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On the Trail of the CIA
By MANFRED ERTEL, ERICH FOLLATH, HANS HOYNG
MARION KRASKE, GEORG MASCOLO AND JAN PUHL
12/10/05 "Der
Spiegel" -- -- Since Sept. 11, the CIA has played a
vital role in the war on terror. But what role is it? Operating in
the shadows, American secret services have been given wide-ranging
powers by the Bush Administration. And they include murder,
abduction and torture.
It's Saturday, Sept. 15, 2001, four days after the terror attacks in
New York and Washington. US President George W. Bush withdraws with
his closest advisors to Camp David in order to escape the chaos of
the week and to develop the first plans to confront the new and
unprecedented challenge facing the United States.
In the afternoon, then CIA head George Tenet distributes a file to
all participants of the crisis summit. It's called "Going to War."
Inside are the first rough outlines of the coming war against
terrorism. In the upper left corner of the file's cover, there is a
red circle inside of which is a portrait of Osama bin Laden with a
black line drawn through it.
Tenet wants to finally go on the offensive. And his list of
priorities is ambitious. Goal number one: Destroy al-Qaida and close
off the terror group's zones of safety wherever they might be.
According to Bob Woodward in his book "Bush at War," this is a list
with wide-ranging powers granted to authorities battling worldwide
terror. And Tenet does not hold back. He requests that his agents be
given the go-ahead to eliminate al-Qaida wherever the CIA comes
across the terror group. He wants Carte blanche for clandestine
operations without having to first go through the long process of
having them authorized. In addition, CIA agents should once again be
given the authority to kill -- a power withdrawn from US
intelligence agents in 1976 by then President Gerald Ford.
Also on Tenet's wish list is a request for hundreds of millions of
dollars to be used in buying intelligence assistance from foreign
secret services. Specifically, Tenet was thinking about agents from
Egypt, Jordan and Algeria -- and he is sure that help from these
country's secret services would dramatically increase the CIA's
ability to track down and eliminate al-Qaida.
Three days later, Bush signs a Presidential Directive whose exact
wording only a very few Americans know until this day. Point for
point, the demands made by the CIA were granted, and with that, the
document became the first shot fired in the worldwide war on terror.
Bush ordered the CIA to be the first on the new front -- America's
secret service was unleashed.
Four years later, America's secret services -- and especially the
CIA (the "flagship of the business ... where you come if you want
the gold standard," according to the agency's new director Porter
Gosss) -- have become one of the most controversial weapons in the
fight against terrorism. While the most powerful army in the world
has become ever-more an occupying power in Iraq and, by it's mere
presence, has attracted a whole new generation of mujahedeen, Bush's
secret services have fought their part of the battle under the
apparent motto, "The end justifies all means."
America's agents, whose worldwide presence and disdain for
international legal norms right up through the 1970s gained them a
reputation for being ugly Americans, are back on the international
political stage. Not everybody is happy to see them.
And Bush is using all the tools at his disposal. Measured by sheer
numbers and capability, America's gigantic secret service apparatus
appears just as omnipotent as his military: Fifteen secret services
with 200,000 employees and a yearly budget of some $40 billion. The
sum represents more than most countries even spend on their
militaries. The satellites of these agencies can read license plates
from space -- and the newest generation of these advanced spy
satellites are just as sophisticated as the Hubble Space Telescope.
But instead of looking out into the depths of the universe, they are
focused downwards to the goings on here on Earth.
Every day, analysts from this secret army deliver their findings to
their superiors and, in the form of the Presidential Daily Briefing,
to President Bush himself. It's a sort of super-secret daily
newspaper -- with severely limited circulation of course --
generally comprising between 12 and 30 pages. It's the most
important thing you have to read every day, Bush Senior -- himself
head of the CIA for a year -- told his son when Bush Junior took
office.
But the secret war does not end with America's spy agencies.
