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New Army
Documents Confirm Black Ops "Special Access Program" Unit Covered Up
Detainee Abuse
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: media@aclu.org
Army Knew of Systemic Abuse in Afghanistan
Back in January 2002
NEW YORK -- The American Civil Liberties Union today released new
documents obtained from the Defense Department detailing abuse at
U.S. facilities in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantánamo Bay. Included in
the release is the first publicly available government document
confirming the existence of a secret “Special Access Program”
involving a special ops unit, Task Force 6-26, which has been
implicated in numerous detainee abuse incidents in Iraq, and whose
operatives used fake names to thwart an Army investigation.
“These documents confirm that the torture of detainees and its
subsequent cover-up was part of a larger clandestine operation, in
all likelihood, authorized by senior government officials,” said
ACLU attorney Amrit Singh. “Despite mounting evidence of systemic
abuse authorized or endorsed from above, however, not a single high
level official has thus far been brought to justice.”
In one Army file, an investigator states that he is unable to
continue an investigation into claims that a detainee captured by
Task Force 6-26 in Tikrit, Iraq, was stripped, humiliated and
physically abused until he passed out, because the unit accused of
the abuse is part of the Special Access Program (SAP). A memorandum
included in the report states that “fake names were used by the 6-26
members” and that the unit claimed to have a computer malfunction
which resulted in the loss of 70 percent of their files. The
memorandum concludes, “Hell, even if we reopened [the investigation]
we wouldn’t get any more information than we already have.”
Also included in the documents released today is a heavily
redacted memo referring to a December 10, 2002 “SERE INTERROGATION
SOP” (Standard Operating Procedure) for Guantánamo. SERE, which
stands for “Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape,” is a secret
military program under which detainees held in U.S. custody abroad
are subjected to harsh interrogation techniques. According to the
ACLU, this document shows that such techniques may have been
formally authorized in a memo to military personnel at Guantánamo.
The ACLU said it is unclear how this document relates to abusive
interrogation techniques authorized for use in Guantánamo by
Secretary Rumsfeld in a separate memo on December 2, 2002.
Several sworn statements of military intelligence personnel and a
written “Chronology of Guard/Detainee Issues” also released today
confirm that the Army began receiving reports of detainees being
brutally beaten and abused in Afghanistan as early as January 2002.
The documents show that abuse continued into 2004. A February 16,
2004 memorandum recording an interview of an American interrogator
stationed in “Orgun-E Military Intelligence Detention Facility” in
Afghanistan reveals that its “Standard Operating Procedure” included
keeping detainees awake, standing and blindfolded without food for
the first 24 hours. The interrogator also refers to standard
practices of “OGA” (a common military reference to the CIA) that
include the use of drugs and prolonged sensory deprivation. A
February 12, 2004 memorandum records the use of a “Fear Up approach”
involving “disrespect for the Koran,” insulting the detainee, having
a room upstairs with spotlights and turning the music on very loud.
In a March 28, 2004 report released today, the Inspector General
of the Combined/Joint Task Force 180 in Bagram found several
problems with detainee operations in Afghanistan, including a lack
of training and oversight on acceptable interrogation techniques.
The report states that “Army doctrine simply does not exist” and
that detainees are not afforded “with the privileges associated with
Enemy or Prisoner of War status” or the Geneva Conventions.
The documents further reveal gruesome accounts of torture and
abuse by U.S. military personnel in Iraq. In one 2004 document, a
civil contractor recounts in a sworn statement that he witnessed
Marines pouring peroxide and water over the open wounds of an Iraqi
prisoner. The contractor also reports that soldiers with the 372nd
Military Police Company used slingshots against Iraqi children
attempting to steal food from the base.
In another document, following the release of images of abuse at
Abu Ghraib, one officer wrote on May 6, 2004, that abusive
interrogation techniques, such as the application of cold or ice,
loud music, sleep deprivation and confining detainees to a metal
box, will “continue to cause us problems, as some interrogation
techniques aren’t real defensible given the Abu Ghraib fallout.”
The documents released today are a result of a Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) request filed by the ACLU, the Center for
Constitutional Rights, Physicians for Human Rights, Veterans for
Common Sense and Veterans for Peace. The New York Civil Liberties
Union is co-counsel in the case.
The FOIA lawsuit is being handled by Lawrence Lustberg and Megan
Lewis of the New Jersey-based law firm Gibbons, Del Deo, Dolan,
Griffinger & Vecchione, P.C. Other attorneys in the case are Singh,
Jameel Jaffer and Judy Rabinovitz of the ACLU; Arthur N. Eisenberg
and Beth Haroules of the NYCLU; and Barbara Olshansky of the Center
for Constitutional Rights.
To date, almost 90,000 pages of government documents have been
released in response to the ACLU's Freedom of Information Act
lawsuit. The ACLU has been posting these documents online at
www.aclu.org/torturefoia.
The documents released today are available at:
http://action.aclu.org/torturefoia/released/011206
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