Liberty Beat
CIA Secret Prisons Exposed
The disappeared: Are they dead? Are they alive? Ask Congress.
Ask the president.
by Nat Hentoff
May 7th, 2006 7:59 PM
http://villagevoice.com/news/0619,hentoff,73121,6.html

illustration: Matthew Leake
CIA officers soon learned one thing for sure—prisoners sent to
Bright Light and [other CIA secret prisons] . . . were probably
never going to be released. "The word is that once you get sent
to Bright Light, you never come back," said the CIA's
Counterterrorism Center veteran. James Risen, State of War: The
Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration
May is the month that the United States has been summoned to
Geneva by the United Nations Committee Against Torture to, as
Reuters reported on April 18, "provide information about secret
detention facilities and specifically whether the United States
assumed responsibility for alleged acts of torture in them."
The committee also wants a list of all these secret prisons. So
do I—along with every major human rights organization and some
members of Congress on both sides of the aisle. However, Kansas
Republican Pat Roberts, chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee, rigidly keeps refusing to authorize an investigation
into these "black sites," as they are called in CIA internal
communications. (The United States is a faithless signatory to
the UN Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment and is now being called to
account.)
Meanwhile, Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte
said the prisoners in these hidden gulags will be there as long
as "the war on terror continues." He added, in an April 12 Time
interview: "I'm not sure I can tell you what the ultimate
disposition of those detainees will be."As far as their families
are concerned, these "detainees" have vanished from the face of
the earth.
Time says that Negroponte's comments "appear to be the first
open acknowledgement of the secret U.S. detention system"
(authorized by the president soon after 9-11).
Actually, when the CIA recently fired senior official Mary O.
McCarthy—for allegedly providing classified information about
CIA secret prisons in Eastern Europe to The Washington Post's
Dana Priest—that public accusation also officially revealed the
existence of the "black sites." (McCarthy denies that she was a
source for Priest.)
The cover has long ago been blown on these dungeons by Amnesty
International, Human Rights Watch, Human Rights First, and the
ceaseless researchers at NYU law school's Center for Human
Rights and Global Justice. And in the Voice, I've been writing
on what I can find out about them since the end of 2002.
But the CIA, the president, Alberto Gonzales, Condoleezza Rice,
and Donald Rumsfeld have nothing to say about these gulags,
which are wholly removed from American law and the international
treaties we have signed.
Now, however, in an explosive, documented April 5 Amnesty
International report—"Below the Radar: Secret Flights to Torture
and 'Disappearance' "—there is direct testimony, for the first
time, from three men who have been salted away in these secret
CIA prisons.
This 41-page report, currently reverberating throughout Europe,
also includes a wide range of detailed information about the
CIA's kidnapping and "renditions" of suspects to countries known
for torturing prisoners. But most revealing are Amnesty
International's interviews with the three men from Yemen who
were "held in at least four secret US-run facilities . . .
probably in Djibouti, Afghanistan, and somewhere in Eastern
Europe."
In their last "black site," where they were disappeared for 13
months, Muhammad Bashmilah, Salah Ali Qaru, and Muhammad
al-Assad were imprisoned—they believe it was in Eastern
Europe—where "they were never allowed to look outside. . . . And
for month after month, the men had no idea whether it was day or
night . . . or whether their torment of spending endless days
staring at blank walls, or being interrogated, would ever end."
Why they were finally returned to Yemen is unknown; but
there—where they were first arrested two and a half years ago
before falling into CIA crevasses—they were charged on February
13, 2006, with having forged a travel document. Amnesty
International emphasizes:
"None was charged with any terrorism-related offense; [and] the
Chief of Special Prosecution in Yemen told Amnesty International
that they were not suspected of any such involvement."
On the old forgery charge, the judge in Yemen sentenced them to
time served, the trial record notes, "in an unknown place by the
USA."
They were then released. But, AI adds, "All continue to suffer
the dire mental and physical health consequences of torture and
ill-treatment, including the prolonged periods in isolation."
As Eric Olson, acting director of government relations at
Amnesty International USA, says, their long-term solitary
imprisonment can, by international standards, "be considered
cruel and inhuman treatment," and two "were in a facility where
they were chained to a ring on the floor permanently."
But what of the others who have been disappeared in the CIA's
secret prisons? In the Voice nearly two years ago, I quoted Jack
Cloonan, a 27-year veteran of the FBI who, in New York, as
senior agent on the FBI's bin Laden squad, headed the
investigation of the master Al Qaeda strategist Khalid Shaikh
Mohammed. Cloonan had been directing the interrogation of
Mohammed in a once secret CIA interrogation center at Bagram Air
Force Base in Afghanistan (which Dana Priest exposed in The
Washington Post).
Concerned at the time about the network of still hidden CIA
interrogation centers around the world, Cloonan asked: "What are
we going to do with these people when we're finished . . . with
them? Are they going to disappear? Are they stateless? . . .
What are we going to explain to people when they start asking
questions about where they are? Are they dead? Are they alive?
What oversight does Congress have?"
Will the elite Washington press finally ask this question of
presidential press secretary Tony Snow—and Senate Intelligence
Committee chairman Pat Roberts? And especially George W. Bush at
his next press conference? What are these American values, Mr.
President, we stand for against the terrorists?
send a letter to the editor
http://villagevoice.com/news/0619,hentoff,73121,6.html
===================
9/11, American Empire, and Christian Faith
By David Ray Griffin
May 5, 2006
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=GRI20060505&articleId=2393