Likewise in the shadows -- sometimes operating within international
law, sometimes outside the boundaries -- are the special forces of
the American military. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld sends
them on missions across the globe; indeed they may, some say,
already be operating inside of an Iran that continues its pursuit of
nuclear weapons. He would be "surprised and disappointed" if covert
measures were not already under way against Iran's armaments
program, says Ashton Carter, assistant secretary of defense under
Bill Clinton.
And where American personnel can't go, the National Security
Agency's (NSA) worldwide network can eavesdrop. The NSA routinely
listens in on what is going on in the United Nations in New York --
and UN General Secretary Kofi Annan, for awhile at least, was one of
the agency's number one targets says James Bamford, a leading expert
on the NSA.
One of the newest weapons in the secret service arsenal is called
"geolocating." Should, for example, satellites identify the location
of a suspect through a mobile phone signal, then special forces or
warplanes can quickly strike. The technology has become so precise,
that mobile telephones can be located to within one meter.
Indeed, the ability to precisely locate a target was instrumental,
in November 2001, in killing al-Qaida military head Mohammed Atif in
his house near Kabul, or in the arrest of bin-Laden aide Abu Subeida
in Pakistan. But the system also makes grave mistakes. In 2002 in
Afghanistan, for example, hastily scrambled bombers dropped their
ordnance on a wedding party instead of on a targeted meeting of
terrorists.
CIA head Goss, himself a CIA agent for 10 years before he went into
politics, encourages the taking of risks by his agents. "And when it
goes wrong, I will support you," he has told them. He sends his
agents with deadly powers and backpacks full of dollars into
operations all over the world where they also have the authority to
call in air power. Or, alternatively, they can call in a Predator --
drones armed with laser-controlled Hellfire rockets and which can be
steered from half a world away using a simple joystick.
In the 1980s and 90s, secret operations in foreign countries became
more and more seldom and analysis was emphasized. That, though, was
the old CIA -- an organization former agent Melissa Boyle derided by
saying, that the days of James Bond were long gone. But now, the
enemies of yesteryear are history. President Bush has repeatedly
warned Americans that the new enemy confronting the US is totally
different than all those that have come before.
The warning also represents the birth of the new CIA -- an agency
that should strike fear into the hearts of its enemies.
So is the CIA on the road to re-establishing the notoriety it for so
long had in the Third World? That of a frightening, secret power
that kidnapped politicians, bought mercenary troops and toppled
governments at will merely because Washington didn't approve of
them?
Already shortly after the agency's founding on July 26, 1947 by
President Harry Truman, the CIA had made the world its playground
and had began deciding who were the good guys and who were the bad
guys. And they punished the bad guys at the order of the White
House.
The "firm" had license to kill, and used it during the Cold War
against a Soviet enemy that was at least as brutal. In the 1960s,
the CIA developed a highly poisonous arrow that was supposed to
leave no traces whatsoever during an autopsy. They also experimented
with training dolphins to deliver explosives to a given target.
But in reality, these were hollow victories. Mixed in with the
successes were disastrous missions abroad and embarrassing mistakes
at home. The combination led to the CIA becoming more of a burden
then a help. The nation was horrified to learn that President
Richard Nixon used former agents for the Watergate break-in;
Americans were disgusted by the government's spying on tens of
thousands of citizens critical of their government; the term
"America's Gestapo" began to make the rounds.
The result was a reigning in of Big Brother. In 1974, a law went
into effect requiring that all clandestine operations abroad had to
be rubber-stamped by Congress. The secret services began
concentrating almost exclusively on technological data-gathering
methods -- and thus largely stayed out of the Iranian revolution.
And in an Afghanistan fighting against the USSR, the CIA didn't pick
up that the mujahedeen -- generously supplied by the Americans with
arms and money -- were not only fanatic opponents of the Soviets,
but were also against the American "crusaders."
