hand, the sad news is that torture, black sites, etc. are apt to be timely topics for a very long time to come. I don’t see the book being overtaken by events — rather, increasingly validated by them.
I have been interogated (and flirted with) by the Secret Service for saying that Bush played a lousy game of chess, put American lives at stake, and deserved to die. Ocassionally, the government wonders if I am too much in love with China. Usually their weapon of choice is a cyber knife to reanimate genetics of their preference. I feel back pain and arm pain from time to time on another level, yet never have I been whisked away to Guantanomo and came back alive. So is torture an “everyone must die” mentality or do we deactivate systems? I wonder.