Part II: Cheney goes to the dark side
Indeed, the pact with the Islamist warriors -- in combination with
an almost blind faith in the Pakistani secret services -- played a
large role in the development of the Taliban and al-Qaida both.
Afghanistan became Bin Laden Land.
The fact that Sept. 11 resulted in major changes to the American
secret services was thus hardly a surprise. What was surprising,
though, was the speed with which the secret services regained their
old, bad reputation. The list is growing once again: allegations
that the CIA handed out large sums of money in Venezuela in an
effort to topple Hugo Chavez; and a growing number of terrorists
executed by the agency's drones.
A Hellfire rocket fired by a CIA Predator took out, in Yemen, the
alleged ring-leader of the 2000 attack on the USS "Cole." The CIA
killed the Egyptian Hamsa Rabia -- the al-Qaida number three -- in
Pakistan not far from the Afghanistan border using the same weapon
earlier this month.
Vice President Richard Cheney, who, even on his good days,
increasingly resembles an old-style Soviet general secretary,
publicly announced the CIA's change of directions. One has to
operate in the shadows, he says. In order to defeat the terrorists,
America's agents "have to work the dark side, if you will." If the
enemy doesn't play by the rules, then we won't either, is Cheney's
message.
The war in Afghanistan, and the hunt for bin Laden, showed to what
extent the CIA was willing to use its new powers. Cofer Black, the
coordinator for counter-terrorism, demanded the head of the al-Qaida
boss and meant it quite literally. The gruesome trophy should be
sent express -- and "on ice" -- to Washington, he said. Bush also
takes the hunt for the terrorists personally: In his desk is a list
of al-Qaida leaders that he crosses off each time one of them is
captured or killed.
Originally, the CIA likely considered taking out all al-Qaida
bigwigs using Hit Teams -- much like Israel's Mossad killed those
responsible for the 1972 Olympic bloodbath in Munich or executed the
military leaders of Hamas in the Gaza Strip. But then, the concern
won out that even as the al-Qaida leaders were erased, unknown
terror groups could strike again.
A new idea gained credence -- that of capturing al-Qaida members
alive in order to interrogate them and profit from information about
the organization and its plans. Information was the only way to
combat the danger of new attacks.
Exactly how far this system to gather information has gone -- and
how widespread the prisons set up to house those captured -- is
known by only a very few Americans. At the request of Cheney, only
the chairs and vice-chairs of the intelligence committees in the
Senate and the House are informed. Such information is top secret,
Cofer Black told a congressional group in September 2002. "This is a
highly classified area," he said. "All I want to say is that there
was before 9/11 and after 9/11. After 9/11 the gloves come off."
All congressional and legal investigations into the abuse of
prisoners by Americans until now have had to be performed without
the benefit of insight into the practices of the CIA. Not even the
Red Cross has been allowed access to a number of high value
prisoners from Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the planner of the attacks on
New York and Washington, to Ibn al-Sheikh al-Libi, the head of an
al-Qaida training camp. They have just disappeared.
For those in control of the scattered, CIA prisons, there is no
higher power. The Republican John D. Rockefeller, a member of the
Senate intelligence committee complains that the government has made
it clear that all those who would demand an element of control over
these areas are to be criticized as being unpatriotic.
Although the exact extent of the CIA's new powers remains unclear,
that which is known is enough to know that human rights are being
violated as are international conventions and treaties. Targeted
liquidations, the kidnapping of suspects abroad and the delivery of
prisoners to other country's secret services are very definitely
examples of such violations.
But above all, the interrogation experts from the CIA are still
equipped with six notorious torture tools with which they can force
prisoners to talk. To define them, government lawyers have chosen
harmless-sounding euphemisms: the "Attention Grab" describes the
practice of grabbing the shirt of a prisoner and shaking him --
only, of course, to get his attention. Then there's the "Attention
Slap" and the "Belly Slap." Doctors recommended not using the fist
out of fire of causing internal injuries.
Worse, though, is "long time standing," whereby prisoners are forced
to stand uninterruptedly for as long as 40 hours. Rumsfeld's boorish
observation that he too has to stand for hours during his workday
seems rather cynical by comparison.
The keyword "cold cell" describes a practice of cooling prisoners'
cells down to 10 degrees Celsius (50 degrees Fahrenheit) and then
repeatedly pouring cold water over them. But it's "waterboarding"
that has generated the most outcry -- a form of water torture which
leads the prisoner to believe that he is drowning or suffocating.
Only a few seconds of waterboarding are necessary to get the most
prisoners to talk. Khalid Sheik Mohammed is said to have held out a
mere two minutes and a half. Senator Carl Levin, a Democratic member
of the Senate intelligence committee, is demanding transparency.
"It's totally unacceptable that documents that are requested from
the CIA have not been forthcoming," Levin said during hearings held
by a panel investigating the Abu Ghraib abuses.
Part III: Tortured to death by the CIA
It is likely that nobody will ever now how many terror suspects
abducted by the CIA have died in the torture chambers of Egyptian,
Algerian, Syrian or Saudi Arabian prisons. When every thing possible
has been used to extract every last bit of information, the suspects
trail often vanishes.
In fact, it is generally good news for prisoners when they end up in
prisons controlled directly by the CIA. There, "only" those methods
of Torture Light describe above are used. But those examples of
prisoners dying while in American hands show just how quickly things
can get out of control.
In November 2002, the guards at a secret prison -- called "Salt Pit"
-- located not far from Kabul were ordered to strip one
uncooperative Afghan prisoner naked, chain him to the concrete floor
of his cells, and leave him there in below-zero temperatures all
night. In the morning, he was dead. After a hurried autopsy, the
guards quickly buried him in an unmarked grave on the edge of the
city.
But only one single man connected to the CIA, David Passaro, has
been prosecuted by a US court. Passaro, who was on contract with the
CIA, stands accused of beating an Afghan prisoner to death during an
interrogation in June 2003 on the US military base at Bagram.
The most spectacular case where a prisoner died at the hands of the
secret services took place in Abu Ghraib. It's a case that has
become infamous the world over by virtue of the private photos made
by American soldiers for their own enjoyment. Alongside the pictures
of sexual humiliation, there is one particular photo that stands
out: that of the abused corpse of a man -- wrapped in plastic and
packed in ice -- above which the American soldier Sabrina Harman
poses with a wide grin.
The corpse has come to be known as "The Iceman." And the case will
likely haunt the CIA for many years to come as it shows exactly what
happens when a legitimate state power is combined with contempt for
humanity.
On Nov. 4, 2003 the special forces unit the Navy Seals got a tip-off
and searched a house in Baghdad suburb for Manadil al-Jamadi. The
man was thought to have delivered explosives for a terrorist attack.
Jamadi struggled a great deal when arrested. He didn't exactly come
out of the tussle unscathed. He had a black eye and a cut on face --
but nothing fatal.
The Seals first brought their prisoner to the navy camp at Baghdad's
airport. Here, according to one eye witness, a CIA interrogator
"pushed him in the chest with all his strength." The prisoner was
then stripped naked and cold water was thrown all over him. "We'll
grill you on an open fire if you don't talk," threatened one of the
CIA men. "I'm dying, I'm dying," al-Jamadi moaned. "You're going to
wish you were dead," replied the interrogator.
They then transported him to Abu Ghraib, where CIA employee Mark S.
took him into custody. Forty-five minutes later he was dead.
The manner in which al-Jamadi died is known, among experts, as a
"Palestinian hanging." It is regarded across the world as an
outlawed practice. The prisoner is hung onto a high window by his
arms, with his hands tied behind his back. This means that he can't
make the slightest movement without experiencing extreme pain.
Al-Jamadi collapsed during questioning. "He's only pretending to be
dead," S. is reported to have said -- incorrectly, as it turned out.
Al-Jamadi was indeed dead.
The case had still not been brought to court even two years after
the incident took place. Paul McNulty, the lawyer responsible for
the eastern district of Virginia, which had jurisdiction over the
CIA headquarters of Langley, is trying to, if not cover up the case,
at least drag it out. McNulty is known as a Republican and supporter
of Bush. In the meantime he has been nominated as deputy to Minister
of Justice Alberto Gonzales, the man who helped make American
torture socially acceptable.
The official line of the US government is to call such practices
"robust treatment," rather than torture. That, for example, allowed
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, on her most recent European
tour, to deny that America carries out torture. The director of the
CIA Porter Goss referred to the interrogation methods his agents
used as "unique and innovative" methods of making prisoners talk.
But Republican Senator John McCain, who was tortured as a prisoner
of war in Vietnam, says that practices such as waterboarding are
nothing more than mock executions, which, regarded as torture, are
outlawed all over the world. "In my view," he says, "to make someone
believe that you are killing him by drowning is no different than
holding a pistol to his head and firing a blank. I believe that it
is torture, very exquisite torture."
It is exactly because of the gruesome treatment of prisoners that
made it expedient to remove suspects as much as possible from the
responsibility of American judges. In this way this practice gave
birth to the Guantanamo prisoner camp, as well as a whole range of
so-called black sites, or secret interrogation areas, where the CIA
keeps its most valuable prisoners under continuous observation.
These mobile secret camps came into being exactly because the US
government feared that the courts would eventually demand fair
trials even for the inmates of the prisons on Cuba.
The solution was to resort to locations in other friendly countries.
It appears clear that one of the first black sites was in Thailand.
When news leaked out, the government in Bangkok demanded the
withdrawal of the interrogation experts from Langley.
For a while the CIA even dreamt of having its very own Alcatraz and
looked into setting up a high-security prison in Lake Cariba in
Zambia. Although worries about the reliability of government in
Lusaka put pay to this scheme, at least the environment would have
been ideal. John Radsan, a former CIA lawyer, commented on his
former employer's prisoner program by saying "It's the law of the
jungle. And right now we happen to be the strongest animal."
Apparently the CIA then turned to the states of Eastern Europe,
which are regarded as particularly acquiescent to Washington. They
look to teaming up with Europe when it comes to economic
development. As far as security goes though, they rely
wholeheartedly on cooperation with the United States.
This explains why Europe became the central hub for the transport of
CIA prisoners. Hundreds of the now infamous flights used the
airspace between Greenland in the north and the Azores in the south,
and the Atlantic coast of Ireland in the west and Romania in the
east. There is hardly a country which was not used and more details
are constantly being unearthed.
Part IV: Dark flights across Europe
An odd alliance of human rights organizations, state government
observers, journalists and plane spotters has created a close-meshed
network of indicators which raises more and more questions about the
US secret services and their dubious practices. Not to mention the
stupidity or acquiescence of their European allies.
On Jan. 22 of the previous year, for instance, an
unsuspicious-looking Boeing 737 with the identity number N313P
landed at the airport of Son Sant Joan in Palma in Majorca. The
aircraft came from Algiers and was on the way to Skopje. There it
was boarded, the next day, by the Lebanese-born German citizen
Khaled al-Masri, who had been abducted by CIA agents and was being
flown to the Afghan capital Kabul.
When it became clear that the secret service had captured the wrong
man, bitter arguments within the CIA broke out on how to deal with
the incident. It was the then National Security Advisor Condoleezza
Rice, who last week got such a battering all over Europe for the CIA
kidnappings, who ordered the German's release.
The illegal prisoner shuttle only became in March, when human rights
organizations brought the case of "abduction, illegal arrest and
torture" to the local courts. The government in Madrid had no
intention of admitting to collaboration with the Americans. The new
socialist foreign minister Miguel Angel Moratinos attempted to
smooth over the public outcry and protect the previous conservative
government with a "message of peace and calm."
But Moratinos had every cause for concern. According to recent
official inquiries, US aircraft, commissioned by the CIA, are
thought to have used Majorca as a stop-off point at least 15 times
in the last two years. And officials report of nine landings on the
Canary island of Tenerife.
Investigators suspect that the incriminated Majorca plane carried
out at least 19 cross-border trips for the United States. Apart from
landing at Palma, the passenger jet also stopped off in Ireland,
Larnaka in Cyprus and in the Swedish town of Orebro.
A mission which took place on Sept. 22, 2003 is especially
interesting. On this particular Monday a CIA Airline Boeing took off
from Kabul and made its way to the North Polish airport of Szymany.
It then flew on to the Rumanian staging post of Mihail Kogalniceanu
on the Black Sea. Critics of the CIA, such as the human rights
organization Human Rights Watch, have had their eyes on both arms
bases for a while now.
Only a few days ago, according to reports by the US channel ABC,
high-ranking al-Qaida fighters are thought to have been quickly
shipped out of Europe just in time for the visit to Europe of US
Security of State Condoleezza Rice. One of these involuntary
travelers was Ramzi Binalshibh, who helped plan the attack on the
World Trade Center. The new destination: unknown dungeons "somewhere
in North Africa."
In Poland cooperation with the CIA has always been strongly denied.
The new government refers to the explanation given by the outgoing
president Kwasniewski. "Such a prison has never existed," he said.
Really? The camp in the small town of Szczytno in Mazury is
certainly tailor-made for secret missions. Official flights to what
has become Poland's most famous airport stopped long ago. Gone are
the big plans whose remnants can only be seen in the multi-lingual
signs: "Welcome to the international airport of Szczytno-Szymany."
Only private aircraft land and take off here. When, for example,
King Juan Carlos of Spain wants to do a bit of hunting in the
forests full of wild beasts. Or, possibly, when American friends
have urgent business which needs to be dealt with?
"The airport is always ready for action, the technical equipment is
all intact," says the uniformed border guard. Local residents report
that black minivans with darkened windows and military markings are
always driving by. Vehicles like this belong to the official fleet
of the military unit 2669, 20 kilometers away in Stare Kiejkuty.
Two barbed wire fences separate the tiny village from the site with
its watch-towers, barriers and far-off red and white radio masts.
Photos are strictly prohibited and Polish journalists have had film
and memory chips confiscated over the last few days.
Unit 2669 is officially the "training center for news service
cadres." And the fact that it is so near, politically to the new
American allies, and geographically to the airport, makes the site
of particular interest. Respected village resident Krzysztof
Uminski, 45, the last farmer in the area, does not like answering
pushy questions. After all, he says, most of the other villagers
live from "work provided by the state." Only hesitatingly does he
admit what that means. The spy school is the only major employer in
the remote area surrounding the lake.
The flights via Spain are not the only ones to have attracted
attention. A Gulfstream with the identification number N85VM also
keeps cropping up as a CIA transporter in international log-books
and with human organizations. On April 12, 2004 it took off from
Guantanamo with an unidentified cargo. First stop was Spain. The
explosive mission's destination was Bucharest.
The airport of Mihail Kogalniceanu, often called simply "MK" by
American allies, lies about 200 kilometers from the Romanian
capital. The US military has been using the maneuvering area as a
supply base for the Iraq war since 2002. Last week Security of State
Condoleezza Rice signed an agreement with the government in
Bucharest that would allow the USA to keep a base for troops there
long-term. The agreement is only a logical next step. Parts of the
camp have been American-only military areas for years, as the former
minister for defence, Ioan Mircea Pascu was forced to admit.
The British journalist counts 210 dubious flights to England alone,
by noting official recordings of flights commissioned by the CIA.
There are thought to be dozens more, according to research in
Ireland and Portugal. Landings have also supposed to have happened
in Prague, Helsinki and Budapest. Estonia, the Netherlands, Iceland,
Norway and Denmark all lay on the flight-path.
On Feb. 17, 2003 in Milan a CIA commando force abducted the radical
Islamist Abu Omar in "a completely illegal act", as observers
describe it, and flew him out of the country. Extradition warrants
have been made out for 22 CIA pursuers.
But the central hub for Europe was Germany: the Americans used the
Frankfurt Rhein-Main Airbase for 437 flights. It was from here that
the Hercules number N8183J took off, and later, on Jan. 21, 2003,
set off the alarm with the Austrian air force. Two Austrian military
chaser jets were alerted and identifying the plane, which had been
built by the US company Tepper Aviation, as a "pseudo-civilian
aircraft, let it pass.
Part V: No prosecuting; no killing
The fact that the planes are deterred from using neutral airspace
was also noticed by Sweden. There has been a great deal of distrust
directed at the USA, ever since the CIA brought in two Egyptian
asylum seekers from abroad in 2001, in full view of the Swedish
police -- although only after the Swedes had arrested the men after
a tip-off from the Americans.
Just hours later US agents, in a Gulfstream V business jet
(registration N379P), landed at Bromma budget airline airport on the
outskirts of Stockholm. Eight masked men climbed out of the private
jet, grabbed the Egyptians and cut their clothing off them with
knives. They gave them tracksuits to put on and covered their heads
with hoods. Swedish protests were cut short by curt gestures.
Within ten minutes the Egyptians, who were thought to belong to the
group Islamic Jihad, were on the Gulfstream, and, shortly after
that, out of the country. Swedish diplomats reported later that both
have since then been tortured.
The in-house airline belonging to the most powerful secret service
America has, is the industry's worst kept secret. CIA lawyers and
the international air transport authorities demanded that the fleet
of aircraft should have proper registration. Once someone has found
out the identification numbers of these planes, it doesn't take long
to then follow their movements.
The employees of the CIA shuttle company always have run-of-the-mill
names like Steven Kent or Audrey Tailor. They never have private
telephone numbers or previous employers. Their social security
numbers are brand new and their only fixed addresses are postal
boxes. These are classic "sterile identities," as the CIA calls
them.
Former CIA agent Robert Baer, one of the most successful secret
service Middle East experts, described the arrangement with
disarming openness: "There is a rule inside the CIA that if you want
a good interrogation and you want good information you send the
suspect to Jordan, if you want them to be killed or tortured to
death you send them either to Egypt or Syria, and you never see them
again."
Now hardly any country is willing to take in the sorry caravan of
CIA agents and their prisoners. Everyone fears retribution from
al-Qaida.
Even before the spread of the latest CIA scandal, the new use of
power showed itself to be counterproductive in many ways. Admittedly
there has been no major attack on the USA since September 11 - ten
attacks have been prevented all over the world, preened Bush in
October - but the statements forced out of prisoners under
ill-treatment don't help anyone as they would never be admissible in
an American court of law. "Even Adolf Eichmann got a trial," warns
McCain. Maybe too late. A fair trial after torture is no longer
possible.
That puts the CIA between a rock and a hard place. "You can't
prosecute these people, but you can't kill them either," said
Michael Scheuer, the former head of the CIA special unit which,
already under Bill Clinton, was assigned to tracking down Bin Laden.
"All we've done is create a nightmare."
How damaging the program of fighting terror has become is shown by
the case of the defendant Jose Padilla in Chicago, who was accused,
after his arrest, by former Minister of Justice John Ashcroft, of
wanting to set off a dirty bomb. But in the end Padilla was only
charged with supporting and promoting a terrorist organization. The
more serious accusations were based on statements made by Khalid
Sheikh Mohammed. The government is loathe to reveal what has been
discovered, out of fear that, during the trial, the method of how
these statements were obtained would come out into the open.
There can be no doubt that the political damage caused, on a global
level, by the prisoner ill-treatment has long outweighed any
possible use intended by such a policy. The CIA torture scandal is
on the way to becoming a second Abu Ghraib. The torture carried out
in the infamous Iraqi jails has damaged the USA's image across the
whole world, and destroyed its moral pretence to bring democracy and
freedom to the Middle East.
So for months now Washington has been reeling with a bitter debate
on how to bring an end to the unceasing accusations of torture. The
camp of Guantanamo is also included in the debate. National Security
Advisor Stephen Hadley and Secretary of State Rice demand that UN
inspectors to have the right to contact prisoners. In congress
parliamentarians of both parties call for the law proposed by
Vietnam veteran McCain, which would ban torture by US authorities,
be passed.
But Vice President Cheney and CIA Director Goss fight, with
rear-cover provided by the White House, to provide the secret
service with an exemption from this ban on torture. It is possible
however they are fighting a losing battle.
Last Wednesday, while on European trip in Kiev, Secretary of State
Rice announced that the UN ban on torture naturally also applied to
American state employees. "As a matter of US policy," she said the
United Nations Convention against Torture "extend to US personnel
wherever they are, whether they are in the US or outside the US."
Since then speculations have been made in Washington as to whether
the hardliners will step down or fight back as soon as Rice returns.
Now highly respected veterans of the secret service are joining in
the debate: Vincent Cannistraro, a former anti-terror head of the
CIA and leader of the working group which investigated the Lockerbie
crash in 1988, doubts how worthwhile statements made under torture
can be. "Detainees will say virtually anything to end their
torment," he says. Burton Gerber, the former head of the Moscow unit
is convinced that torture "corrupts every society that tolerates
it." Larry Johnson, a former CIA agent and foreign ministry
anti-terror expert says "What real CIA field officers know firsthand
is that it is better to build a relationship of trust ...than to
extract quick confessions through tactics such as those used by the
Nazis and the Soviets." And ex-agent Baer, whose life was the
inspiration for the Hollywood thriller "Syriana," is even certain
that "this story will destroy the CIA."
But above all even the interrogators have been left with the nagging
doubt as to the legality of their actions -- despite all the
assertions made by the government. Why else would Washington be so
adamant about keeping prisoners off American soil. Tenet demanded
again and again guarantees that his agents will not at some point be
hauled in front of a court.
And so arose the infamous seal of approval from the ministry of
justice and the White House, in which then Vice Minister for Justice
Jay Bybee confirmed that every type of interrogation method was
allowed as long as it didn't lead to the prisoner suffering serious
injuries, organ failure or death.
Even the current Secretary for Homeland Security Michael Chertoff
set up a seal of approval. The former White House legal advisor and
current Justice Minister Alberto Gonzales made a speech to the
Senate in which he claimed that ill-treatment of prisoners was
permissible as long as those affected were not US citizens and the
torture took place abroad. All three seal of approvals for torture
were supported by Bush.
As a result of remaining uncertainty the CIA demanded that the
politicians themselves take over responsibility for the treatment of
prisoners in the world-wide war on terror. "We should lock these
people up," said the former terrorist hunter Scheuer to SPIEGEL.
"They declared war on us, so we are allowed to hold them until the
end of the war." He defended the basic principle of the fight
against terrorism: "We have to catch these people before they can do
more killing."
However Scheuer also admits that the arrogant disdain for prisoner
rights has been like "shooting your own leg." He said that in
reality there was no need for special powers or new means of
interrogation. "This whole story is a massive success for al-Qaida,
because we are losing the support of Europe, our most important
partner in the fight against terror."
At the same time, however, he sees the definition of torture as
relative. "There is a difference between torture and severe
interrogation methods. Torture is pulling someone's nails out."
MANFRED ERTEL, ERICH FOLLATH, HANS HOYNG
MARION KRASKE, GEORG MASCOLO, JAN PUHL
© SPIEGEL ONLINE 2005
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